Ruby Wax

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Ruby Wax
OBE
Ruby Wax in 2016 (cropped).jpg
Wax at the 2016 Hay Festival
Born
Ruby Wachs

(1953-04-19) 19 April 1953 (age 71)
Citizenship
  • United States
  • United Kingdom
Education University of California, Berkeley
Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama (BA)
Regent's College (PgDip)
Kellogg College, Oxford (MSt)
Occupations
  • Actress
  • comedian
  • writer
  • television personality
  • mental health campaigner
Years active1970–present
Spouses
  • Andrew Porter
    (m. 1976;div. 1980)
  • Trevor Walton
    (m. 1981,divorced)
  • (m. 1988)
Children3
Website rubywax.net

Ruby Wax OBE ( née  Wachs; [1] born 19 April 1953) [2] is a British-American actress, comedian, writer, television personality, and mental health campaigner. A classically-trained actress, Wax was with the Royal Shakespeare Company for five years and co-starred on the ITV sitcom Girls on Top (1985–1986). [3] [4]

Contents

Wax came to prominence as a comic interviewer, playing up to British perceptions of the strident American style on television shows including The Full Wax (1991–1994), Ruby Wax Meets... (1994–1998), Ruby (1997–2000), and The Ruby Wax Show (2002). She was a script editor for the BBC sitcom Absolutely Fabulous (1992–2012), also appearing in two episodes.

Wax holds both American and British citizenship and has resided in the United Kingdom since the 1970s. [5] In 2013, she gained a master's degree in mindfulness-based cognitive therapy from Kellogg College, Oxford. Wax was appointed an Honorary Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2015 Special Honours for services to mental health. Her memoirs How Do You Want Me? (2002) and Sane New World (2013) both reached number one on the Sunday Times bestseller list.

Early life

Wax was born Ruby Wachs and raised in Evanston, Illinois, the daughter of Edward and Berthe Wachs (née Goldmann). Her parents were Austrian Jews who left Vienna in 1938 because of the Nazi threat. [6] [7] [8] Her father was a sausage manufacturer [9] and her mother qualified as an accountant. Once settled in Chicago, her father changed the spelling of the family surname from Wachs to Wax. [10]

Wax majored in psychology at the University of California, Berkeley, leaving after a year without completing her degree. [11] [12]

Career

Wax at the 2007 BAFTA awards Ruby Wax.jpg
Wax at the 2007 BAFTA awards

Early career

Wax moved to the UK and studied at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama in Glasgow. She started her acting career as a straight actress at the Crucible Theatre, Sheffield, where she began a long-standing writing and directing partnership with Alan Rickman, who later directed many of her stage comedy shows. [13]

In 1978, she joined the Royal Shakespeare Company, working alongside Juliet Stevenson in Measure for Measure , as Jaquenetta opposite Michael Hordern in Love's Labours Lost , replacing Zoë Wanamaker as Jane in The Way of the World [13] and appearing in the Howard Brenton three-hander Sore Throats. [14] While at the RSC, Wax also met and befriended Ian Charleson, and later contributed a chapter to the 1990 book, For Ian Charleson: A Tribute. [15] In 1981, Wax appeared as an American track fan in Charleson's breakthrough film, Chariots of Fire . [16]

Wax made a one-off appearance in a 1980 episode of The Professionals , Bloodsports, playing Lonnie, an American student. In 1981, she appeared in the follow-up to The Rocky Horror Picture Show , called Shock Treatment . In the film, Wax portrays Betty Hapschatt, who married Ralph Hapschatt in the first film. Wax also appeared briefly as a secretary in Omen III: The Final Conflict .

Comedy work

In 1985, she starred as loud-mouthed American actress Shelley DuPont on the British sitcom Girls on Top .

In 1987, Wax was given her own comedy chat show, Don't Miss Wax, on Channel 4. She was also hired as a radio presenter by the Superstation, an overnight sustaining service for commercial radio in the UK. [17] In December 1989, she appeared in the Red Dwarf episode "Timeslides" as the television host Blaize Falconberger of the fictional show "Lifestyles of the Disgustingly Rich and Famous". [18]

Wax began working with the BBC in 1991, with the show The Full Wax (1991–94). In 1994, Ruby Wax Meets Madonna aired on the BBC, followed by the series Ruby Wax Meets... (1996–98), in which she interviewed public figures such as Imelda Marcos, O. J. Simpson, and Pamela Anderson. [19] Ruby Wax Meets... was nominated for a 1997 BAFTA Award (credited to Clive Tulloh and Don Boyd), for an interview with Sarah, Duchess of York, an interview which attracted over 14 million viewers. [20] She also made two guest appearances in Absolutely Fabulous , a programme on which she served as script editor throughout the run of the series. [11]

From November 2001 to June 2002, Wax presented a TV quiz show on BBC One, The Waiting Game . [19] Her final BBC interview series aired in 2003. In 2005 Wax appeared as a cleaner in the music video to McFly's Comic Relief song All About You .

Writing, academia, corporate training and returns to television and stage

In 2002, Wax became the host of Commercial Breakdown . In that year, Wax published her memoir How Do You Want Me?, which topped The Sunday Times best-seller list.

In March 2003, Wax was one of the celebrity contestants on Comic Relief does Fame Academy , a spin-off from the BBC's Fame Academy , with all proceeds donated to Comic Relief . Although not a good singer, Wax made it to the final, taking runner-up position to Will Mellor. [21]

In 2004, the BBC planned to show the cartoon series Popetown , poking fun at the Catholic Church. Wax portrayed the Pope as a spoiled child. After protests, the BBC did not broadcast the show. [22]

In February 2004, Irish broadcaster Patricia Danaher reached an out-of-court settlement with Wax, who had falsely claimed Danaher had made "racist" and "anti-Semitic" remarks about her in an interview for Ulster Television. Wax's legal team apologised in court, accepted Danaher had made no racist or anti-Semitic statements, and announced there had been a financial settlement. [23]

In November 2005, Wax was criticised by the Daily Mail columnist Richard Kay for allegedly opposing a proposed disabled-access ramp for the Couper Collection charitable art gallery. The UK Sunday newspaper The Observer also reported the controversy. [24] In 2006, Wax responded to the claims in the London Evening Standard : "Oh no, that's not true. That's so off the wall. Why would I object to a disabled ramp? It wasn't even about that." [20]

Wax appeared in a supporting role opposite Olivia Williams and Andie MacDowell in the 2005 film Tara Road . In September and October 2005, she appeared as a celebrity contestant in Ant & Dec's Gameshow Marathon , progressing through to Sale of the Century before getting knocked out. In summer 2006, she was a celebrity showjumper in the BBC's Sport Relief event Only Fools on Horses. She presented Cirque de Celebrité on Sky One in 2006. Wax also appeared in an episode of Jackass, participating in the Gumball 3000. While the race was stopped at the Latvian border she was wrestled by Jackass personality Chris Pontius.

In March 2009, Wax returned to Comic Relief to take part in Comic Relief Does The Apprentice . Wax appeared in the 2011 Comic Relief in Comic Relief Does Masterchef in which Wax prepared an appetiser for then Prime Minister David Cameron.

On 1 April 2009, Ruby Wax Goes Dutch premiered on Dutch television network NET 5.[ citation needed ]

She was appointed Chancellor of the University of Southampton, commencing duties on 1 May 2019. [25]

Wax teaches business communication in the public and private sectors. Clients include Deutsche Bank, the UK Home Office and Skype. [26]

In September 2013, Wax graduated from Kellogg College, Oxford, with a master's degree in mindfulness-based cognitive therapy. [27] She had previously earned a postgraduate certificate in psychotherapy and counselling from Regent's College in London. [28]

In 2016, Wax published her first mindfulness book, A Mindfulness Guide For The Frazzled, within which she sets out her own six-week mindfulness course with the blessing of Mark Williams, her professor at Oxford and co-creator of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy. [29]

After the 2020 lockdown period caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, her book And Now for the Good News... was published. Still related to mindfulness, it discusses her discovery of new ways for education, community, self-sustainability, business or volunteering to improve lives internationally. [30] Her book A Mindfulness Guide For Survival was published in August 2021. [31]

She lectures at Bangor University and in 2022 received an honorary degree from the university. [32]

Mental health campaigning

Wax in 2016 Ruby-Wax-2016 (cropped).jpg
Wax in 2016

Wax has been open about her struggles with bipolar disorder and depression. [33] She made an online series on mental health issues for the BBC and has worked with mental health charities.

Wax's 2010 stand-up show Losing It dealt with her mental health, including time she spent in a psychiatric clinic. [34] Wax founded the mental health website (which is now part of the SANE mental health charity) in 2011 in response to the audience reaction from her theatre show. [35]

In 2013, Wax published Sane New World, which became a number-one best-seller. It was followed in January 2016 by A Mindfulness Guide for the Frazzled. [36] In 2018 her third book on the subject of mental health came out: How to Be Human: The Manual, written with the help of a neuroscientist and a monk.

In June 2015, Wax was appointed visiting professor in Mental Health Nursing at the University of Surrey. [37] In the 2015 Special Honours, she was appointed an Honorary Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for her services to mental health. [38] [39]

In May 2023, Wax released her new book and accompanying audiobook I’m Not As Well As I Thought I Was, which details her recent life including further time spent receiving psychiatric treatment and battles against depression. [40] She toured a one-woman show based on the book. [41] [42]

Personal life

Wax is married to television producer and director Ed Bye. They have three children: Max (born 1988), Madeleine (born 1990), and Marina (born 1993). [43]

In an episode of the BBC's Who Do You Think You Are? in 2017, Wax revealed her great-grandmother and great-aunt had been committed to mental asylums in Brno and Vienna as they were incurably "agitated". [44]

In 2019, Wax fell off a horse while on holiday, severely injuring her back. [45] She had to cancel her show How to Be Human at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe as a result of her injuries. [46]

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1981 Chariots of Fire Bunty
Shock Treatment Betty Hapschatt
Omen III: The Final Conflict U.S. Ambassador's SecretaryUncredited
1982 Things Are Tough All Over Restaurant Patron
1985 Romance on the Orient Express Susan LawsonTelevision film
Water Spenco Executive
1986Come DancingHerselfDocumentary film
1998Ruby Wax's Miami Memoirs
1991Ruby Takes a Trip...
1992Wax Acts
1997 The Borrowers Town Hall Clerk
2000Ruby Wax Gets StreetwiseHerselfDocumentary film
2005 Tara Road Carlotta
2008Agent CrushCharleen Chinstubble (voice)
2011 The British Guide to Showing Off HerselfDocumentary film
2012 Sir Billi Patty Turner (voice)
2021 Ron's Gone Wrong Ms. Hartley (voice)

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1979 Not the Nine O'Clock News 1 episode
1980 The Professionals LonnieEpisode: "Blood Sports"
1985 Happy Families WaitressEpisode: "Cassie"
1985–1986 Girls on Top Shelley13 episodes
1986–1992 Wogan Herself5 episodes
1987–1988Don't Miss WaxHerself - Host16 episodes
1988–1989Wax on WheelsHerself
1988–1993 Count Duckula Various (voice)15 episodes
1989 Red Dwarf Blaize FalconbergerEpisode: "Timeslides"
East Meets WaxHerself
Class of '69Presenter
1990Hit and Run1 episode
1991–1994The Full Wax23 episodes
1992 The Comic Strip Presents... SueEpisode: "Wild Turkey"
Wax ActsPresenter
1993Wax Cracks Hollywood
1994–1998Ruby Wax Meets...21 episodes
1995, 2001 Absolutely Fabulous Candy / Beth De WoodiAlso script editor (39 episodes)
1996 Oscar's Orchestra Hannah the Harp (voice)
1997–2000 Ruby Presenter BBC talk show; 48 episodes
1999–2000Ruby's American Pie12 episodes
1999RubyTalk-reality show airing on Lifetime; 10 episodes
2001Hot Wax
2001–2002 The Waiting Game
2002 Commercial Breakdown 8 episodes
The Ruby Wax Show
2002–2003 V Graham Norton Herself - Guest4 episodes
2003Ruby Wax With...Presenter6 episodes
Comic Relief Does Fame Academy Herself Series one
The Big Read 2 episodes
Have I Got News for You 1 episode
2004Ruby Does the BusinessMini-series
Planet CookRoxie (voice)
French and Saunders The Executive1 episode
2005 Jackass HerselfEpisode: "Gumball 3000 Rally Special"
Gameshow Marathon Herself - Contestant4 episodes
2006 Cirque de Celebrité Presenter10 episodes
Popetown The Pope (voice)10 episodes
Dawn French's Girls Who Do Comedy Herself3 episodes
2009 Taking the Flak CandidaEpisode: "Black Gold"
2012Ruby Wax's Mad ConfessionsHerself
2013 Anna & Katy 1 episode
College Tour
The Spa Episode: "Christmas Special: Strangers in the Night"
2014 Crackanory Host - PresenterEpisode: "Let Me Be the Judge & I'm Still Here"
2017 Who Do You Think You Are? Herself1 episode
Head Talks
Thunderbirds Are Go Hayley Edmonds (voice)Episode: "Bolt from the Blue"
2018Ruby Wax: How to Be HumanPresenterMini-series
2020 Question Time Herself1 episode
2021When Ruby Wax Met…3 episodes
2022 Countdown Dictionary corner; 5 episodes
The Great Celebrity Bake Off for Stand Up to Cancer 1 episode
Celebrity Gogglebox for Stand Up to Cancer 1 episode; Series 20 episode 8
Trailblazers: A Rocky Mountain Road Trip3 episodes [47]
2023Ruby Wax: Cast Away2 episodes
The Weakest Link Celebrity Contestant1 episode

Bibliography

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