Actress Romola Garai always remains in discussions due to something. Romola Garai was born on 1945 to a British family in Hong Kong. In addition to her mother Janet A (nee Brown) Romola also had 3 other siblings. Her father Adrian Earl Rutherford Garai is a bank manager. While she moved from Hong Kong to Singapore with family a few days after birth, she returned to Wiltshire, England at the age of 8, where she attended Stoner School in Wonshire, an independent boarding school. At the age of 16, she moved to London to attend the London School of Girls, where she completed her A-Level. After which he started focusing on her acting career. By the age of 18, she won the hearts of people by performing at the National Youth Theater, while she played the younger version of Dame Judi Dench's character in HBO co-production in BBC Films / Television Signed for, The Last of the White Bombsdress. She studied English Literature at the Queen Mary University of London before transferring and graduating with a first-class degree from the Open University. She originally intended to concentrate only on her studies but later switched to acting full-time during summer vacation.
The actress acted in the BBC drama Crimson Petal and White based on Michelle Faber's novel to further her career. She was nominated for Best Actress at the 2012 BAFTA Awards. In 2011, she played the role of Bell Rowley in the TV drama The Hour with Dominic West and Ben Whiswa for which she was nominated for Golden Globe. Later that year she played the lead role of Becky in the stage play 'The Village Bike at Royal Court', for which she was widely praised. Romola starred in Lone Scherfig's One Day alongside Annie Hathaway and Jim Sturges. She played the role of a drug-addicted single mother in the independent British film JunHearts, alongside Eddie Marsan and Tom Streege. She reprised her role as Bell Rowley in the second season of The Hour, which ran from 14 November to 13 December 2012. In 2013 she appeared in the sci-fi film The Last Days on Mars. In 2015, she starred in Izabella in Meas for Mees in Young Vic, describing her performance as 'surprising', 'surprisingly emotional' and 'thrilling'. She had a supporting role in Suffragette, written by The Hour Scribe Abi Morgan, and a lead role in the 90-minute drama Churchill's Secret opposite Michael Gambone and Lindsey Duncan for ITV.
According to media reports, Romola Garai's recent radio drama work for BBC Radio 4 includes The Stone Tape adapted by Peter Strickland and the lead in the 9-part thriller Trek by Matthew Broughton. In 2017, she appeared in Channel 4 miniseries Born to Kill as Jenny, the mother of a seemingly ordinary 16-year-old schoolboy who appeared to be harbouring a latent psychopathic tendency. From June to September 2017 she appeared in the London premiere of Edmundson's Queen Anne as Sarah Churchill. Garai appeared in BBC One as Marin Brandt in the adaptation of the period thriller novel 'The Miniaturist'.
Ricky Martin will provide mental health support