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Ashbourne Serkis returned to television in 2020 as Lavinia in the Netflix fantasy series The Letter for the King, an English-language adaptation of the classic Dutch book by Tonke Dragt. [4] She appeared opposite Alice Englert in the first episode of the crime drama The Serpent. [5] She and her brother Sonny played siblings in the film La Cha Cha.
Ashbourne married Serkis in July 2002. They live in Crouch End, London and have three children: Ruby (b. 1998), Sonny (b. 2000) and Louis (b. 2004), all of whom are actors. Filmography
Ruby Ashbourne Serkis as Alice Fewterer; Joe Barber as Novice Simon Whelplay; Miles Barrow as Brother Gabriel; Babou Ceesay as Abbot Fabian; Peter Firth as Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk; Paul Kaye as Brother Jerome; Mike Noble as Master Bugge; David Pearse as Brother Edwig; Irfan Shamji as Brother Guy; Matthew Steer as Dr. Goodhap; Brian ...
Martin Clunes leads the cast and is joined by Louis Ashbourne Serkis, Michael Obiora, Mark Lewis Jones, Natalia Kostrzewa, Carly-Sophia Davies and Gerran Howell. [3] Filming took place in Wales in late 2023. Filming locations included Newport, [4] the Black Mountains [5] and Llandovery. [6]
This is a list of television series, television specials and title sequences produced by Ruby-Spears Productions (also known as Ruby-Spears Enterprises). Most of the pre-1991 library of Ruby-Spears is currently owned by Warner Bros. Television Studios through Warner Bros. Animation.
Serkis at GalaxyCon Austin in 2023. English actor Andy Serkis has been featured in various films, television series, and video games. Serkis started acting in the late 1980s with small roles on the television series Morris Minor and His Marvellous Motors (1989), and The New Statesman (1989) before being cast as Owen in Streetwise from 1989–1992.
Mark Moorman of De Volkskrant awarded the show 3 out of 5 stars and commented: "With nice young actors, beautiful cinematography and a strong quest, The Letter for the King is a reasonable success. But it does feel a bit like Netflix has crushed our favourite children's book with a steam engine."
The Story of Tracy Beaker (informally known as Tracy Beaker or TSOTB) is a British television programme series adapted from the book of the same name by Jacqueline Wilson.It ran on CBBC for five series, from January 2002 to December 2005 and also contained a feature-length episode, Tracy Beaker: The Movie of Me, broadcast in February 2004, as well as a week of interactive episodes for Children ...