Theatre Richardson began her career in regional theatre at
Leeds Playhouse, and in 1984 at the
Open Air Theatre in London's
Regent's Park, when she appeared in ''
A Midsummer Night's Dream'' with
Ralph Fiennes and
Richard E. Grant. Her first professional work in London's
West End was in a revival of
Anton Chekhov's
The Seagull in 1985. This production also featured her mother, Vanessa Redgrave. Soon afterward, Richardson starred in a London stage production of
High Society, adapted from the
Cole Porter film. Richardson made her Broadway debut in 1993 in the title role of
Anna Christie, which is where she met future husband
Liam Neeson. She was nominated for a
Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play at the
47th Tony Awards for that role. In 1998, Richardson played the role of
Sally Bowles in
Sam Mendes's revival of
Cabaret on
Broadway, for which she won the
Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical at the
52nd Tony Awards. The following year, Richardson returned to Broadway in
Closer, for which she was nominated for the
Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play, and in 2005 she appeared again with the
Roundabout, this time as
Blanche DuBois in the revival of
Tennessee Williams's
A Streetcar Named Desire, She later starred as
Mary Shelley in the 1986 film
Gothic, a fictionalised account of the author's creation of
Frankenstein. The following year, Richardson starred with
Kenneth Branagh and
Colin Firth in
A Month in the Country, directed by
Pat O'Connor. Director
Paul Schrader signed Richardson for the title role of
Patty Hearst in the 1988 docudrama film
Patty Hearst about the heiress and her kidnapping. Richardson's performances with
Robert Duvall and
Faye Dunaway in ''
The Handmaid's Tale and Christopher Walken, Rupert Everett and Helen Mirren in The Comfort of Strangers (directed by Schrader) won her the 1990 Evening Standard
British Film Award for Best Actress. In 1991, Richardson appeared in The Favour, the Watch and the Very Big Fish'' with
Bob Hoskins. He later credited her with giving him the best kiss of his life during the film. Hoskins stated, "She got hold of me and kissed me like I've never been kissed before. I was gobsmacked." Richardson was named Best Actress at the 1994
Karlovy Vary International Film Festival for ''
Widows' Peak and that same year appeared in Nell with Jodie Foster and future husband Liam Neeson. She appeared in the Disney film remake The Parent Trap'' in 1998 alongside
Dennis Quaid, as Elizabeth James, the divorced mother of
Lindsay Lohan's characters Hallie Parker and Annie James. Additional film credits include
Blow Dry (2001),
Chelsea Walls (2001),
Waking Up in Reno (2002),
Maid in Manhattan (2002),
Asylum (2005), which won Richardson a second
Evening Standard Award for Best Actress,
The White Countess (2005), and
Evening (2007). Her last screen appearance was as Mrs. Kingsley, the headmistress of a girls' school in the 2008 comedy
Wild Child. During the last week of January 2009, Richardson recorded her offscreen role as Ruth Mallory, the wife of climber
George Mallory, who disappeared while climbing
Mount Everest during a 1924 expedition, in the 2010 documentary film
The Wildest Dream, for which Liam Neeson provided narration.
Television Richardson made her American television debut in a small role in the 1984 miniseries
Ellis Island. That same year, she made her British television debut in an episode of the BBC series
Oxbridge Blues. The following year, she appeared as Violet Hunter with
Jeremy Brett and
David Burke in
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes in the episode entitled "
The Copper Beeches." Richardson starred with
Judi Dench,
Michael Gambon and Kenneth Branagh in a 1987
BBC adaptation of the
Henrik Ibsen play
Ghosts; with
Maggie Smith and
Rob Lowe in a 1993 BBC adaptation of
Suddenly, Last Summer by Tennessee Williams; as
Zelda Fitzgerald in the 1993 television movie
Zelda;
Haven (2001) on
CBS and
The Mastersons of Manhattan (2007) on
NBC. Richardson appeared as a celebrity judge on
Top Chef,
season 5. ==Personal life==