Caroline Harding

Caroline Harding (born March 1962) is an English television actress and playwright. She has played recurring roles in the ITV soap opera Coronation Street and crime drama Scott & Bailey, as well as in the Netflix six-part mockumentary sitcom Hard Cell. She has also written and performed in numerous theatrical productions, including her play Two Sisters, which received nominations for two Manchester Evening News Theatre Awards for Best Play and Best Performance in 2007, and a one-woman show about the eminent Restoration actress Nell Gwyn.

Caroline Harding
BornMarch 1962 (age 62)
Marlow, Buckinghamshire, England
NationalityBritish
EducationGuildford School of Acting
Occupations
  • Actress
  • playwright
Years active1992–present
Spouses
(divorced)
(m. 2002)

Early life and education

Harding was born and raised in Marlow, Buckinghamshire, England.[1] She graduated from the Guildford School of Acting and worked extensively for the Royal Shakespeare Company in the late '80s.[1]

Career

Stage

Together with fellow actress Candida Gubbins, she formed the theatre company Two Friends Productions in 2000.[1][2] Soon after, she made her debut as a playwright with Postcards from Maupassant, a 2001 play based on the late 19th-century short stories by French author Guy de Maupassant, in which she also starred.[3] It first premiered at the Edinburgh Festival and then, after receiving rave reviews from critics, went on a national tour.[4] Sam Marlowe of The Times wrote: "All three actors are excellent throughout, but here Harding in particular is painfully funny and sad as the child-like, crazed wife. Her portrayal is still more impressive when you consider that, by contrast, just a couple of scenes earlier she was an elegant, icy society doyenne in sequins and silk."[5] Ten years after the initial premiere, Harding adapted it into French Fancies.[2]

Her next play was Two Sisters, a gripping black comedy set in 1880's Russia and directed by Chris Gascoyne.[6] First performed in July 2006 at the Buxton Festival, it was soon followed by a national tour and nominations for two Manchester Evening News Theatre Awards for Best Play and Best Performance.[7] Around the same time, Harding starred in the productions of Terrence McNally's Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune (2004),[8] Tom Stoppard's The Real Thing (2005)[9] and Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman (2007).[10]

In 2008 she wrote and performed a one-woman show about one of the first actresses on the English stage and a long-time mistress of King Charles II of England, Nell Gwyn.[11] She called it Pretty Witty Nell after a description of Gwyn by Samuel Pepys, the famed diarist and social commentator of the day.[10] Described by Harding as "a sort of historical stand-up",[1] the show toured the UK for two years.[12]

Television

Her television career began in a 1992 episode of the ITV crime drama Van der Valk, based on Nicolas Freeling's novels about a detective in Amsterdam, played by Barry Foster.[13] She then appeared in all four episodes of the BBC Two medical drama Degrees of Error (1995), starring Beth Goddard, and all six episodes of the BBC One legal drama Fish (2000), starring Paul McGann in the eponymous role.[14][15] In 2007, she briefly appeared opposite Robert Pattinson and Holly Grainger in The Bad Mother's Handbook, the television adaptation of the best-selling novel of the same name by Kate Long.[16] She then had recurring roles in Scott & Bailey and Doctors in the early 2010s.[17][18][16]

For three months in autumn 2020 she appeared in the ITV soap opera Coronation Street as Dr. Howarth, who treated the dying son of Steve McDonald and Leanne Battersby, and later told the court it would be an act of kindness and compassion to switch off his life support.[19] Harding has also played five different characters, including three doctors, in another popular ITV soap opera, Emmerdale.[1][16]

In 2022 she appeared as series regular Sal in Hard Cell, Catherine Tate's Netflix mockumentary sitcom set in a women's prison.[20][21] Together with Lorna Brown, she led a storyline about a couple who found love in the prison and have no desire to leave.[22]

Personal life

Harding has been married to actor Chris Gascoyne, best known for his role as Peter Barlow in the soap opera Coronation Street, since 2002.[10] In 2004, they starred opposite each other in the Octagon Theatre production of Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune.[8] The couple have a daughter, Belle.[23] Harding also has two children, Pip and Freddie, from a previous marriage to actor Jason Watkins.[24]

Filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1992Van der ValkMaarte de KleineEpisode: "Still Waters"
The Old Boy NetworkJournalistEpisode: "The Book of Revelations"
Waiting for GodJanet FollettEpisode: "The Estate Agent"
1993The Buddha of SuburbiaNew York Interpreter2 episodes
1995A Touch of FrostA&E SisterEpisode: "Dead Male One"
Degrees of ErrorSusan4 episodes
1999DangerfieldSheila LardnerEpisode: "Through a Glass, Darkly"
2000DoctorsEve SharpeEpisode: "God's Will"
FishJuliette Vishnevski6 episodes
CasualtyLouise BennettEpisode: "Getting to Know You"
EastEndersWelfare Officer1 episode
2004DoctorsHarriet ScottEpisode: "Turning Back the Clock"
2005CasualtyRuby Townend2 episodes
EmmerdaleBelinda Connors1 episode
2006Life on MarsRaimes' Lawyer1 episode
Strictly ConfidentialStephanie2 episodes
2007The Bad Mother's HandbookSandra GaleTV film
The RoyalDiane FletcherEpisode: "Laura"
2008Cold BloodMrs. ArmstrongEpisode: "The Last Hurrah"
EmmerdaleDr. Judd1 episode
Spooks: Code 9Sarah1 episode
2009Casualty 1909Edith DeanKnown as London Hospital in the USA; 2 episodes
2010Holby CitySally CarleyEpisode: "Thursday's Child"
2013Scott & BaileyLouise4 episodes
EmmerdaleDr. Garrett2 episodes
Mount PleasantMaître d'1 episode
Holby CityAnja FancourtEpisode: "If I Needed Someone"
2014DoctorsGrace Henning5 episodes
2015Coronation StreetConsultant2 episodes
2016–2017EmmerdaleProsecution Barrister3 episodes
2018Dr. Todd2 episodes
2020Coronation StreetDr. Howarth18 episodes
2022Hard CellSal6 episodes
2023Happy ValleySIO Mary Whitaker1 episode

References