Lucy Punch's career has taken her everywhere from Hollywood movies to the post-divorce wasteland of SoHa.
Lucy Punch Recreates Iconic Amanda Pose from 26 Years Ago
Lucy Punch's career has taken her everywhere from Hollywood movies to the post-divorce wasteland of SoHa.But from the very beginning of her stage and screen car...
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But from the very beginning of her stage and screen career, the actress has channelled her most beloved character of Amanda Hughes.
Lucy, 48, is back in the second series of Motherland spin off Amandaland, but unearthed photos reveal how Lucy has always channelled the brash alpha mum.
Photos have emerged of the actress' stage debut in the 2000 West End adaptation of The Graduate at the Gielgud Theatre in London.
Lucy was just 22 when she played the role of Elaine Robinson, the daughter of Jerry Hall's Mrs Robinson.
Photos taken during the theatre run, show Lucy posing backstage in a tiny pink, sequinned mini dress and looking the spitting image of her character Amanda with her best 'I could have been a model' pose.
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Photos have emerged of Amandaland star Lucy Punch's stage debut in the 2000 West End adaptation of The Graduate at the Gielgud Theatre in London
Lucy was just 22 when she played the role of Elaine Robinson, the daughter of Jerry Hall's Mrs Robinson
Other snaps show the young actress performing alongside modelling icon Jerry, who Lucy recalled years later 'was just on another level. At the weekend she would go to Marrakech and I'd go to Sainsbury's.'
Lucy grew up in West London and attended private girls' school Godolphin & Latymer, but has remembered feeling like 'an outsider' in the 'competitive and very academic school', before discovering the National Youth Theatre.
She went on to study history of art at University College London, but dropped out when comedy duo Jennifer Saunders and Dawn French offered her a part in their 1999 sitcom, Let Them Eat Cake.
From there she dabbled in theatre and TV bit parts before moving to LA in 2006 because, she has said, 'I kept getting cast as posh idiots.'
Parts in Woody Allen's 2010 movie You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger and the big screen comedy Bad Teacher followed, before Lucy headed back to the UK in 2016 after landing the part of Amanda in the first series of Motherland.
Nine years later and the part of the delusional alpha mum has taken her from Chiswick to SoHa and the risky business of a spinoff which has pushed Lucy's character into the spotlight.
The first series in 2025 proved to be a huge success among viewers and critics, leading to a Christmas special and a second run, currently airing on the BBC.
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Lucy's performance in the newly released second run has been lavished with praise although her mother Felicity, played by Joanna Lumley, and Philippa Dunne, who stars as downtrodden Anne, have been deemed 'magnetic' and 'sterling' as her supporting characters.
Photos taken during the theatre run, show Lucy posing in a pink mini dress and looking the spitting image of her character Amanda with her best 'I could have been a model' pose
Lucy grew up in West London and attended a private girls' school but has remembered feeling like 'an outsider' in the 'very academic school', before discovering the National Youth Theatre
She went on to study history of art at University College London, but dropped out to pursue acting
Series two sees attention-hungry Amanda has found her metier as an online influencer.
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It doesn't matter that, since she doesn't have any followers, she's not actually influencing anyone. She has a lifestyle brand and 'it's all she needs'.
Reviewers have likened the character to comedy icons The Office's David Brent and Steve Coogan's legendary Alan Partridge in their cringeworthy lack of self-awareness, arrogance and poorly-hidden deep insecurities.
Amandaland cemented its status last week when it won the BAFTA for Best Scripted Comedy after a string of nominations for the cast.
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