Early years Ullman began her television career in 1980 playing
Lynda Bellingham's daughter in the television series
Mackenzie. "I really thought I was great when I did a quite serious soap opera for the BBC. I played a nice girl from
St John's Wood. 'Mummy, I think I'm pregnant. I don't know who's done it.' Then I would fall down a hill or something. 'EEEEE! Oh, no, lost another baby.' It seemed all I ever did was have miscarriages—or make yogurt." Ullman appeared in
Les Blair's
avant-garde Four in a Million, an improvised play about club acts, at London's
Royal Court Theatre. In 1981, she was cast in the
BBC Scotland sketch comedy programme
A Kick Up the Eighties, which in turn led to her being offered the sketch show
Three of a Kind, co-starring comedians
Lenny Henry and
David Copperfield. Ullman said, "My first reaction was you must be joking, as women are treated so shoddily in comedy. Big busty barmaids and all those sort of clichés just bore me rigid." Eventually a deal was struck with a proviso that she would have script approval and could choose her own costumes.
Three of a Kind premiered in July 1981, running for three series until 1983. Throughout the series, Ullman would also sing, performing comical spoofs of well-known artists of the era such as
Toyah,
Bananarama,
Jennifer Warnes, and
Dollar.
Three of a Kind led to a brief but successful singing career in 1983, as well as her winning her first
BAFTA (for "Best Light Entertainment Performance") in 1984. By this time, she had become a household name with the British media referring to her as "Our Trace". In 1985, she signed on to star in the
ITV sitcom
Girls on Top. She was cast as the promiscuous golddigger Candice Valentine. The show, co-starring
Dawn French,
Ruby Wax, and
Jennifer Saunders, continued for a second series without Ullman who bowed out after the first.
The Tracey Ullman Show In 1985, Ullman was persuaded by her husband, British independent television producer,
Allan McKeown, to join him in
Los Angeles, where he was already partially based. She set her sights on a film and stage career, believing that there was little in the way of television for her. Her British agent put together a videotape compilation of her work and began circulating it around Hollywood. The tape landed in the hands of Craig Kellem, vice president of comedy at
Universal Television. Brooks felt that a sketch show would best suit her. "Why would you do something with Tracey playing a single character on TV when her talent requires variety? You can't categorize Tracey, so it's silly to come up with a show that attempted to."
The Tracey Ullman Show debuted on 5 April 1987, along with
Married... with Children. The show also produced
The Simpsons as a series of animated shorts, or "
bumpers", which would air before and after commercial breaks.
The Simpsons shorts would eventually be spun-off into their own half-hour series in 1989.
The Tracey Ullman Show was awarded ten
Primetime Emmy Awards, with Ullman winning three, one in the category of
Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program in 1990. The show was the first Fox network primetime show to win an Emmy award. The show concluded after a four-season run in 1990.
HBO In 1991, Ullman's husband placed a successful bid on a television franchise in the
South of England. The television programming lineup agreed upon included a Tracey Ullman special. Unlike the Fox show, this programme would be shot entirely on location.
Tracey Ullman: A Class Act, a send-up of the
British class system, premiered on 9 January 1993 on
ITV. This led to
HBO in America becoming interested in having a special made for them, with the caveat that Ullman take on a more American subject. She chose
New York City.
Tracey Ullman Takes on New York debuted on 9 October 1993. The programme went on to win two Emmy Awards, a
CableAce Award, an
American Comedy Award, and a
Writers Guild of America Award. The success led to the creation of the HBO
sketch comedy series
Tracey Takes On... in 1996. Ullman returned to HBO in 2003 with the television special
Tracey Ullman in the Trailer Tales, which she also directed. She returned to HBO again in 2005 with her one-woman stage show
Tracey Ullman: Live and Exposed.
Purple Skirt and Oxygen In 2001, Ullman took a break from her multi-character-based work and created a fashion-based talk show for
Oxygen Network, ''
Tracey Ullman's Visible Panty Lines''. The series was spun-off from her
e-commerce clothing store
Purple Skirt. Interviewees included
Arianna Huffington and
Charlize Theron. The show ran for two seasons, concluding in 2002.
Showtime Upon her
naturalisation in the United States, it was announced in April 2007 that she would be making the switch from HBO to
Showtime after working fourteen years with the former. ''
Tracey Ullman's State of the Union'', a new sketch comedy series, debuted on 30 March 2008. It ran for three seasons, concluding in 2010.
Return to British television After an absence of over 30 years, Ullman returned to the BBC with the sketch comedy programme ''
Tracey Ullman's Show in 2016. It aired in the United States on HBO. In 2017, the show earned a BAFTA nomination for Best Make-Up and Hair Design, and its first Primetime Emmy Award nomination in the category of Outstanding Variety Sketch Series. In 2018, it garnered two additional Primetime Emmy Award nominations in the categories of Outstanding Variety Sketch Series and Outstanding Costumes for a Variety, Nonfiction, or Reality Programming. The show eventually led to the creation of the topical comedy programme Tracey Breaks the News'' in 2017.
Other notable work In 1995, she became the first modern-day cartoon voice of
Little Lulu. In 1999, she had a recurring role as an unconventional psychotherapist on
Ally McBeal. Her performance garnered her a Primetime Emmy Award, her seventh, and an American Comedy Award which was her eleventh. In 2005, she co-starred with
Carol Burnett in the television adaptation of
Once Upon a Mattress. She played Princess Winnifred, a role originally made famous by Burnett on Broadway. This time Burnett took on the role of the overbearing Queen Aggravain. In March 2014, Ullman was introduced as Genevieve Scherbatsky, the mother of character
Robin Scherbatsky in
How I Met Your Mother. On 15 February 2017, it was announced that she would star in the
Starz-BBC co-produced limited series adaptation of
Howards End, playing Aunt Juley Mund. On 14 May 2019, it was announced that Ullman would be portraying
Betty Friedan in the
FX limited series
Mrs. America. The nine-episode series premiered 15 April 2020 on
Hulu to favourable reviews. Her performance garnered her an
Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or Movie Primetime Emmy nomination. Ullman played councilwoman Irma Kostroski in the eleventh and twelfth seasons of
Curb Your Enthusiasm. ==Music career==