Maggie Steed
- Actress
- Writer
- Soundtrack
Born Margaret Baker in Plymouth, Devon, in 1946, Maggie Steed studied
drama with the Old Vic Theatre School in Bristol, graduating in the
late 1960s. However, her first professional engagements were as an
assistant stage manager, working behind the scenes in a somewhat lowly
capacity, because, she says, she was not considered conventionally
pretty enough to be an actress. She does, however, recall that the
eccentric English puppeteer Harry Corbett praised her for assisting him
with his creation Sooty the Bear. Maggie left theatrical life after
only a few months and for several years worked as a secretary. An
interest in Theatre in Education lured her back to the stage, this time
as an actress, with Sue Johnston and Clive Russell at the Belgrade
Theatre in Coventry. Since then she has worked on stage with both the
Royal Shakespeare and National Theatre Companies, and in 2002 was a
commanding Lady Bracknell in a revival of 'The Importance of Being
Earnest'. A lady of political awareness, she was a founder member of
the Campaign Against Racism in the Media, and in the early 1980s
visited Nicaragua with actor Andy de la Tour to view the plight of its
citizens, and in 1983, helped stage the televised Concert for
Nigaragua. She is, however, best remembered for her television roles,
chiefly comical ones, beginning in the early 1980s with 'Shine On
Harvey Moon', through 'A Bit of a Do' and 'Pie In the Sky' as the wife
of cop-turned-chef Richard Griffiths to, in the mid-2000s. 'Jam and
Jerusalem' as the dim but well-meaning Women's Institute leader, a
sitcom filmed in her native Devon and reuniting her with her early
stage co-star Sue Johnston.