Rebecca Lee
Acting
Biography
Rebecca Lee is known for The Cleaner (2021), Call the Midwife (2012) and The B@it (2019). Rebecca trained at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. Her stage credits include Tanya in Jerusalem, Viola in Twelfth Night (Watermill Theatre), Franny in Small Island (National Theatre), Lily in The First Man (Jermyn St Theatre). Rebecca was nominated for the Ian Charleston award for Friar Lawrence in Romeo and Juliet at the Watermill. Her TV credits include Babs (BBC), Sparks (Channel 4) and she has voiced commercials for Calm (2019) and The Body Shop (Christmas 2020). She has recorded numerous audiobooks including Crossfire by Malorie Blackman, The Wintering by Catherine May, Cream Buns and Crime by Robin Stevens and video games including Umbra In Sea of Thieves.
Known For

Drama following the lives of a group of midwives working in the poverty-stricken East End of London during the 1950s, based on the best-selling memoirs of Jennifer Worth.
Call the Midwife

Follow the adventures of Darrell Rivers as she leaves home for the first time to attend an all-girls’ boarding school. Set in post-war Britain on the sun-drenched cliffs of the Cornish coast, the series explores a nostalgic world of midnight feasts, lacrosse, pranks, a mystery ghost and lasting friendships.
Malory Towers

After CSI have done their stuff, the cleaner mops up the grisly remains. For Wicky, a bloodbath and the pub is all in a day's work.
The Cleaner

Miss Austen takes a literary mystery – Cassandra Austen notoriously burning her famous sister Jane’s letters – and reimagines it as a fascinating, witty and heart-breaking story of sisterly love, while creating in Cassandra a character as captivating as any Austen heroine.
Miss Austen

This is the story of Dame Barbara Windsor, the Cockney kid with a dazzling smile and talent to match. Preparing to perform in the theatre one cold evening in 1993, the cheeky, chirpy blonde Babs recounts the people and events that have shaped her life and career over fifty years from 1943 to 1993. She contemplates her lonely childhood and WWII evacuation; her decision to go from Barbara Ann Deeks to Barbara Windsor, inspired by the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II; her complicated relationship with her father; her doomed marriage to Ronnie Knight; capturing the attention of theatre director Joan Littlewood; and becoming the blonde bombshell in the Carry On films. Babs, ever the consummate professional, never lets her fans down whatever her personal anguish and steps on the stage to rapturous applause.
Babs

World renowned anthropologist Curtis is consumed by grief over his young daughters' deaths. He finds solace in immersing himself in preparations for his upcoming expedition to Asia, where he aims to unravel the mystery of "The First Man." However, he must confront an undercurrent of family conflict as he battles against his relatives' unsettling suspicions that his wife Martha is carrying his best friend Bigelow's child.