- The spin-off BBC show starring British actress will hit screens on Wednesday
- READ MORE: The actor who’s been in everything – but do you know his name?
She’s got a face that many would recognise – but could you name her?
Lucy Punch is the star of her very own sitcom as Amandaland – spin-off of popular BBC comedy Motherland – hits UK TV screens tonight.
But it has been a long road to leading lady for the 47-year-old actress, who has enjoyed countless small roles in small and big screen and cemented herself as a supporting character in Hollywood – but never quite making it as the biggest name.
However, as Amandaland follows Punch’s high-maintenance, uptight Amanda as she navigates motherhood and divorce while promoting herself as a local celebrity, the actress is officially a top prime time star.
She stars opposite TV legend Joanna Lumley, who is her on-screen mother, and Philippa Dunne, who plays Amanda’s long-suffering best friend Anne.
But British viewers will likely be familiar with the actress’s work over a series of decades and she is well-known for her charming portrayal of irksome characters who are often the source of their peers’ annoyance.
The west London-born actress currently lives in LA alongside her visual artist husband, Dinos Chapman, and their two children – though the family recently had to vacate their property in Laurel Canyon after the ‘devastating’ fires threatened to destroy their home.
Over the years, Lucy has played roles in dozens of productions including Hot Fuzz, Bad Teacher and St Trinian’s.
She began life in Hammersmith, London and later attended the prestigious private school, Godolphin and Latymer School, before heading to University College London to study history.

Now, Lucy is the star in a new spin-off, Amandaland, where she spotlights as a post-popular yummy-mummy struggling to cope with a divorce – all while navigating the new surroundings of a less affluent part of town

Lucy began life in Hammersmith, London and later attended the prestigious private school, Godolphin and Latymer School, before heading to University College London to study history (pictured in 2024)
But it wasn’t to last, with the star quickly realising her true calling and she promptly dropped out of university to pursue a career in acting.
As a teenager, she always shared an interest in the arts and had performed at the National Youth Theatre between the ages of 16 and 19. She took on her breakout TV role in The Adventures of Robin Hood in 1998.
She later had a role in Let Them Eat Cake, a BBC sitcom starring Jennifer Saunders and Dawn French, that aired in 1999. Shortly after, she managed to bag roles in episodes of Poirot and Midsomer Murders as well as a part as a receptionist in Doc Martin.
After several years of steady jobs in both TV and film – bored of being cast as ‘posh idiots’ – Lucy ended up moving to LA during the early 2000s, where she was given a role in the comedy show, The Class.
However, work began to dry up, leaving the actress questioning whether she really wanted to pursue the vocation. Her mother even suggested she consider becoming a chiropodist – a specialist in prevention of foot disorders.
But things took a positive turn for Lucy when in 2009 she was cast in Woody Allen’s 2010 film, You Will Meet A Tall Dark Stranger, after Nicole Kidman dropped out.
In the film, she took on the role of Anthony Hopkins’ gold-digger girlfriend Charmaine, delivering scene stealing performances while radiating in a platinum blonde wig.
She previously described the role as life changing. ‘Getting that was a huge endorsement. I still had to audition for things, but the feeling was ,”If she’s good enough for Woody…,”‘ she told The Guardian.

The British born actress currently lives in LA alongside her visual artist husband, Dinos Chapman (pictured) and their two children – though the family recently had to vacate their property in Laurel Canyon after the ‘devastating’ fires threatened to snatch their home
While she said the role was ‘fun’, Lucy revealed in a later interview that she hadn’t enjoyed having to ‘wear these tiny outfits’ and watch what she ate. ‘That side was really, really boring,’ she told Vulture.
In an interview with The Independent last week, the actress described the project as a ‘failure’ in hindsight – despite having previously called it ‘life changing’.
‘There are plenty of [personal regrets] that I don’t want to actually resurrect and talk about. My list of failures? I did a film with Woody Allen, a very long time ago, and I’d been out of work for a long time before I got that,’ she told the publication.
‘That really changed my life, getting that job, because I was ready to pack it all in. It’s difficult to say that now because of all the stuff that’s happened around him since then.’
Nevertheless, she said she remains ‘proud’ of what was one of her breakthrough films.
Since then, she has taken on a string of TV and film gigs across both sides of the Atlantic, including the 2010 film Dinner for Schmucks with Steve Carrell and A Little Bit of Heaven with Kate Hudson.
She also took parts in a number of films alongside big industry names, playing alongside Joanna Lumley in Ella Enchanted and Simon Pegg in Hot Fuzz.
Lucy also previously credited her part in the 2010 film Bad Teacher, with being responsible for her progression in the industry.

She will star opposite TV legend Joanna Lumley (pictured) in a spin-off to the hit Motherland – but the programme will give Lucy’s infamously irritating character, Amanda the spotlight as she navigates a divorce while raising two tumultuous teenagers

In Woody Allen’s 2010 film, the actress took on the role of Anthony Hopkins’ gold-digger girlfriend Charmaine

More recently, Lucy has performed in a handful of British sitcoms, including Motherland and the BBC medic show, Bloods in 2021
Reflecting on the role in 2011, Lucy told You Magazine that the role ‘changed everything’ for her.
Lucy previously admitted the conservative wardrobe that came with the role offered much needed respite from other roles in which she’d be cast as tight-dress wearing love interests.
She said she relieved not to have to ‘worry about fitting into miniskirts and tossing around in high heels and tons of makeup and looking fake-y attractive.’
Over the course of her career, Lucy has played a grand total of four evil step-sisters. In 2014 she took the part alongside industry heavyweights Meryl Streep and Johnny Depp in the Disney Adaptation of the Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine musical.
Reflecting on her archetypal role of unlikable women, she The Guardian at the time: ‘I was always playing witches and crazy women.’
She added: ‘When I was 11, I had an Ugly Sister birthday party. All my idea.
‘Most girls want to be a fairy or a princess, but there I am with beauty spots and fur and fluorescent pink kiss-curls. When I told my mother about Into the Woods, she was like, “Oh darling, not again”.’
More recently, Lucy has performed in a handful of British sitcoms, including Motherland and the BBC medic show, Bloods in 2021.
Often typecast as the vexatious blonde, the actress admitted she was relieved to play a ‘respected’ woman.
Discussing the role at the time, she said: ‘It was nice to play someone that I respected, a capable, practical woman who is fantastic at her job. But when you see her with him, she’s in freefall.
‘She’s a woman in her 40s, who is so used to being in control, and then loses it and is just… melting.’

Lucy Punch pictured with her husband, Dinos Chapman, at the Netflix premiere of A Series of Unfortunate Events in LA in 2018
But it’s not to say the actress doesn’t appreciate her characters.
In a recent interview, Lucy told The Independent: ‘I’ve always liked people just verging on the grotesque. Not to be friends with, of course, but just to observe.’
A sentiment she previously reiterated in 2021 when she told The iPaper: ‘I have played… A lot of b***hes and witches and ugly stepsisters.’
The theme prevailed for Lucy who went on to take on the role of the super posh and polished Amanda, who was queen bee of the school yard platoon, much to the envy of her rival mothers.
She spent three seasons working on the BBC show Motherland – written by Sharon Horgan, Holly Walsh, Helen Serafinowicz and Barunka O’Shaughnessy – alongside Diane Morgan, Anna Maxwell Martin, Oliver Chris and Tanya Moodie.
After the series came to a close in 2022, it was revealed that there would be a spin-off of the show with Lucy taking on the lead role opposite Joanna Lumley, who is returning as Amanda’s cruel mother, Felicity.
Speaking to The Times, Lucy sang the praises of her co-star, who joined her as her onscreen mother in Ella Enchanted in 2004.
Lucy said: ‘I love Joanna so much. Occasionally I’m worried what my mum’s thinking. But truthfully, Joanna would be my second choice of mother. I’ve already got a lovely, perfect mum. Joanna’s a solid, definite number two.’
The first episode will air at 9pm on Wednesday 5 February with all six parts becoming available to watch on BBC iPlayer.
The Motherland star now lives in Los Angeles with her son, Rex, nine and three-year-old, along with her partner, Dinos Chapman.
Dinos, who was born in London, is one of a two brother-duo of visual artists known as the Chapman Brothers.
Also known as Konstantinos, Dinos began working with his brother, Iakovos, professionally known as Jake, in 1991 with the two going on to build a portfolio of shocking works over the course of their career.
Their work, which included incarnations of hell, Nazi, Freudian, apocalyptic, and Biblical themes, earned them a nomination for the Turner Prize in 2003.
Many of their works were of plastic models of fiberglass mannequins of people. One early piece displayed 83 scenes of torture and disfigurement derivative of those recorded by Francisco Goya, in his series, The Disasters of War.

The Motherland star now lives in Los Angeles with her son, Rex, nine and three-year-old, along with her partner, Dinos Chapman
In 2008, they produced a series of works that appropriated original watercolors by Adolf Hitler.
Dinos was previously married to Tiphaine de Lussy with whom he had two children with. He and Lucy now live together with their two sons.
The creative nature of the couple’s jobs can make childcare difficult, with Lucy admitting the two have to divide childcare in ‘a very mismanaged, chaotic way’.
But as her career is set to shoot to new heights, fate has served Lucy a mixed bag, with the actress recently opening up about having to flee her US home after it was caught up in the LA fires.
Lucy, who lives in Laurel Canyon in LA, with Dinos and their two sons, opened up about the ordeal in an interview with The Times.
While the family were lucky enough to salvage their home, she said fires were ‘shocking and devastating’ for many of her friends.
‘It was shocking and devastating for a lot of friends. It’s like imagining east London flattened – schools, neighbourhoods just gone. How do you get that back? It’s going to be years and years,’ she said.
She also told how she has ensured her partner and son, who remained in LA have their belongs packed in case they needed to ‘run out the door again’, after the family were forced to escape to Joshua Tree desert last month.
The Motherland actress even admitted that the tragedy of the LA fires, combined with the recent voting of Donald Trump, had left her questioning whether to remain in the US having spent the last 20-years there.
Lucy, who moved to LA in 2006, shared: ‘I’ve always got one foot out the door, wherever I am. I never got round to getting a green card. I’m on these rolling visas, which is ridiculous: I have a home there and I have two American children. But I can’t commit to anywhere. I get itchy feet. I like being a little bit here and a little bit there.’
Here, FEMAIL takes a look at Lucy’s illustrious career, who boasts an enviable resume – as she prepares to be back on our screens…
Motherland 2020-2022

Lucy (far right)was one of a start studded cast including, Diane Morgan, Anna Maxwell Martin, Oliver Chris and Tanya Moodie, in the hit BBC series, Motherland
Lucy was one of a star studded cast including, Diane Morgan, Anna Maxwell Martin, Oliver Chris and Tanya Moodie, in the hit BBC series, Motherland.
The show was written by Sharon Horgan, Holly Walsh, Helen Serafinowicz and Barunka O’Shaughnessy.
Lucy played the hilariously self-obsessed mother, Amanda, in the hit series, which explored the trials and tribulations of raising a family in middle-class suburbia – from competitive children, to motherly rivalry and the grimier sides of parenthood.
Amanda is as outrageously loathsome as she is beautiful and organised.
One of Lucy’s opening lines to a fellow mother is: ‘You work so hard, I really admire how you can just switch off your family and focus on your job because I would just hate myself too much.’
Speaking on why she loves playing terrible people so much in a recent interview, Lucy told The Independent: ‘Smugness and self-satisfaction and ego alongside massive insecurity, they make an interesting mix.

Written by Sharon Horgan, Holly Walsh, Helen Serafinowicz and Barunka O’Shaughnessy, the hit show offered an often cringe-inducing picture of motherhood in the suburbs on London.
‘I’ve always liked people just verging on the grotesque. Not to be friends with, of course, but just to observe.’
Reiterating the sentiment, she told The iPaper in 2021: ‘I have played… A lot of b***hes and witches and ugly stepsisters.’