Jodie Whittaker
English actress (born 1982)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jodie Auckland Whittaker (born 17 June 1982) is an English actress. She is best known for her roles on television as Beth Latimer in Broadchurch (2013–2017) and the Thirteenth Doctor in Doctor Who (2017–2022; 2025).
17 June 1982
Jodie Whittaker | |
|---|---|
Whittaker at the 2022 GalaxyCon Columbus | |
| Born | Jodie Auckland Whittaker 17 June 1982 Skelmanthorpe, West Yorkshire, England |
| Alma mater | Guildhall School of Music and Drama |
| Occupation | Actress |
| Years active | 2005–present |
| Known for | Thirteenth Doctor in Doctor Who |
| Notable work | Broadchurch Doctor Who |
| Spouse |
Christian Contreras (m. 2008) |
| Children | 2 |
| Signature | |
She came to prominence in her 2006 feature film debut Venus, for which she received British Independent Film Award and Satellite Award nominations. She was later praised for her roles in the science fiction film Attack the Block (2011) and the Black Mirror episode "The Entire History of You" (2011). She was nominated for the British Academy Television Award for Best Actress for her role in Toxic Town (2025).
In 2017, Whittaker became the thirteenth and first female lead actor to play the Doctor in Doctor Who and formally assumed the role from Peter Capaldi in "Twice Upon a Time". Whittaker starred in three series and five specials beginning with "The Woman Who Fell to Earth" in 2018 and concluding in 2022 with "The Power of the Doctor". She returned to the role in 2025 with a cameo appearance in the series 15 finale "The Reality War".
Early life
Jodie Auckland Whittaker[2] was born on 17 June 1982[2] in Skelmanthorpe, West Yorkshire. She is the second child and only daughter of Yvonne (née Auckland) and Adrian Whittaker.[3][4][5][6] She attended Scissett Middle School and Shelley High School before training at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, graduating in 2005 with an acting gold medal.[7]
Career
Early career

Whittaker made her professional debut in The Storm at Shakespeare's Globe in 2005.[7] She has since worked in film, television, radio and theatre. In 2007, she stood in at short notice for an unwell Carey Mulligan in the Royal Court's production of The Seagull, and appeared in a fundraising play at the Almeida Theatre.
In Whittaker's first major role, she co-starred as Jessie in the film Venus (2006), receiving British Independent Film Award and Satellite Award nominations. Her radio credits at that time included a 2008 adaptation of Blinded by the Sun by Stephen Poliakoff[8] and playing Lydia Bennett in Unseen Austen, an original drama by Judith French. In 2009, she worked on the films Ollie Kepler's Expanding Purple World and Perrier's Bounty, as well as the BBC Two drama Royal Wedding[9] and the short film Wish 143,[10] which was nominated for Best Live Action Short Film at the 83rd Academy Awards.[11]
In the early 2010s, Whittaker co-starred in the anthology series Accused (2010) and the adaptation of Sarah Waters's novel The Night Watch, followed by the role of Ffion in the Black Mirror episode "The Entire History of You". In film, she starred in the cult science fiction comedy horror Attack the Block, as well as in projects like The Kid (2010), One Day (2011), Hello Carter (2013) and Good Vibrations (2013). She also returned to the stage in the contemporary staging of the classic Greek tragedy Antigone, playing the title role opposite Christopher Eccleston as Creon.[12]
In 2014, she appeared as Sandra Grimes in the reality-based spy drama miniseries The Assets and as Anna in the BAFTA-nominated short film Emotional Fusebox, later reprising the role in its feature-length version, Adult Life Skills, and earning nominations in the Best Actress category at both the British Independent Film Awards and the National Film Awards.[13] She also took one of the lead roles in the hit ITV crime drama Broadchurch (2013–2017) and the four-part BBC One medical drama Trust Me (2017).[14]
2017–2022: Doctor Who

On 16 July 2017, the BBC announced Whittaker would play the Thirteenth Doctor in the science fiction television series Doctor Who; she is the first woman to play the Doctor.[15][16][17][18] She had previously worked with incoming Doctor Who showrunner Chris Chibnall on Broadchurch.[19] She admitted that she had to "tell a lot of lies" after being cast to keep the information secret and used the codeword "Clooney" when talking about the role.[19] Whittaker kept her mother in "the inner circle" regarding knowledge of the role, as her father, Adrian, "would have the ability to tell the world".[20]
She urged fans not to be afraid of her gender, saying "Doctor Who represents everything that's exciting about change. The fans have lived through so many changes, and this is only a new, different one, not a fearful one."[19] Chibnall said that he always wanted a woman for the part and that Whittaker was their first choice.[21]
Reaction to Whittaker's casting was mostly positive, although a "sizeable minority" was unhappy.[22] Some said that a female Doctor would be a good role model for young girls, while others felt the Doctor was only ever meant to be male, or criticised the casting as an exercise in political correctness.[23][24]
Whittaker debuted in the 2017 Christmas special "Twice Upon a Time" while her opening episode The Woman Who Fell to Earth is the highest-viewed premiere episode of a debuting Doctor in the show's history with 10.96 million viewers.[25][26]
In November 2018, the BBC confirmed that the twelfth series, Whittaker's second series, began production.[27][28] Whittaker returned for the thirteenth series,[29] and also voiced the Doctor in the 2022 BBC Sounds podcast Doctor Who: Redacted.[30] She departed the programme following the series and three associated specials in 2022.[31] Whittaker generally received praise for her performance.[32][33][34][35][36] Though some felt the Thirteenth Doctor did little to combat social and political injustices,[37][38] others felt the era's storylines were too 'politically correct', criticising what they saw as the show taking a more socially progressive outlook during Whittaker's tenure.[39]

On May 31, 2025, Whittaker made a surprise cameo, reprising her role as the Thirteenth Doctor in the Doctor Who series 15 finale "The Reality War", alongside Ncuti Gatwa as the Fifteenth Doctor.[40] Starting in July 2025, Whittaker reprised her role as the Thirteenth Doctor in a series of Doctor Who audio dramas from Big Finish Productions.
2023–present
In February 2023, a press release indicated that Whittaker was filming for a six-part Australian drama series One Night for Paramount+.[41] The series was released on Paramount+ in Australia on 1 September 2023[42] and in the UK and Ireland on 24 November 2023.[43] In One Night, Whittaker played a rape victim.[44]
In April 2023, it was announced that Whittaker would star alongside Bella Ramsey and Siobhan Finneran in the second series of the BBC prison drama Time and that filming would start in the spring of 2023 in and around Liverpool.[45] The series premiered on BBC One in October 2023.[46]
In August 2023, Whittaker joined the main cast of the Netflix series Toxic Town, based on the Corby toxic waste case.[47] It was released on Netflix worldwide on February 27, 2025.[48]
From October 2024 to December 2024, Whittaker starred in the West End stage play The Duchess.[49]
It was announced on 30 January 2025 that Whittaker and Suranne Jones would star in Frauds, a six-part ITV art-heist series about two confidence trickster women.[50] The tv series premiered in the UK on ITV1 6 October 2025.[51]
It was announced on 7 July 2025 that Whittaker would star in Dear England, a four-part BBC series adapted from a hit stage play about English football manager Gareth Southgate. Southgate, to be played by Joseph Fiennes, turned around the England men's football team; Whittaker will play the team's psychologist. The series is set to broadcast on the BBC in the UK in 2026.[52]
Personal life
Whittaker met Christian Contreras, a Belizean-American actor and writer, in drama school, and they married in Arizona in 2008.[3] She gave birth to their daughter in April 2015,[53] and had their second child in 2022.[54] During filming of Doctor Who, Whittaker and her family resided in Penarth for four years. By 2025 they had lived in London for more than 20 years.[55]
Filmography
Film
| Year | Title | Role | Note | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | Venus | Jessie | [56] | |
| 2007 | St Trinian's | Beverly | [56] | |
| 2008 | Good | Anne Hartman | [56] | |
| 2009 | White Wedding | Rose | [57] | |
| Thrush | Ruby's Friend | Short film | ||
| Swansong: Story of Occi Byrne | Bridget Byrne | [56] | ||
| Roar | Eva | Short film | [57] | |
| Perrier's Bounty | Brenda | [56] | ||
| Wish 143 | Maggie | Short film | [10] | |
| Mr. Dorothy | Mitch's Wife | |||
| St Trinian's 2: The Legend of Fritton's Gold | Beverly | [56] | ||
| 2010 | The Kid | Jackie | [56] | |
| Ollie Kepler's Expanding Purple World | Noreen Stokes | [56] | ||
| 2011 | Attack the Block | Samantha Adams | [58] | |
| Two Minutes | Juliette | Short film | [59] | |
| One Day | Tilly | [56] | ||
| A Thousand Kisses Deep | Mia Selva | Also a video operator | [56] | |
| Hello Carter | Susie | Short film | [60] | |
| 2012 | Ashes | Ruth | [61] | |
| Dust | Jessica's Mum | Short film | [62] | |
| Smoke | Woman | [63] | ||
| 2013 | Hello Carter | Jenny | [56] | |
| Spike Island | Suzanne | [56] | ||
| Good Vibrations | Ruth | [56] | ||
| 2014 | Get Santa | Alison | [56] | |
| Emotional Fusebox | Anna | Short film | [56] | |
| Black Sea | Chrissy | [56] | ||
| 2016 | Adult Life Skills | Anna | Also an executive producer | [56] |
| 2017 | Journeyman | Emma | [57] | |
| 2018 | Untitled | Mary | Short film | [64] |
| 2019 | Rachel | Rachel | [65] | |
| 2022 | Type | Franny (voice) | [66] | |
| 2024 | That Christmas | Mrs. Williams (voice) | ||
| 2026 | Office Romance | Lizzy | Post-production | |
| TBA | Truckload | Sarah |
Television
| † | Denotes productions that have not yet been released |
| Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | The Afternoon Play | Sam | Episode: "The Last Will and Testament of Billy Two-Sheds" | [67] |
| Doctors | Louise Clancy | Episode: "Ignorance Is Bliss" | [57] | |
| Dalziel and Pascoe | Kirsty Richards | Episode: "Fallen Angel" | [57] | |
| 2007 | This Life + 10 | Clare | Television film | [57] |
| 2008 | Tess of the D'Urbervilles | Izz Huett | 3 episodes | [56] |
| Wired | Louise Evans | [56] | ||
| The Shooting of Thomas Hurndall | Sophie | Television film | [56] | |
| Consuming Passion: 100 Years of Mills & Boon | Mary Boon | [68] | ||
| 2009 | Return to Cranford | Peggy Bell | 2 episodes | [69] |
| 2010 | Accused | Emma Croft | Episode: "Liam's Story" | [57] |
| Royal Wedding | Linda Caddock | Television film | [56] | |
| 2011 | Marchlands | Ruth Bowen | 5 episodes | [57] |
| Black Mirror | Ffion | Episode: "The Entire History of You" | [58] | |
| The Night Watch | Vivian Pearce | Television film | [56] | |
| 2013–2017 | Broadchurch | Beth Latimer | 24 episodes | [56] |
| 2014 | The Assets | Sandy Grimes | 8 episodes | [57] |
| The Smoke | Trish Tooley | [57] | ||
| 2017 | Trust Me | Cath Hardacre / Dr Ally Sutton | 4 episodes | [57] |
| 2017–2022, 2025 | Doctor Who | Thirteenth Doctor | 33 episodes | [58] |
| 2021 | Comic Relief 2021 | Hospital doctor | Charity sketch: "2020: The Movie" | |
| 2023 | Ready Eddie Go! | Narrator (voice) | 26 episodes | |
| One Night | Tess | 6 episodes | [41] | |
| Time | Orla O'Riordan | 3 episodes (Series 2) | [45] | |
| Tabby McTat | Narrator (voice) | Television film | [70] | |
| 2024 | The Great Celebrity Bake Off for Stand Up To Cancer | Herself / contestant | 1 episode | [71] |
| 2025 | Toxic Town | Susan McIntyre | 4 episodes | [47] |
| Frauds | Leanne 'Sam' Samuels | 6 episodes | [72] | |
| TBA | Dear England † | Pippa Grange | 4 episodes | |
Commercials
Stage
| Year | Title | Role | Venue | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | The Storm | Ampelisca | Shakespeare's Globe | [79] | |
| 2006 | Enemies | Nadya | Almeida Theatre | [57] | |
| 2007 | A Gaggle of Saints | Sue | Trafalgar Studios | [80] | |
| Awake and Sing! | Hennie Berger | Almeida Theatre | [57] | ||
| 2012 | Antigone | Antigone | National Theatre | [81] | |
| 2019 | Doctor Who Escape Room: Worlds Collide | Thirteenth Doctor | |||
| 2020 | Doctor Who Escape Room: A Dalek Awakens | ||||
| 2021 | Doctor Who: Time Fracture | Immersive LDN | Pre-recorded video | [82] | |
| 2024 | ECHO | Royal Court Theatre | |||
| The Duchess | Giovanna d'Aragona, Duchess of Amalfi | Trafalgar Theatre |
Radio and podcast
| Year | Title | Role | Production | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2008 | Blinded by the Sun | Joanna | BBC Radio 4 | [83] | |
| Unseen Austen | Lydia Bennet | [84] | |||
| 2012 | Bite | Julie | [85] | ||
| 2016 | Special Deliveries | Narrator | Episode: "Second Class, Signed For" | [86] | |
| 2022 | Doctor Who: Redacted | Thirteenth Doctor | BBC Sounds | 5 episodes | [87] |
| 2025 | Doctor Who: The Thirteenth Doctor Adventures | Big Finish Productions | 12 stories | [88] |
Video games
| Year | Title | Role | Developer | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | Doctor Who: The Runaway | Thirteenth Doctor (voice) | BBC Media Applications Technologies | Virtual reality game | [89] |
| Doctor Who: The Edge of Time | Maze Theory | [90] | |||
| 2020 | Coding with the Thirteenth Doctor | BBC Learning / Tynker | [91] | ||
| 2021 | Doctor Who: The Lonely Assassins | Kaigan Games | Cameo | [90] | |
| Doctor Who: The Edge of Reality | Maze Theory | [90] |
Music videos
Web
| Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | The Thirteenth Doctor revealed | Thirteenth Doctor | ||
| 2018 | Doctor Who Access All Areas | Herself | Guest; 10 episodes | [93] |
| 2020 | The Doctors Say Thank You | |||
| Message from the Doctor | Thirteenth Doctor | part of Doctor Who: Lockdown | ||
| United we stand, 2m apart | ||||
| 2021 | A Message from the Doctor | part of #Findthedoctor series |
Discography
| Year | Title | Album | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | "Yellow" | BBC Children in Need: Got It Covered | Single (#5 on the Official Big Top 40)[94] | [95][96] |
Awards and nominations
| Award | Year[a] | Category | Work | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ian Charleson Awards | 2006 | N/a | Enemies | Nominated | [97] |
| Royal Television Society Midlands Awards | Best Actress | The Afternoon Play | Won | [98] | |
| British Independent Film Awards | 2006 | Most Promising Newcomer | Venus | Nominated | [99] |
| Satellite Awards | 2006 | Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy | Nominated | [99] | |
| Critics' Circle Film Awards | 2007 | British Newcomer of the Year | Nominated | [99] | |
| Online Film & Television Association's Television Awards | 2010 | Best Ensemble in a Motion Picture or Miniseries (shared with the cast) | Return to Cranford | Nominated | [100] |
| Fangoria Chainsaw Awards | 2012 | Best Supporting Actress | Attack the Block | Nominated | [99] |
| Black Reel Awards | 2012 | Best Ensemble (shared with the cast) | Nominated | [101] | |
| Crime Thriller Awards | 2013 | Best Supporting Actress | Broadchurch | Nominated | [102] |
| Royal Television Society Programme Awards | 2014 | Best Actress | Nominated | [103] | |
| British Independent Film Awards | 2016 | Best Actress | Adult Life Skills | Nominated | [104] |
| National Film Awards UK | 2017 | Best Actress | Nominated | [13] | |
| Best Breakthrough Performance in a Film | Nominated | [13] | |||
| Evening Standard British Film Awards | 2018 | Best Actress | Journeyman | Nominated | [105] |
| Satellite Awards | Best Actress – Television Series Drama | Doctor Who | Nominated | [106] | |
| Heat's Unmissables Awards | Unmissable Actress of the Year | Won | [107] | ||
| National Television Awards | 2019 | Drama Performance | Nominated | [108] | |
| Saturn Awards | 2019 | Best Actress on Television | Nominated | [109] | |
| BAFTA Cymru Awards | 2019 | Outstanding Actress | Nominated | [110] | |
| Critics' Choice Super Awards | 2021 | Best Actress in a Science Fiction/Fantasy Series | Nominated | [111] | |
| 2022 | Nominated | [112] | |||
| DIVA Awards | Celebrity Ally of the Year | N/a | Nominated | [113] | |
| RTS Awards | 2024 | Leading Actor: Female | Time | Nominated | [114] |
| British Academy Television Awards | 2026 | Best Actress | Toxic Town | Pending |
Notes
- Year refers to the ceremony at which the award was given.