
Cast
Jodhi May
Acting
Cast
Jodhi May
Known for
Acting
Born
1975-05-08
From
Camden, London, England, UK
Biography
Jodhi Tania May (née Hakim-Edwards; 8 May 1975) is a British actress. Starting her career as a child actress, she is the youngest recipient of the Best Actress award at the Cannes Film Festival, for A World Apart (1988). Her other film appearances include The Last of the Mohicans (1992), Sister My Sister (1994), and A Quiet Passion (2016). From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The Last of the Mohicans
as Alice

The Scapegoat
as Blanche

Defiance
as Tamara Skidelsky

The Scarlet Letter
as Voice of Pearl (voice)

Making The Witcher
as Self - Queen Calanthe

The Escapist
as Christine

Ginger & Rosa
as Anoushka

Down a Dark Hall
as Heather Sinclair

Nightwatching
as Geertje

Einstein and Eddington
as Elsa Einstein

Prizefighter: The Life of Jem Belcher
as Mary Belcher

Sister My Sister
as Lea

A World Apart
as Molly Roth

The Silent Twins
as Marjorie Wallace

The Other Boleyn Girl
as Anne Boleyn

The Severed Sun
as Andrea

D Is for Distance
as Narrator

The Invisible Thread
as Tilly Nolan

Flashbacks of a Fool
as Evelyn Adams

Max and Helen
as Miriam Weiss

Sleep with Me
as Lelia

Eminent Domain
as Ewa

The Gambler
as Anna Snitkina

I, Anna
as Janet Stone

The House of Mirth
as Grace Julia Stepney

Land of the Blind
as Joe's Mother

Land of the Blind
as Joe's Mother (uncredited)

A Quiet Passion
as Susan Gilbert

Warriors
as Emma

The Best Man
as Tania

Scarborough
as Liz

Resurrection
as Leah

The Woodlanders
as Marty South

The Warrior Queen of Jhansi
as Queen Victoria

Friends & Crocodiles
as Lizzie Thomas

Common
as Coleen O'Shea

On a Clear Day
as Angela

Blinded
as Rachel Black

Rembrandt's J'Accuse...!
as Geertje

Aristocrats
as Lady Sarah Lennox

The Turn of the Screw
as Miss

The Man-Eating Leopard of Rudraprayag
as Jean Ibbotson

Round About Five
as Bicycle Courier

The Mayor of Casterbridge
as Elizabeth Jane

Let Me Go
as Beth

Blood and Oil
as Claire Unwin

Bye Bye Blackbird
as Nina

Aung San Suu Kyi: The Fall of an Icon
as Narrator