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Laura Fraser
Height
5' 3" (1.60 m)
Mini biography
Laura Fraser was born on 24th July 1976 and brought up
in Glasgow. Her father, Alister, used to run a small
building company but is now an aspiring scriptwriter;
her mother, Rose, used to be a nurse but is now a
college lecturer. She has an older brother who works
with computers, a younger sister who is studying
philosophy at university, and a younger brother who
hasn't yet decided what he wants to do. Laura describes
her family as a pretty close bunch. Alister Fraser was
instrumental in getting his daughter into acting when
she was at school. He wrote a play for the youth club in
which she played the female lead. After completing High
School, Laura did a drama foundation course at Glasgow's
Langside College, and than went to the prestigious Royal
Scottish Academy of Music and Drama. During her time
there, she got a supporting role in Gillies MacKinnon’s
film Small Faces (1996). This was on top of a couple of
other minor roles she had taken (such as 'Big Day for
the Bad Guys). The college authorities took a pretty dim
view of the amount of professional work she had been
taking on, questioning her commitment to the course.
Having not been enjoying her time at the Academy, and
encouraged by her parents, she dropped out after a year
and moved to London. She landed the starring female role
in the BBC adaptation of Neil Gaiman’s _"NeverWhere"
(1996) (mini)_ series, and then moved to several small
or supporting roles in films (Cousin Bette, Man in the
Iron Mask), as well as a lead in the short film 'Paris
Brixton'. She also appeared as a minor character in
single TV dramas, such as 'The Investigator' and 'The
Tribe').
Her role in the movie Left Luggage (1998) was more
substantial and led to her getting one of the main
character roles in the black comedy Divorcing Jack
(1998) (at least in the first half). And her highest
profile performance as the lead female in the comedy
Virtual Sexuality (1999) in 1998. From here she has
appeared in a number of films, mainly in supporting
roles, but always noticeable.
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