Burke's first role was in the 1982 film
Scrubbers, directed by
Swedish actress
Mai Zetterling and featuring
Pam St. Clement,
Robbie Coltrane,
Miriam Margolyes,
Honey Bane,
Debby Bishop and
Eva Mottley. The film was set in a
young offenders' institute for girls and was seen as a female version of the film
Scum. Burke appeared in a non-speaking role in a 1985
public information film about
heroin addiction. The following year she appeared in a non-speaking role as 'witness in doorway' in an award-winning advert for
The Guardians 'Points of View'. Burke first became familiar to television audiences as a player of minor roles in sketches by better-known performers such as
Harry Enfield,
Dawn French and
Jennifer Saunders. Early TV work included regular appearances on the chat show
The Last Resort hosted by
Jonathan Ross on UK Channel 4 in the mid-1980s, playing the characters 'Tina Bishop' and "Perry the Pre-pubescent Schoolboy". Bishop was a continually pregnant "expert" offering advice on household chores, always with disastrous results. Both Perry and Tina (renamed "Waynetta Slob") later re-appeared as recurring sketch characters in Harry Enfield programmes. Along with
French and Saunders, she has contributed to two
Comic Relief charity singles. She first appeared as a member of
Bananarama parody band
Lananeeneenoonoo in 1989, and then as a member of
Spice Girls look-alike band the Sugar Lumps in 1997. In real life Burke was a big fan of
Morrissey and appeared in the video for his 1989 single "
Ouija Board, Ouija Board" and later in the 2002
Channel 4 documentary
The Importance of Being Morrissey. On the 7 November 2023 episode of her ''Where There's a Will There's a Wake'' podcast, with
Dolly Alderton as her guest, Burke commented "We don't like Morrissey anymore...because he's a racist wanker". Alderton shared Burke's disappointment with Morrissey's views with Burke adding "We idolise these people...but then people are three-dimensional and you get to know what they really think about life and it's just always a disappointment." She became successful in her own right and although mainly associated with comedy, she has played several serious roles including that of
Queen Mary Tudor in the film
Elizabeth, which was released in 1998. In 1994 Burke was awarded the
Royal Television Society Award for Best Actress, for her performance as the mute Martha in the 1993 BBC TV series ''Mr. Wroe's Virgins''. The series was directed by
Danny Boyle and is based on
Jane Rogers' book about
John Wroe. Burke won the
Best Actress award at the
1997 Cannes Film Festival for her role in the gritty drama
Nil by Mouth. Burke was so convinced she would not win that she made no plans to attend the ceremony; when told shortly beforehand she had won, she found her passport was out of date. The film also earned her a
BAFTA nomination for
Best Actress in a Leading Role. From 1999 to 2001 she appeared as
Linda La Hughes in the BBC TV series
Gimme Gimme Gimme (which she developed with writer
Jonathan Harvey) where she was nominated for three
British Comedy Awards (winning one), two BAFTA TV Awards and a
National Television Award for her performance. In 2000, she appeared in the cult film
Love Honour and Obey with
Ray Burdis, and as Perry in the comedy film
Kevin & Perry Go Large. In 2003, she was listed in
The Observer as one of the 50 funniest acts in British comedy. Beginning in 2001, she stopped acting and began theatre directing, something she considers to be one of her true passions. She said in an interview with Dawn French in ''Dawn French's Girls Who Do Comedy'' that she no longer felt the same creative energy associated with acting that she used to have (she described it as a "feeling in my belly") and that for this reason she had stopped acting. However, since then, she has done some voice-over work, including UK TV adverts for Ski yoghurt (2005) and the voice of Rita's mum in the animated film
Flushed Away (2006). She also appeared in the 2007 Christmas Special of
The Catherine Tate Show as Nan's daughter Diane. In February 1990, she wrote and directed
Mr Thomas at the
Old Red Lion Theatre. It was filmed and shown on
Channel 4 the next year. In 2007, Burke contracted
Clostridioides difficile while in hospital for an operation, resulting in her having to pass directing duties on
Dying for It at the
Almeida Theatre (which starred
Charlie Condou and
Sophie Stanton who she worked with on
Gimme Gimme Gimme). In 2009, Burke made her television directorial debut with the
BBC Three sketch show series
Horne & Corden, starring
Mathew Horne and
James Corden. Burke wrote and appeared as a nun in the short autobiographical film "Better Than Christmas" for
Sky 1's
Little Crackers, a collection of comic shorts that aired in December 2010. On 19 January 2012, it was announced that Burke had written her first TV series; her short for
Little Crackers had led to the four-part series "Walking and Talking", based on her teenage years. Burke appeared as a nun in each episode of the series, which aired in the summer of 2012 on
Sky Atlantic. In 2011, Burke played
Connie Sachs in the
film adaptation of the novel
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. She was long-listed for a
BAFTA nomination for her performance as Supporting Actress in 2012. Burke appeared in the 2015
Peter Pan prequel film
Pan, as Mother Barnabas. In November 2015, Burke presented the BBC topical news panel show
Have I Got News for You. In 2019, Burke starred in her own self-titled three-part documentary ''Kathy Burke's All Woman''. The programme aired on Channel 4 and focused on the stereotypes and expectations of modern women. Burke touched on subjects such as marriage, pregnancy and cosmetic surgery. In 2021, Burke appeared as a guest judge in series 3 of ''
RuPaul's Drag Race UK''. Burke directed ITV's four-part murder mystery series
Holding, which premiered on 14 March 2022 and is based on
Graham Norton's novel of the same name. In 2022, Burke started a podcast called ''Where There's a Will, There's a Wake''. In the podcast Burke talks a guest through how the guest believes (or hopes) they will die and what they want to be done for their funeral. Notable guests have been
Jennifer Saunders,
Dawn French,
Emerald Fennell and
Steve McQueen. The podcast is produced by
Sony Music Entertainment. Burke published a memoir,
A Mind of My Own, in October 2025, which received positive reviews. ==Filmography==