Rula Lenska

Rula Lenska
Born Róża Maria Leopoldyna Łubieńska[1][2][3]
(1947-09-30) 30 September 1947
St Neots, Huntingdonshire, England, UK
Occupation Actress
Years active 1973–present
Spouse(s) Brian Deacon (1977–87)
(divorced)

Dennis Waterman (1987–98) (divorced)

Rula Lenska (born Róża Maria Leopoldyna Łubieńska,[1][2][3] 30 September 1947) is an English actress. She mainly appeared in United Kingdom productions, but also appeared in a United States television advert that presented her as a celebrity, even though she was not widely known there at the time. She is a former wife of British actor Dennis Waterman.

Early life

Łubieński family crest

Lenska was born at St Neots, Huntingdonshire, England. Her family are members of the Polish nobility, and bearers of the Pomian coat of arms.[4] They had owned a castle and estate in Kazimierza Wielka, Poland. Her father, Major Count Ludwik Łubieński, was personal secretary to Józef Beck, Minister for Foreign Affairs in pre-1939 Poland. Later he became adjutant to General Władysław Sikorski, Prime Minister of the Polish Government in Exile and chief of the Polish military mission in Gibraltar during World War II. Łubieński later became head of the CIA-funded Polish Section of Radio Free Europe in Germany during the Cold War. Her mother was Countess Elżbieta Tyszkiewicz who escaped from Poland during the Nazi occupation, to Italy, but was captured with her mother and sent to Ravensbrück concentration camp where they survived for two years.[5] Lenska has two sisters: Anna, an actress who appeared in a few films in the late 1950s and early 1960s, and, Gabriela. Lenska was educated at the Ursuline Convent School in Westgate-on-Sea, Kent.

Early career

Her big break was as Little Ladies' band member, "Q," in the British TV series Rock Follies (1976) and its sequel Rock Follies of '77 the following year. By this time, she had renounced her title as a Polish countess; she has said of the decision, "In England it doesn't count, if you'll excuse the pun."[6]

Lenska appeared in commercials for the hair care product Alberto VO-5, which were aired on US television. Though Lenska was a popular UK actress, she was virtually unknown in the United States. In a Tonight Show monologue that aired after the commercials started running, Johnny Carson asked "Who the hell is Rula Lenska?" and began using Lenska's name as a running joke on his show.[7] Around the same time, Jane Curtin played Lenska in a sketch on Saturday Night Live.[8] Soon (at least to US audiences) Lenska became famous because of the mere assumption that she was famous. Most people in the US were unaware that she had an acting career in the United Kingdom, and believed she was a model. The discovery that she was not that prominent in the United States led to Alberto-Culver's eventual decision not to renew its contract with her, bringing an end to her commercial "starring roles".

Film, TV and radio

She has appeared in television series such as Special Branch, Minder, Boon, The Detectives, Footballers' Wives, To the Manor Born, One Foot in the Grave, Casualty, Space: 1999, Return of the Saint, Robin Of Sherwood, the Doctor Who serial Resurrection of the Daleks (in the 1970s, Lenska made it to the final five actresses short-listed for the role of companion Jo Grant), Doctors and EastEnders, in which she played Frank Butcher's girlfriend, Krystle, in a 2002 Costa del Sol special. She played Mrs. Peacock in series 2 of Cluedo. She also starred with John Inman in the short-lived (six episodes were screened) 1981 series Take a Letter, Mr. Jones, with Lenska as an executive and Inman as her secretary. In 2003, she starred in the black comedy Paradise Grove.

Her film roles included Soft Beds, Hard Battles (1974), Confessions of a Pop Performer (1975), Royal Flash (1975), Alfie Darling (1975), It Could Happen to You (1975), The Deadly Females (1976), and the cult film Queen Kong (1976) as Luce Habit. In the 2005 film Gypo, which was the first UK feature film to be made under Dogme rules, she played a Romani refugee from the Czech Republic living on a caravan site in Margate. She starred in the independent British film Jack Says, opposite her one-time EastEnders co-star Mike Reid, which was released on DVD on 22 September 2008. That same year she lent her voice to the animation film Agent Crush. In 2009, Lenska joined the cast of Coronation Street as new character Claudia Colby, an old friend of Audrey Roberts. In May 2011, Lenska quit the role in order to join the Calendar Girls tour in August 2011.

On radio she played Lintilla and her clones in the second series of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy and was also in the third, fourth and fifth series which debuted on BBC Radio 4 in May 2005. She has presented travel programmes for the BBC and has recorded many audiobooks.

Stage roles

She has toured extensively both in the UK and abroad and appeared in several West End shows (most recently in The Vagina Monologues and 84 Charing Cross Road) and in many pantomimes and is a regular performer (and part of the original cast) of the touring play Seven Deadly Sins Four Deadly Sinners.

In December 2005, she appeared on stage with the London Gay Men's Chorus for their Christmas Show, Make the Yuletide Gay. She sang and danced while also hosting the show at Symphony Hall in Birmingham, the Dome Concert Hall in Brighton and the Barbican Centre in London.

At the equivalent show in December 2006, comedian Sandi Toksvig corrupted the lyrics of a song to suggest Lenska had a Christmas job in Debenhams. In 2007, she was toured alongside Marti Webb and Sheila Ferguson in a new musical about menopause called Hot Flush.[9] and hosted a mini-show at Lutterworth Piano Rooms 3 November 2012.[10]

Celebrity Big Brother

Her work on tour with the London Gay Men's Chorus is assumed to have prompted her participation in the United Kingdom version of Celebrity Big Brother in January 2006. Her reason for accepting the invitation to go on the show was "I'm a crazy Polish countess who likes a challenge". During the show, she declared that she had been a “Tibetan Buddhist” for many years but had been practising “Buddhism for the common man”, which has no hierarchical structure (Nichiren Daishonin), for two years. On 13 January 2006, with fellow housemate, British politician George Galloway, she attracted the attention of the media by indulging in a role-play task set by Celebrity Big Brother, in which Galloway pretended to be a cat licking milk from her cupped hands, and Lenska stroked his ears and moustache. On another occasion during her time in the BB house, when accidentally locked in the toilet, singer Pete Burns quipped, "Oh dear, what can the matter be, clapped out actress stuck in the lavatory." Lenska was the third housemate voted out of the show on 20 January 2006.[11]

Personal life

She has been married twice, first to actor Brian Deacon (4 June 1977 – 1987), with whom she had one daughter, Lara Parker (née Lara Deacon),[12][13][14] and secondly, to actor Dennis Waterman, from 3 January 1987 until 31 March 1998. Both marriages ended in divorce. She and Waterman met on the set of Minder in 1982. Her marriage to Waterman ended because of his violent behaviour towards her and in March 2012 he caused controversy with some comments on that aspect of their relationship: "‘It’s not difficult for a woman to make a man hit her. She certainly wasn’t a beaten wife, she was hit and that’s different."[15][16][17] Rula Lenska said that she was relieved that he had now admitted beating her.[18]

Waterman's daughter, Hannah Waterman, was starring in EastEnders at the same time as Lenska made her guest appearances, although they did not share any scenes together. In 2009 she sought compensation from the Polish government for the Communist state's seizure of her family's Polish estate.[19]

Lenska was charged with being in excess of the UK drink driving limit on the 23 February 2016.[20] The following month she was sentenced to a 16-month driving ban and ordered to pay a total of £526.[21] Her three-year-old grandson was present in the back seat of the car [21]

References

  1. 1 2 Birth name per www.findmypast.co.uk
  2. 1 2 "Meet the Big Brother celebrities". BBC News. 6 January 2006. Retrieved 2015-10-30.
  3. 1 2 Brooks, Xan (6 January 2006). "Galloway enters Big Brother as unexpected house guest". The Guardian.
  4. Polish dynastic genealogy: http://www.sejm-wielki.pl/b/cz.I003946
  5. Lenska, Rula (26 September 2013). Rula: My Colourful Life. The Robson Press. ISBN 978-1849545501. (subscription required (help)).
  6. Hauptfuhrer, Fred (14 April 1980). "This Is Everything You Wanted to Know About Rooo-La Lenzzz-Ka but Were Too Ashamed to Ask". People. 13 (15).
  7. Zorn, Eric (18 January 2006). "Rula Lenska? Why, she's just showing some friends around London, of course". Chicago Tribune.
  8. Saturday Night Live archive
  9. Blackburn, Anna (17 April 2007). "Hot Flush! Review". BBC News.
  10. "An audience with... actress Rula Lenska". Lutterworth Mail. 30 October 2012.
  11. "Galloway 'cat' act sparks anger". BBC News. 13 January 2006.
  12. "Personal". The Official Rula Lenska Website. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
  13. "Last word with… Rula Lenska". Candis Magazine. Newhall Publications. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
  14. "Lara 'Deacon' Parker Profile". Rummikub (players social network). Retrieved 5 June 2014.
  15. Scott, Paul; Anthony Bond (21 March 2012). "Rula Lenska 'shocked and relieved' after ex-husband Dennis Waterman finally admits that he punched and slapped the actress". Mail Online. Retrieved 24 May 2013.
  16. McAuliffe, Naomi (20 March 2012). "Dennis Waterman and the 'problem with strong, intelligent women'". The Guardian.
  17. Smith, Joan (21 March 2012). "Blame the victim – a classic with wife-beaters". The Independent.
  18. "Dennis Waterman's attack confession brings relief to victim Rula Lenska". Daily Record. 21 March 2012.
  19. Petre, Jonathan (4 May 2009). "Countess Rula Lenska's bid to reclaim Warsaw estate stolen by Stalin". Daily Mail.
  20. "Ex-EastEnders star Rula Lenska charged with drink driving". Daily Mail. 25 February 2016.
  21. 1 2 "Rula Lenska banned for drink-drive crash". BBC News Online. 4 March 2016. Retrieved 4 March 2016.
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