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Cressida Bonas

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Cressida Curzon Bonas (born 18 February 1989[1]) is an English actress and model.

Key Information

Early life and education

[edit]

Bonas was born in Winchester, Hampshire,[2] the only child of 1960s "it girl" Lady Mary-Gaye Georgiana Lorna Curzon[3] (daughter of the 6th Earl Howe's second marriage) and her third husband, Old Harrovian entrepreneur Jeffrey Bonas.[4] The Bonas family, once grocers and butchers, also owned textile mills in Castle Gresley and Burton-on-Trent; they constructed looms for their own use, and subsequently manufactured them for sale to other companies. The "Bonas Brothers" company closed operations in the 1980s, having produced, as its final line, elastic for women's tights.[5][6][7]

She has seven half-siblings: three paternal half-brothers from her father's first marriage; one maternal half-sister from her mother's first marriage; and two maternal half-sisters and a maternal half-brother from her mother's second marriage, including actress Isabella Calthorpe.[8]

Bonas studied ballet from the age of nine at the Royal Ballet School.[9] Later, Bonas won a sports scholarship to Prior Park College in Bath, Somerset, then completed her formal education at Stowe School. She went on to study dance at the University of Leeds, graduating with a 2:1, before undertaking postgraduate dance studies at the Trinity Laban Conservatoire in Greenwich.

Career

[edit]

Whilst at school, Bonas played Cockney housekeeper Mrs. Swabb in Alan Bennett's Habeas Corpus, Miss Julie in the eponymous play, and Laura in Tennessee Williams's The Glass Menagerie.[10]

She made her first screen appearance in 2009 with a small role in the TV series Trinity. Her theatrical debut came in 2014 at Hay Festival in the play There's a Monster in the Lake. The play was also staged at the Vault Festival in January 2015.[11] In May and June 2015 Bonas appeared as Laura in the one-woman play, An Evening with Lucian Freud, by Laura-Jane Foley, at the Leicester Square Theatre, directed by Ella Marchment. Jane Shilling in The Daily Telegraph praised the "charm and energy of Bonas's performance".[12] In June 2014 Bonas appeared in the film Tulip Fever (2015) as Mrs. Steen.[13] In December 2016 and January 2017 Bonas played the female lead role of Daisy Buchanan in the musical play Gatsby, at the Leicester Square Theatre, based on F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby. In 2020 she played Sheila Caffell in White House Farm, a British television series about the 1985 White House Farm murders.[14]

Bonas was photographed by Mario Testino for Vanity Fair after being included in the magazine's annual "International Best-Dressed List" in 2014.[15] In January 2015, after modelling for British brand Burberry, Bonas was announced to front the 2015 campaign of fashion company Mulberry. Her work for the brand includes a two-minute-long advertisement released in March that co-stars actor Freddie Fox.[16]

Personal life

[edit]

Bonas has been called an "it girl".[17][18] She was introduced to Prince Harry by her close friend Princess Eugenie in May 2012.[19] The couple were in a relationship for two years, leading to speculation in the British press that the two would eventually marry. On 30 April 2014, the couple was reported to have separated amicably.[20] In May 2018, she was a guest at the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle.[21]

On 18 August 2019, Bonas's engagement to real estate agent and property investor Henry David (Harry) Wentworth-Stanley (born 1989) was announced via a post on his Instagram page. Wentworth-Stanley is the son of Nicholas Philip Wentworth-Stanley, of a Hertfordshire landed gentry family,[22] and his first wife, Clare Husted (née Steel), former social editor for Tatler magazine, is now wife of George Mountbatten, 4th Marquess of Milford Haven.[23][24][25][16]

On 25 July 2020, Bonas and Harry married in a small, private ceremony in West Sussex.[26]

In July 2022 she confirmed her first pregnancy in The Spectator magazine.[27] In November 2022, she was spotted pushing her newborn son, Wilbur James Wentworth-Stanley, in a pram.[28] In a December 2022 interview, she revealed that she had undergone in vitro fertilisation (IVF) after struggling to conceive.[29]

In January 2025, it was announced that Bonas was pregnant with the couple's second child using frozen embryo from her earlier IVF treatment.[30] In June 2025, the couple welcomed their second child, a daughter named Delphina Pandora Wentworth-Stanley. Bonas paid tribute to her late half-sister, Pandora Cooper-Key, who died in July 2024 after a 24-year cancer battle, by naming her daughter in her honour.[31]

Selected credits

[edit]

Theatre

[edit]
Year Play Role Venue Notes
2014; 2015 There's a Monster in the Lake Wolf Hay Festival; Vault Festival ;[32][33]
2015 The Importance of Being Earnest Cecily Cardew The London Oratory School [34]
2015 An Evening with Lucian Freud Laura Leicester Square Theatre, London [35]
2016–2017 The Great Gatsby Daisy Buchanan Leicester Square Theatre, London [36]
2017 Mrs. Orwell Sonia Orwell Old Red Lion Theatre, London [37]

Film and television

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
2009 Trinity Cheerleader [38]
2016 Doctor Thorne Patience Oriel [39]
2017 The Bye Bye Man Sasha [40]
2017 Tulip Fever Mrs. Steen [41]
2020 White House Farm Sheila Caffell [42]

References

[edit]
[edit]

Grokipedia

from Grokipedia
Cressida Bonas (born 18 February 1989) is an English actress and model recognized for her work in theater, film, and television, including roles in the horror film The Bye Bye Man (2017), the period drama Tulip Fever (2017), and the true-crime miniseries White House Farm (2020), where she portrayed Sheila Caffell.[1][2][3] She first garnered widespread media attention due to her two-year relationship with Prince Harry, which lasted from 2012 to 2014.[4] Bonas, who studied contemporary dance at the University of Leeds after attending Stowe School, comes from an aristocratic family as the daughter of Lady Mary-Gaye Curzon—daughter of the 6th Earl Howe—and entrepreneur Jeffrey Bonas; she is the youngest of her seven half-siblings.[5][6] Bonas began her career in modeling before transitioning to acting, making her stage debut in the 2014 production of There's a Monster in the Lake at the Hay Festival and earning acclaim for her portrayal of Sonia Brownell in the 2017 play Mrs Orwell at the Old Red Lion Theatre.[3] Her film roles often feature supporting parts in ensemble casts, such as the wife of a Dutch merchant in Tulip Fever, directed by Justin Chadwick, and Sasha, a college student, in the supernatural thriller The Bye Bye Man. On television, she appeared as Patience Oriel in the 2016 ITV adaptation of Anthony Trollope's Doctor Thorne and took on the lead role of Sheila Caffell in the 2020 ITV series White House Farm, which dramatizes the 1985 murders in Essex. More recently, Bonas starred in the 2024 sci-fi horror film Touchdown.[1] In addition to acting, she has contributed essays to publications like The Spectator, where she has written on topics including motherhood and fertility.[7] In her personal life, Bonas married property developer Harry Wentworth-Stanley, whose family has ties to the British aristocracy through his stepfather, the 4th Marquess of Milford Haven, in a private ceremony at Cowdray Park in West Sussex on 25 July 2020.[8] The couple welcomed their first child, son Wilbur James Wentworth-Stanley, in 2022 after undergoing IVF, and their second child, daughter Delphina Pandora Wentworth-Stanley, on 9 June 2025, also conceived via a frozen embryo; the middle name Pandora honors her late half-sister, who died in 2024.[9] Bonas has been open about her experiences with infertility and the joys and challenges of early parenthood in her writing, emphasizing the importance of support networks.[10]

Early life and education

Early life

Cressida Curzon Bonas was born on 18 February 1989 in Winchester, Hampshire, England.[11] She is the only child of businessman Jeffrey Bonas, whose family owned textile mills in the Midlands, and Lady Mary-Gaye Georgiana Lorna Curzon, a 1960s socialite and daughter of Edward Curzon, 6th Earl Howe.[5][12] Bonas grew up in a blended family as the youngest of eight siblings. Her half-siblings include three paternal half-brothers, George, Charles, and Henry Bonas, as well as four maternal half-siblings: Pandora Cooper-Key from her mother's first marriage to Esmond Cooper-Key, and Georgiana, Jacobi, and Isabella Anstruther-Gough-Calthorpe from her mother's second marriage to John Anstruther-Gough-Calthorpe.[5][13] This complex family structure shaped her early years, with time spent across multiple households influenced by her mother's aristocratic connections and her father's entrepreneurial world.[14] During her childhood, Bonas was exposed to the equestrian pursuits common in her social circle and began dance training at a young age, which became a significant outlet for her.[15] Family travels and a privileged upbringing in locations including London and Norfolk further enriched her early experiences, fostering a sense of adventure and cultural awareness. At age 11, she transitioned to formal education.[5]

Education

Bonas developed an early interest in dance, joining the Royal Ballet School at age nine.[16] She began her secondary education with a sports scholarship to Prior Park College, a boarding school in Bath, Somerset, where she excelled in tennis.[5] Later, she completed her formal schooling at Stowe School, an independent co-educational boarding school in Buckinghamshire, earning an A in drama A-level alongside a B in English literature and a C in sports science; during this time, she participated in school productions, including a role as the Cockney housekeeper Mrs. Swabb in Alan Bennett's Habeas Corpus.[17] Bonas also remained active in sports, continuing her passion for tennis.[5] Following Stowe, Bonas pursued higher education at the University of Leeds, where she earned a bachelor's degree in dance in 2011.[18] There, she became involved in student theater and dance societies, further honing her performance skills.[19] In 2011, Bonas enrolled in postgraduate training at the Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance in London, completing a one-year program in 2012 focused on contemporary dance techniques.[20] This specialized study built on her undergraduate foundation, emphasizing expressive and innovative movement practices.[18]

Career

Modeling

Bonas began attracting attention in the fashion world shortly after graduating from the University of Leeds in 2012, though her formal modeling work remained limited in the early years. In 2013, rumors circulated that she had been cast in a Burberry advertising campaign, but Bonas publicly clarified that she was not involved in any such role at the time.[21] The following year, she reportedly turned down multiple offers from designer brands to pursue tutoring opportunities instead.[22] Her modeling career gained notable traction in 2015, when she was chosen to front Mulberry's spring/summer campaign. Photographed by Lotten Holmqvist, the images captured Bonas embodying the brand's whimsical English countryside vibe through playful poses and outfits like floral dresses and leather bags, culminating in a short digital film where she danced across rural landscapes.[23][24] That same year, she landed the cover of Miss Vogue's April issue, photographed by David Soma, which showcased her fresh, approachable appeal and marked a key breakthrough in editorial fashion.[25] Bonas's aesthetic, often characterized as an "aristocratic bohemian" blend of effortless grunge, boho layers, and aristocratic ease, resonated widely in the industry. This style was highlighted in features across British Vogue and Tatler, where she appeared in editorials and street-style spreads emphasizing thrown-together looks like denim overalls, Adidas track jackets, and floral maxis.[26][27][28] These modeling endeavors, particularly around 2013–2014, offered Bonas early visibility in public spheres, paving the way for her subsequent pivot toward acting while establishing her as a style influencer in British fashion circles.[29]

Acting

Cressida Bonas began her acting journey building on her formal training in contemporary dance at the University of Leeds.[6] She supplemented this with additional classes in the Meisner technique during a period in Sydney, emphasizing instinctive responses and emotional authenticity in performance.[30] Her professional stage debut came in 2014 with the role of a wolf in the eccentric drama There's a Monster in the Lake at the Hay Festival, marking her entry into live performance and earning positive notices for her physicality and commitment.[31][32] This led to a breakthrough in 2015 with the one-woman show An Evening with Lucien Freud at the Leicester Square Theatre, where she portrayed the artist's muse and received acclaim for her raw, immersive delivery that built her reputation in intimate British theater settings.[33] Subsequent stage roles, including Daisy Buchanan in the immersive production of The Great Gatsby at Leicester Square Theatre in 2016 and Sonia Brownell in Mrs Orwell in 2017, further solidified her presence in West End and fringe theater, showcasing her versatility in period and biographical pieces.[34][3][35] Bonas expanded into television and film in 2016 with her screen debut as Patience Oriel in the ITV adaptation Doctor Thorne, adapting her stage-honed intensity to the subtler demands of camera work.[36] This transition presented challenges, as she navigated the shift from live audience energy to on-screen nuance, later reflecting on building confidence amid self-doubt and external labels tied to her personal life.[37] In 2017, she took on supporting film roles as Mrs. Steen in the historical drama Tulip Fever and Sasha in the supernatural horror The Bye Bye Man, roles that highlighted her range while exposing her to international production scales and the pressures of Hollywood scrutiny.[38][39] In 2020, Bonas starred as Sheila Caffell in the ITV true-crime miniseries White House Farm, dramatizing the 1985 Essex murders and earning praise for her portrayal of the central figure.[40] These projects marked a pivotal evolution, blending her theater roots with cinematic storytelling despite the industry's competitive demands. By 2024, Bonas demonstrated sustained momentum with the role of Emma in the sci-fi horror Touchdown, a lockdown-shot production that underscored her adaptability in genre work amid evolving personal commitments like motherhood.[41] Following the birth of her first child in 2022, she has expressed intent to balance family with acting pursuits, signaling ongoing career growth as of late 2025 without announced pauses.[42] Early publicity from her high-profile relationship with Prince Harry provided initial visibility but ultimately supported her focus on professional ambitions post-2014.[43]

Personal life

Relationship with Prince Harry

Cressida Bonas and Prince Harry were introduced in the summer of 2012 by his cousin, Princess Eugenie, at a music festival. Their early dating was kept private amid the scrutiny associated with Harry's royal status and his ongoing military commitments. Shortly after they began seeing each other, Harry deployed to Afghanistan for a four-month tour in late 2012, during which the couple maintained regular telephone contact to support one another.[44][45][46] The relationship became public in early 2013 when paparazzi photographed the couple exiting a restaurant in London's Notting Hill neighborhood. They made several joint appearances that year, including at the Glastonbury Festival in June, where they watched the Rolling Stones perform alongside celebrities like Kate Moss. In December 2013, Bonas accompanied Harry to the Charles Dickens Bicentenary celebrations at Westminster Abbey, marking one of their more formal outings. The following year, they attended events such as the WE Day UK charity rally in March and a Six Nations rugby match at Twickenham Stadium, further confirming their partnership amid growing media interest. This visibility also brought early exposure to Bonas's budding career in modeling and acting.[47][48][49][50][51] The intense media pressure surrounding their romance contributed to strains in the relationship, with Bonas reportedly seeking greater independence to pursue her own path. In April 2014, after nearly two years together, the couple parted ways amicably, with sources indicating the split was mutual and focused on personal growth rather than conflict. Harry returned from military duties around this time, but the decision allowed Bonas to step away from the royal spotlight.[52][44] Reflecting on the relationship in 2020 interviews, Bonas described how fear had limited her choices during that period, including anxieties about being perpetually labeled an "It girl" and losing her sense of self under public scrutiny. She noted the experience as intense but ultimately a source of personal growth, emphasizing lessons in overcoming fear that informed her later endeavors, such as launching her podcast Fear Itself.[53][54]

Marriage and family

Cressida Bonas rekindled her relationship with Harry Wentworth-Stanley, whom she first met while both were students at the University of Leeds, around 2017 after a brief earlier romance.[55][56] The couple announced their engagement in August 2019, with Wentworth-Stanley sharing the news on Instagram alongside a photo of Bonas's ring.[57] They married in a low-key ceremony on 25 July 2020 at Cowdray Park in West Sussex, limited to close family due to COVID-19 restrictions, where Bonas wore a simple high-street midi dress she had previously used in a music video.[58][8] The couple welcomed their first child, a son named Wilbur James Wentworth-Stanley, in November 2022; the name honors Wentworth-Stanley's late brother, James, who died by suicide in 2006.[59][60] In January 2025, Bonas revealed in an essay for The Spectator that she was expecting their second child, conceived using a frozen embryo from earlier IVF treatments, marking a joyful milestone after previous fertility challenges.[61] The baby, a daughter named Delphina Pandora Wentworth-Stanley, was born on 9 June 2025.[9][62] Bonas and Wentworth-Stanley reside in a flat in West London, though they have expressed interest in relocating to a larger family home.[63] Wentworth-Stanley works as a property developer specializing in residential and mixed-use projects at the firm Savills.[64] The couple shares philanthropic interests, particularly in mental health advocacy; Wentworth-Stanley has supported James' Place, a charity for men in suicidal crisis founded in memory of his brother, including by rowing across the Atlantic in 2016 to raise funds.[65] Bonas has drawn on her equestrian background to engage in related causes, aligning with their joint focus on wellness and community support.[57] Bonas has publicly discussed the challenges and joys of motherhood, including fears of loss and the emotional unpredictability of parenting, through her 2025 podcast Lessons From Our Mothers, co-hosted with her sister Isabella Branson.[66] She described motherhood as "frightening and unpredictable" yet "really beautiful," highlighting IVF struggles and the profound bonds formed with her children.[67][68] This private family life contrasts with her earlier high-profile romance, emphasizing a stable, low-media environment for raising their family.[69]

Credits

Theatre

Bonas made her stage debut in 2014 in Tallulah Brown's There's a Monster in the Lake, a surreal play about dementia and family, where she portrayed a picaresque wolf character, earning praise for her promising comedic timing and physicality in the role during its initial run at the Hay Festival and subsequent London performances at the Rosemary Branch Theatre.[70][71] In March 2015, she appeared in a charity gala production of Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest at the London Oratory School, taking on the role of Cecily Cardew in a three-night amateur staging that highlighted her elegant delivery of the character's witty innocence.[72][73] Later that year, Bonas starred in the one-woman play An Evening with Lucian Freud at the Leicester Square Theatre, embodying art student Laura in a intimate recounting of a night with the painter, which received critical acclaim for her nuanced portrayal of vulnerability and strength.[74] From December 2016 to January 2017, she led the immersive adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby at the Leicester Square Theatre, playing the glamorous Daisy Buchanan opposite Ludovic Hughes as Jay Gatsby, with reviewers noting her captivating embodiment of the character's tragic allure in the intimate, jazz-infused production.[75][76] In 2017, Bonas originated the role of Sonia Brownell in Mrs Orwell by Tony Cox, depicting the editor's complex relationship with George Orwell in his final days; the fringe production premiered at the Old Red Lion Theatre before transferring to the Southwark Playhouse, where her performance was lauded for persuasively capturing Sonia's intelligence and resilience amid emotional turmoil.[3][77] Her final major stage role to date came in 2018 with W.H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood's The Dog Beneath the Skin at the Jermyn Street Theatre, where she physically embodied the titular dog companion to the protagonist, drawing commendations for her adept physical comedy and masked, crawling performance in this satirical exploration of 1930s Europe.[78][79] Since 2018, Bonas has not taken on significant theatre roles, shifting her focus primarily to screen work while occasionally referencing her stage training in interviews.

Film and television

Bonas began her screen career with a minor cameo as a cheerleader in the 2009 ITV2 drama series Trinity, a college-set production that marked her initial foray into television acting.[80] Building on her theatre background, she secured her first significant television role as Patience Oriel, the supportive friend to the lead character, in the 2016 ITV three-part adaptation of Anthony Trollope's Doctor Thorne, directed by Julian Fellowes.[81] That same year, Bonas made her feature film debut as Mrs. Steen in Tulip Fever, a 17th-century romantic drama starring Alicia Vikander and Christoph Waltz, filmed in 2014 but released in 2017.[82] She followed this with the role of Sasha, the protagonist's girlfriend entangled in supernatural terror, in the 2017 American horror film The Bye Bye Man, directed by Stacy Title.[83] In 2020, Bonas portrayed Sheila Caffell, a central figure in the infamous 1985 Bamber family murders, in the ITV six-part true-crime miniseries White House Farm, earning acclaim for her nuanced depiction of vulnerability and tragedy.[84] Her most recent screen appearance came in 2024 as Emma, a key member of a friend group battling an alien threat during pandemic lockdown, in the horror thriller Touchdown, which world-premiered at London's FrightFest festival.[85]

References

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