Aisling Bea
Irish comedian, actress (born 1984)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aisling Clíodhnadh O'Sullivan (born 16 March 1984)[2], known professionally as Aisling Bea (/ˈæʃlɪŋ ˈbiː/ ASH-ling BEE), is an Irish comedian, actress and screenwriter. She created, wrote and starred in the comedy series This Way Up on Channel 4.[3][4] As a stand-up comedian, she won the So You Think You're Funny award at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2012, being only the second woman to win the award in its then-25-year history.[5] She also appears regularly on light entertainment comedy panel shows such as QI and 8 Out of 10 Cats and was a contestant on comedy game show Taskmaster.
- Comedian
- actress
- screenwriter
Aisling Bea | |
|---|---|
Bea in 2017 | |
| Born | Aisling Clíodhnadh O'Sullivan 16 March 1984 |
| Alma mater | Trinity College, Dublin (B.A.) London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art |
| Occupations |
|
| Years active | 2009–present |
| Known for | |
| Partner | Jack Freeman (2022–present) |
| Children | 1[1] |
| Website | aislingbea |
Early life and education
Bea was born Aisling Cliodhnadh O'Sullivan[6] in Kildare, Ireland.[7][8][9] Her father, Brian, was a horse veterinarian who died by suicide when Bea was three years old; she was not told how he had died until she was 13.[10][11][12] She adopted the stage surname "Bea" as a tribute to her father, taking it from a short form of his first name.[2][13][14] Bea and her younger sister, Sinéad (who is now a Hollywood costume designer),[13] were raised by their mother, Helen (née Moloney), a secondary school teacher who had previously trained jockeys at the Racing Academy and Centre of Education.[15] She was also a professional flat-race jockey, and later ran a jockey school.[13][14] Her family was "obsessed" with horses and race meetings.[16]
Her great-aunt was playwright Siobhán Ní Shúilleabháin,[17] and musician Liam O'Flynn was a family friend.[18] It has been said that Bea's grandfather is Gaelic poet, Mícheál Ó Súilleabháin,[13][12][19] but this has been disputed.[20]
In her youth, Bea worked as a tour guide at the Irish National Stud.[13][citation needed] However, she knew from a young age that she was not interested in the horse racing industry; instead, she had a passion for performing.[10]
Bea was educated at Presentation Secondary School, Kildare Town, a convent school.[13] She studied French and philosophy at Trinity College Dublin.[21][22] While there, she was an active member of the drama society,[13] and part of a student sketch comedy group.[23] She then studied at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA).[24] She has said she did not enjoy this experience, but that it has helped with her comedy.[13]
Career
After graduating from drama school, Bea spent two years trying to get work in theatre as a dramatic actress.[25] Instead, she was cast mainly in comedic television series including Cardinal Burns and Sharon Horgan's Dead Boss (both 2012).[13] While filming Dead Boss in 2011, Bea decided to try stand-up comedy.[2][13][26] In 2012, she was the first woman in 20 years (and only the second in its history)[13] to win the Gilded Balloon So You Think You're Funny award at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.[2][27] In 2013, she was nominated for Best Newcomer at the Edinburgh Comedy Awards for her show C'est La Bea.[28]
The exposure brought by these awards and festival appearances marked a "turning point" in Bea's career[24] and she began to appear as a regular guest on panel shows including QI and Insert Name Here.[29] Bea and Yasmine Akram co-wrote and co-hosted the BBC Radio 4 comedy folklore series Micks and Legends (2012, 2015);[30] it was nominated for a Chortle Award in 2013.[31] Bea won the 2014 British Comedy Award for Best Female TV Comic,[32] and returned to Edinburgh in 2015 with the live show Plan Bea.[33] In 2015, she presented Channel 4's alternative election coverage with David Mitchell and Jeremy Paxman.[34] In 2016, she became a team captain on 8 Out of 10 Cats[35] and was a contestant on series 5 of Taskmaster in 2017.[citation needed]

Bea has continued to act in television sitcoms including Trollied (2014–2015),[13][citation needed] The Delivery Man (2015),[13] Amy Huberman's Irish television series Finding Joy (2018),[citation needed] and Living with Yourself (2019).[36][37][38] She acted in the crime dramas The Fall (2016) and Hard Sun (2018), She starred in the ITV drama series Quiz (2020) based off the true story of the Who Wants to be a Millionaire coughing scandal.[citation needed]
In 2018, she and Sara Pascoe began to co-host the BBC Radio 2 comedy chat show What's Normal?[39] She recorded a 15-minute stand-up special that was released on Netflix in late 2018.
Bea wrote and starred in the Channel 4 comedy series This Way Up (2019–2021).[12] For her writing, she won the BAFTA 2020 British Academy Television Craft Award for Breakthrough Talent.[2][40][41] In 2022, she also received a nomination for British Academy Television Award for Best Female Comedy Performance for the series.[42]
In January 2024, Bea was one of 10 comedians in Amazon Prime Video's LOL: Last One Laughing Ireland.[43]
Personal life
Bea previously dated Michael Sheen and Andrew Garfield.[12] In June 2024, Bea announced that she was expecting her first child, with her partner Jack Freeman.[44] Their daughter was born in late August 2024.[45]
Bea is close to fellow comedians Roisin Conaty, Katherine Ryan and Sharon Horgan, calling them her "comedy sisters".[12]
Bea lives in London.[12]
In May 2025, Bea appeared on Who Do You Think You Are and found out that her great-great-grandmother, Áine O’Donoghue, was the first teacher on the Blasket Islands.[48]
Activism
Bea was a vocal supporter of the Repeal the 8th campaign in the successful 2018 Irish referendum to introduce legal abortion in the Republic of Ireland;[24][49] she contributed an essay to Una Mullally's Repeal the 8th a month before the vote.[50] She previously campaigned for same-sex marriage legislation in the successful 2015 Irish referendum.[24]
She frequently shares posts about the humanitarian situation in Palestine.[51][52] In 2024, Bea participated in the Cinema for Gaza auction,[53] and was a signatory calling for the end of arms sales to Israel.[54] In September 2025, she signed an open pledge with Film Workers for Palestine pledging not to work with Israeli film institutions "that are implicated in genocide and apartheid against the Palestinian people."[55]
Filmography
Acting
Television
| Year | Title | Channel | Role | Other roles | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | Fair City | RTÉ One | Cliodhna Norris | 3 episodes | ||
| We Are Klang | BBC Three | Inspector | 1 episode | [56] | ||
| The Roy Files | TRTÉ and RTÉ TWO (Ireland), CBBC (UK) | Ticket girl (voice) | Episode: "Truth and Lies" | |||
| Belonging to Laura | TV3/BAI | Leanne Thompson | Television film | |||
| 2009–2014 | The Savage Eye | RTE | Various | 4 episodes | ||
| 2010 | Inn Mates | BBC Three | Elf | Pilot | [57] | |
| L.O.L | BBC | Various | Writer | Pilot | ||
| Freedom | BBC Two | Aisling | Pilot | [58] | ||
| Come Fly with Me | BBC One | Mary O'Mara | 1 episode | [59] | ||
| 2011 | Lewis | ITV | Hotel receptionist | 1 episode | ||
| Holby City | BBC One | Amelia Warner | 1 episode | |||
| 2012 | Cardinal Burns | E4 | Sally | 5 episodes | [13] | |
| Dead Boss | BBC Three | Laura Stephens | 6 episodes | [13] | ||
| In with the Flynns | BBC One | Naimah | 1 episode | [60] | ||
| The Town | ITV | Carly | 3 episodes | |||
| Trivia | Ruth | 6 episodes | ||||
| 2013 | Fit | CBBC | Various | 13 episodes | [61] | |
| Quick Cuts | BBC Four | Customer | 1 episode | |||
| 2014 | Playhouse Presents | Sky Arts | Toddler Woman | 1 episode | ||
| The Assets | ABC | Kara Jensen | 1 episode | |||
| Vodka Diaries | BBC Three | Nic | Pilot | [62] | ||
| The Sunny | BBC Two | Emma | Pilot | [63] | ||
| 2014–2015 | Trollied | Sky One | Charlie | 13 episodes | [13] | |
| 2015 | Funny Valentines | BBC iPlayer | Sarah | 2 episodes | [64] | |
| The Delivery Man | ITV | Lisa | 6 episodes | [13] | ||
| The Trap | Marie | |||||
| Nish Kumar's Christmas | Sky Arts | Agent | Comedy short | |||
| The Cloud | [13] | |||||
| 2016 | Damned | Channel 4 | Anne-Marie | 1 episode | ||
| The Fall | ZDFneo (Germany), RTÉ One (Ireland), BBC Two (UK) | Kiera Sheridan | 4 episodes | |||
| 2017 | Drunk History | Comedy Central | Guinevere | 1 episode | ||
| Gap Year | E4 | Kendra | 2 episodes | |||
| Taskmaster | Dave | Series 5 contestant | 8 episodes | |||
| 2018 | Hard Sun | BBC One (UK), Hulu (US) | Mari Butler | 5 episodes | ||
| Plebs | ITV2 | Minerva | 1 episode | |||
| I Feel Bad | NBC | Simone | 1 episode | |||
| Finding Joy | ITV | Amelia | 6 episodes | [65] | ||
| 2019 | State of the Union | BBC (UK), Sundance TV (US) | Anna | Episode: "Plaster Cast" | ||
| Living with Yourself | Netflix | Kate Elliot | 8 episodes | [12] | ||
| 2019–2021 | This Way Up | Channel 4 | Aine | Writer, executive producer | 12 episodes |
|
| 2020 | Quiz | ITV | Claudia Rosencrantz | 3 episodes | ||
| 2021–2022 | Amphibia | Disney Channel (US) | Captain Beatrix (voice) | 3 episodes | ||
| 2022 | Doctor Who | BBC | Sarah | Episode: "Eve of the Daleks" | [2][66] | |
| 2023–2024 | Avoidance | BBC One | Megan | Season 2 | ||
| 2024 | Alice & Jack | Channel 4 (UK), PBS (US) | Lynn | Miniseries | [67] | |
| Upcoming | Grown Ups | Netflix | Cara | [47] |
Film
| Year | Title | Production | Role | Other roles | Notes | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | Tattooed | Eve | Short film | |||
| Very Few Fish | Gráinne | Short film | ||||
| 2016 | Bullet to the Heart | Grain Media | Jane | Co-writer | Short film | [68] |
| 2020 | Love Wedding Repeat | Netflix | Rebecca | Rom-com | [12] | |
| 2021 | Home Sweet Home Alone | Carol Mercer | ||||
| Riverdance: The Animated Adventure | Margot (voice) | Animated film | ||||
| 2023 | Greatest Days | Rachel | ||||
| 2024 | Swede Caroline | Louise | ||||
| And Mrs | Gemma | [69] | ||||
| Get Away | Susan | [70] |
Radio
| Year | Title | Station | Role | Other role | Notes | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012, 2015 | Micks and Legends | BBC Radio 4 | Co-host | Co-writer | with Yasmine Akram | [30] |
| 2014 | The Architects | BBC Radio 4 | Hayley (voice) | 4 episodes |
Video Games
| Year | Title | Publisher | Role | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | Assassin's Creed III | Ubisoft | Emily Burke (voice) | |
| 2013 | Soul Sacrifice | Sony Computer Entertainment | Similia (voice) |
Stand-up comedy
| Year | Title | Channel | Venue | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | Sabotage | BBC Radio 4 Extra | Live at Hoxton Hall | |
| Fresh From the Fringe | BBC Radio 4 | Edinburgh Festival Fringe | ||
| 2013 | C'est La Bea | Gilded Balloon,
Edinburgh Festival Fringe |
[71] | |
| Galway | ||||
| Seann Walsh's Late Night Comedy Spectacular | BBC Three | Edinburgh Festival Fringe | ||
| Russell Howard's Good News | BBC Three | Riverside Studios | ||
| Set List | Nerdist Channel | |||
| 2014 | C'est La Bea | Soho Theatre, London | [71] | |
| Live at the Apollo | BBC One | Hammersmith Apollo | ||
| 2014–2016 | Channel 4's Comedy Gala | Channel 4 | O2 Arena | |
| 2015 | Plan Bea | Edinburgh Festival Fringe | [13] | |
| 2018 | Netflix Comedy Lineup | Netflix | ||
| 2026 | Older Than Jesus | UK and Ireland tour |
Panel show appearances
From 2016 to 2017, Bea was a team captain (the first female captain on the show)[12] on 8 Out of 10 Cats, having previously been a guest on the show in 2013 and 2014.[72] Her guest appearances on other panel shows include:
- Have You Been Paying Attention? (2024)[72]
- RuPaul's Drag Race UK (Series 4 in 2022, Series 5 in 2023)[72]
- I Literally Just Told You (2021)[73]
- Sunday Brunch (2021)[72]
- Have I Got News for You (2021)[72]
- QI (2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2025)[72]
- Richard Osman's House of Games (2020)[72]
- Insert Name Here (2016, 2018)[72]
- Taskmaster (2017)[72]
- The Big Fat Quiz of the Year (2016, 2017)[72]
- @midnight (2016, 2017)[72]
- The Last Leg (2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2023)[72]
- Word of the Year 2017 (2017)[72]
- 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown (2014, 2015, 2016, 2019)[72]
- A League of Their Own (2015, 2016)[72]
- Room 101 (2016)[72]
- The Unbelievable Truth (2016)[72]
- It's Not What You Know (2016)[72]
- Very British Problems (2015, 2016)[72]
- Duck Quacks Don't Echo (2015)[72]
- Jack Dee's HelpDesk (2015)[72]
- Alan Davies: As Yet Untitled (2015)[72]
- Listomania (2015)[72]
- Would I Lie to You? (2015)[72]
- Channel 4's Alternative Election Night (2015)[72]
- Celebrity Squares (2014, 2015)[72]
- This Week (2014)[72]
- Don't Make Me Laugh (2014)[72]
- Virtually Famous (2014)[72]
- Never Mind the Buzzcocks (2014)[72]
- Don't Sit In The Front Row (2013)[72]
- The Guessing Game (2013)[72]
- Bad Language (2013)[72]
- Sweat the Small Stuff (2013)[72]
Awards and nominations
| Award | Date | Category | Work | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | Edinburgh Festival Fringe | Gilded Balloon So You Think You're Funny award | Won[27] | ||
| 2013 | Edinburgh Comedy Awards | Best Newcomer | C'est La Bea | Nominated | [28] |
| 2014 | British Comedy Award | Best Female Television Comic | Won[32] | ||
| 2020 | BAFTA TV Craft Awards | Best Breakthrough Talent | This Way Up | Won | [74][75] |
| 2020 | Royal Television Society Programme Awards | Breakthrough Award | Nominated | [74][76] | |
| 2021 | Writers' Guild of Great Britain | Best TV Situation Comedy | This Way Up - "Episode #2.4" | Nominated | [74] |
| 2022 | BAFTA TV Awards | Female Performance in a TV Comedy | This Way Up | Nominated | [74][42] |
| 2022 | NME Awards 2022 | Best TV Actor | Won[77] | ||
| 2024 | National Film Awards UK | Best Supporting Actress | Swede Caroline | Nominated | [74] |
| 2026 | Spirit of Kildare Awards | Contribution to the Arts | Won |