Daisy May Cooper
Daisy May Cooper (born 1 August 1986) is an English actress, comedian, and writer, best known for co-creating and starring in the BAFTA-winning BBC mockumentary series This Country (2017–2020) alongside her brother Charlie Cooper, in which she portrayed the character Kerry Mucklowe.[1][2][3] Born in Basingstoke, Hampshire, Cooper grew up in Cirencester, Gloucestershire, with her parents Gillian and Paul, and younger brother Charlie, drawing inspiration from her Cotswolds upbringing for much of her comedic work.[4][3] She attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA), where she earned a BA in acting, though she later described the experience as traumatic due to intensive method acting techniques.[5][3] Cooper's career began with small roles, including an appearance in the fifth series of Doc Martin in 2011, before she and her brother developed This Country as a semi-autobiographical series reflecting their rural life and family dynamics, which became a critical and commercial success, earning her the 2018 BAFTA TV Award for Best Female Performance in a Comedy Programme and the Best Scripted Comedy award.[1][2] Following its acclaim, she expanded into writing, releasing the memoir Don't Laugh, It'll Only Encourage Her in 2021, a No. 1 Sunday Times bestseller chronicling her early struggles, family hardships, and rise to fame.[6][7] In subsequent years, Cooper created and starred in the dark comedy series Am I Being Unreasonable? (2022–present) on BBC One, earning the 2023 RTS Award for Comedy Performance (Female), and appeared in projects like the HBO series Rain Dogs (2023), the film The Personal History of David Copperfield (2019) as Peggotty, and the BBC comedy The Witchfinder (2022).[1][8] She has also served as a team captain on the revived music panel show Never Mind the Buzzcocks (2021–2024).[1] On a personal note, Cooper was married to Will Weston from 2019 to 2021, with whom she shares two children, daughter Pip (born 2018) and son Jack (born 2020); she welcomed a third child, son Benji, in June 2024 with her partner Anthony, to whom she became engaged in early 2025.[9][10][11] In 2025, she reunited with her brother for the paranormal investigation series NightWatch on BBC Two, further showcasing their collaborative sibling dynamic.[12]Early life
Family and upbringing
Daisy May Cooper was born in 1986 in Basingstoke, Hampshire, and raised in Cirencester, Gloucestershire, where she was raised in a working-class family amid rural poverty.[4][6] Her father, Paul Cooper, and mother, Gill, faced significant financial hardships, living on the breadline in a modest home in the Cotswolds town.[6][13] She has a younger brother, Charlie Cooper, born in 1989, with whom she shared a close bond during their childhood, often turning to creative play to cope with their circumstances.[2] The family was further connected through extended relatives, including her uncle Trevor Cooper, an established actor, and second cousin Mathew Baynton, also an actor known for roles in television comedies.[6] Growing up in Cirencester's close-knit community, Cooper's childhood was shaped by the surrounding Gloucestershire countryside, which provided both a sense of isolation and inspiration for her early imaginative pursuits.[2] The family's financial struggles were a constant reality, marked by challenges such as pawning heirlooms for basic needs and the shame of deprivation in an otherwise affluent area of the Cotswolds.[6] Her mother's eccentricity added layers to the household dynamics; Gill filled their home with rescued animals and once kept a deceased pet parrot in the freezer wrapped in gold tissue paper, unable to bear burying it, which became a source of darkly humorous family lore.[13] Tragedies also loomed large, including the death of Cooper's aunt Alison in a car accident when Daisy was six, prompting her mother to seek solace in séances that sparked young Daisy's fascination with the supernatural.[2][6] These experiences fostered Cooper's early interest in performance, influenced by her family's creative undercurrents—such as making homemade films with her mother's camcorder alongside Charlie—and the local theater scene in Cirencester.[2] Humorous incidents punctuated the hardships, like Cooper and her brother experimenting with eating loose plaster from their father's study walls, which she later likened to "savoury meringue" in her memoir.[13][6] The siblings' shared resilience amid poverty and family quirks laid the groundwork for their later collaborations, including co-creating the BBC series This Country, drawing directly from their Cotswolds upbringing.[2]Education
Daisy May Cooper attended Cirencester Deer Park School, a comprehensive secondary school in her hometown, where she did not thrive academically or socially.[14] The environment was described by her brother Charlie as "the most uninspiring place," and she faced bullying from peers, which later inspired elements of her character Kerry Mucklowe in the series This Country.[2] These experiences contributed to her self-doubt during her formative years, fostering a resilient mindset that she credits with shaping her approach to performance.[2] After leaving school, Cooper pursued her passion for acting, which she had nurtured since age 10 through performances like a Shakespeare piece at the Cheltenham Festival of Performing Arts. In 2007, at age 20, she was accepted into the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in London, selected as one of 34 students from over 2,000 applicants following a rigorous four-stage audition process.[15] She enrolled in the three-year BA (Hons) Acting program, graduating in 2010.[16] At RADA, Cooper underwent intensive training in classical and contemporary theatre, including the Stanislavski Method, which involved deeply personal exercises such as discussing experiences of rape and miscarriage to achieve authenticity in performance.[5] The program was traumatic for her, marked by harsh feedback from tutors—such as being told she had "no talent" or should consider teaching—that intensified her self-doubt and left her feeling emotionally drained.[2] Financially, the studies were challenging; her student loan did not cover London accommodation costs, leaving her £3,000 short on fees, while her family's situation worsened as her parents lost their jobs and sold their home, prompting Cooper and her mother to take up cleaning jobs to make ends meet.[17] Prior to RADA, she had gained early exposure to comedy through stand-up performances at venues like Laughing Horse in Wimbledon, which helped build her confidence in writing and performing humorous material.[15]Career
Early roles
After graduating from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in 2010, Daisy May Cooper signed with an agent in 2011 and began pursuing acting opportunities in London, where her RADA training informed her approach to auditions despite initial difficulties. Her first credited television role came in 2011, appearing as a young mother in the ITV series Doc Martin episode "Remember Me." This minor part marked her entry into professional screen work, though subsequent years saw limited bookings as she navigated the competitive industry.[18][19] Cooper's early career also included guest spots and small roles that honed her comedic timing. Between 2013 and 2014, she portrayed PC Garvey, a recurring police character, in the BBC comedy-thriller series The Wrong Mans, providing one of her more sustained early television appearances. Additionally, she took on roles in short films and fringe theater productions around 2012–2013, including paid work in off-West End shows, which allowed her to build experience in ensemble comedy settings. These gigs, often low-profile, reflected her growing specialization in humorous, character-driven performances.[20] Throughout this period, Cooper faced significant challenges, including frequent audition rejections and financial instability while living in London on a limited budget. To support her ambitions, she worked odd jobs such as waitressing, temping, and cleaning, often sharing these hardships with her brother Charlie as they scraped by in shared accommodations. In her 2021 memoir Don't Laugh, It'll Only Encourage Her, Cooper details these struggles, recounting moments of near-despair, such as being offered a humiliating Father Christmas role shortly after leaving RADA, underscoring the precarious path to establishing herself as an actress.[21][2]Breakthrough with This Country
In 2016, Daisy May Cooper co-created the mockumentary sitcom This Country with her brother Charlie Cooper, drawing inspiration from their upbringing in the Cotswolds, where they experienced rural poverty and family hardships such as sharing a bed after eviction and parental job loss.[22] The siblings wrote the pilot while working low-paying jobs as cleaners, using public library computers to email it to BBC Three after leveraging Cooper's contacts from drama school; the network commissioned the series for its authentic portrayal of mundane rural life in a small English village.[22] This breakthrough came after years of minor acting gigs and financial struggles that had left the Coopers feeling stuck in their hometown.[22] Cooper starred as Kerry Mucklowe, the chaotic yet endearing cousin navigating boredom, petty rivalries, and unfulfilled dreams in the fictional Cotswolds village of Swindon (a nod to their local football team).[23] Her performance captured Kerry's lovable impulsiveness—often getting into scrapes like feuding with neighbors or obsessing over minor village drama—across all three series, blending humor with pathos to highlight the character's resilience amid stagnation.[24] The show was filmed on location in and around Northleach, Gloucestershire, using real Cotswolds spots like the marketplace, bus shelter, and residential streets to authentically evoke the isolated, quirky rural setting.[25] This Country aired its first series on BBC Three in 2017, followed by a second in 2018 and a third in 2020, earning widespread acclaim for its sharp depiction of working-class rural Britain, where everyday tedium and community bonds coexist with economic challenges often overlooked in media.[23] The series won the BAFTA Television Award for Best Scripted Comedy in 2018, with Cooper receiving the Best Female Performance in a Comedy Programme for her role as Kerry.[26] Its cultural resonance lay in humanizing the "unnoticed" lives of young people in de-industrialized countryside areas, blending mockumentary wit with genuine empathy for their aspirations and frustrations.[27] The 2020 finale served as a poignant series closer, with Kerry and Kurtan confronting change as their vicar departs for Bristol, offering a bittersweet reflection on growth and farewell to the village.[28]Later television and film roles
Following the success of This Country, which earned her a BAFTA TV Award for Best Female Comedy Performance in 2018, Daisy May Cooper transitioned to more prominent roles across film and television, showcasing her versatility in both comedic and dramatic formats. Her film debut came in 2019 with the role of Peggotty, the devoted housekeeper, in Armando Iannucci's adaptation of Charles Dickens' The Personal History of David Copperfield, where she shared the screen with Dev Patel and Tilda Swinton in a colorful, satirical take on the classic novel.[29] This marked her entry into feature films, highlighting her ability to blend humor with heartfelt character work in a high-profile ensemble production. In television, Cooper expanded into science fiction satire with a recurring role as Sarah, a bridge crew member on the ill-fated luxury spaceship, in HBO's Avenue 5 (2020–2022), created by Iannucci; her character was killed off in season 1 but returned in season 2 as the twin sister Zarah, an aspiring actress posing as a scientist. She then took on a lead comedic role as the outspoken Thomasine Gooch in the BBC Two historical satire The Witchfinder (2022), playing a 17th-century woman accused of witchcraft alongside Tim Key's hapless title character during a chaotic road trip across England. In 2023, Cooper starred as Costello Jones, a struggling single mother in working-class Liverpool, in the HBO/BBC drama Rain Dogs, a raw exploration of poverty, addiction, and makeshift family bonds written by Cash Carraway, earning praise for her intense, layered performance as the series lead. Cooper's post-BAFTA career also saw her take on leading roles in original series, such as Nic Telenko, a grieving mother navigating a strained marriage and dark secrets, in the BBC comedy-thriller Am I Being Unreasonable? (2022–present), which she co-created and which returned for a second season in 2025. This collaboration with the BBC underscored her growing influence in British television, building on her breakthrough to secure creative control in projects blending humor, suspense, and social commentary.[30] In 2025, Cooper voiced Impedimenta in the Netflix animated miniseries Asterix & Obelix: The Big Fight.[31] Beyond scripted work, Cooper ventured into reality and variety formats, finishing as runner-up in the 2020 series of Taskmaster on Channel 4, where her chaotic and inventive approach to absurd challenges earned her widespread acclaim among fans. She appeared as the masked contestant Otter on ITV's The Masked Singer in 2023, delivering humorous performances before her unmasking in the top seven. In 2025, she competed in the debut season of Amazon Prime Video's LOL: Last One Laughing UK, hosted by Jimmy Carr, where ten comedians attempted to suppress laughter amid escalating pranks.[32] That September, the BBC commissioned Daisy May and Charlie Cooper's Nightwatch, a six-part docuseries reuniting her with brother Charlie to investigate haunted locations across the UK, which began airing on 26 October 2025.[33]Writing and other works
Television writing
Daisy May Cooper first gained recognition as a television writer through her collaboration with her brother Charlie Cooper on the BBC Three mockumentary series This Country (2017–2020), for which they co-created and co-wrote all 19 episodes.[2] Drawing heavily from their own experiences growing up in rural Gloucestershire, the series explores the mundane absurdities, isolation, and interpersonal dynamics of small-town life, blending observational humor with poignant insights into family and community.[2] The Coopers developed the show during financially strained times, writing scripts during the day after night shifts as office cleaners, and pitched it by sending a sample episode, "Kerry Gets a New Camera," along with supporting videos to production companies after initial rejections.[2] Their writing process was influenced by post-RADA advice to create original material, emphasizing authentic character voices over conventional sitcom tropes.[2] The scripts for This Country won the BAFTA Television Award for Best Scripted Comedy in 2018.[34] In 2022, Cooper expanded her writing portfolio as co-creator and co-writer of the BBC One comedy thriller Am I Being Unreasonable? (2022–present), partnering with Selin Hizli, her real-life friend, to pen the series across its first two seasons.[35] The show incorporates autobiographical elements from Cooper's life, including themes of mental health struggles, grief, toxic relationships, and the pressures of motherhood, framed through an obsessive friendship and a mysterious disappearance.[36] Written during the COVID-19 lockdown, it reflects the co-writers' shared experiences of isolation and paranoia, evolving from informal conversations into a genre-blending narrative that mixes humor, suspense, and emotional depth.[35] The BBC recommissioned the series for a third season in 2024, ahead of the second season's airing, affirming its critical and audience appeal.[37] Cooper's television writing style consistently features close familial and friendly collaborations, prioritizing raw, empathetic portrayals of personal vulnerabilities over polished comedy formulas, often starring in the projects she co-writes to infuse them with lived authenticity.[2]Books and memoirs
Daisy May Cooper's debut memoir, Don't Laugh, It'll Only Encourage Her, was published on 28 October 2021 by Michael Joseph, an imprint of Penguin Random House. The book provides an candid account of her upbringing in rural poverty in Gloucestershire, marked by financial hardship and family instability, as well as her early career challenges, including repeated rejections after attending the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) and low-paid jobs before the success of This Country. It also delves into her experiences of motherhood amid personal turmoil.[38][39][6] The memoir became a No. 1 Sunday Times bestseller, praised for its humorous yet raw portrayal of adversity.[40] Cooper has stated that writing the book was driven by a need to impose purpose on her life's difficulties, noting that without documenting them, "everything that’s happened in my life would just be depressing and there’d be no purpose for it." The process functioned as a form of therapy, allowing her to confront unprocessed emotions related to mental health struggles, such as shame from poverty—"To have no money, it’s just the most shameful fucking thing"—and complex family relationships, including fallouts with her brother Charlie. Fans' positive reception to her television work further encouraged this personal disclosure, transforming her narrative into a source of connection and uplift.[6][6] In 2024, Cooper followed with Hexy Bitch: Tales from My Life, the Afterlife, and Beyond, released on 24 October by Octopus Publishing Group's Radar imprint. This work combines comedic storytelling with explorations of the supernatural, including near-death experiences, ghostly encounters, and her lifelong fascination with the paranormal, such as childhood fears of her deceased grandmother's spirit. It features specific anecdotes like a believed visitation from her late This Country co-star Michael Sleggs, who promised to return after death, and recent home hauntings, including the sighting of a young boy's legs in her bedroom and rhythmic door banging.[41][42][43] The book addresses themes of mental health through the lens of family grief—such as her aunt's death prompting spiritualist consultations—and paranormal beliefs as a coping mechanism, all infused with Cooper's signature humor to destigmatize the "para-curious." Motivated by personal apparitions and a desire to share unexplained events without judgment, akin to her therapeutic first memoir, it reflects fan interest in her evolving life post-fame. Promotional efforts in late 2024 and 2025, including Guardian and Radio Times interviews, a podcast collaboration with Danny Robins for an Uncanny special, and social media engagement, have amplified its buzz.[43][42][43]Personal life
Relationships and marriages
Daisy May Cooper married landscape gardener Will Weston on 21 September 2019 in a ceremony in the Cotswolds.[44] The couple separated in July 2021 after nearly two years of marriage.[45] In subsequent interviews, Cooper described the divorce as amicable, praising Weston as an "incredible, incredible dad" while admitting that "there wasn't real love there" and that lockdown pressures had highlighted underlying issues in the relationship.[46] Following her separation, Cooper met artist Anthony Huggins on the Hinge dating app in 2022.[47] The pair moved in together in 2023 and welcomed their engagement, which had been kept private, with hints emerging via social media posts and public outings in February 2025.[48] Huggins has offered steadfast support amid Cooper's professional successes, including taking on the role of her assistant to help manage her demanding schedule.[9] Cooper has openly addressed the challenges of maintaining privacy amid rising fame after 2021, stating that she avoids social events and parties, preferring a reclusive home life to shield her personal matters from public scrutiny.[9] The emotional strain of her separation briefly influenced her creative process, as she later channeled those experiences into her writing.[9]Family and children
Daisy May Cooper is a mother of three children. She shares her daughter Pip, born in 2018, and son Jack, born in 2020, with her ex-husband Will Weston.[49][9] Following Pip's birth, Cooper was severely ill with viral meningitis, experiencing a near-death episode while alone in the hospital.[9] Her third child, a son named Benji, was born on June 6, 2024, seven weeks prematurely, with her partner Anthony Huggins.[50][51] Cooper publicly shared details of Benji's early arrival, including his time in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), describing the experience as a "scary time" but ultimately positive as he recovered well.[52] In discussing her parenting experiences, Cooper has highlighted the challenges of balancing motherhood with her acting career, such as when production on the second series of Am I Being Unreasonable? halted mid-filming due to Benji's premature birth, requiring a maternity leave adjustment.[53] She co-parents Pip and Jack amicably with Weston on a 50/50 custody basis, noting that their improved post-divorce dynamic has benefited their family life and allowed her dedicated time with the children.[54]Recognition
Awards
Daisy May Cooper's breakthrough acclaim came at the 2018 BAFTA Television Awards, where she won the Best Female Comedy Performance for her portrayal of Kerry Mucklowe in the BBC mockumentary series This Country.[55] At the same ceremony, This Country, which she co-created and co-wrote with her brother Charlie Cooper, also secured the Best Scripted Comedy award, highlighting the series' innovative take on rural British life.[56] These victories marked a pivotal moment, elevating Cooper's profile from niche BBC Three success to mainstream recognition and opening doors to international projects, including her lead role in the HBO-BBC co-production Rain Dogs (2023).[57] Further accolades followed, including a win for Breakthrough Talent at the 2018 BAFTA Television Craft Awards for her contributions to This Country. In 2019, she and Charlie received the BAFTA Television Craft Award for Best Comedy Writing for the series' second season, underscoring their sharp, observational scripting.[58] Cooper was nominated for Female Performance in a Comedy Programme at the 2021 BAFTA Television Awards for the final series of This Country.[59] Her work on Am I Being Unreasonable? (2022), which she created, wrote, and starred in, earned additional honors. At the 2023 Royal Television Society Programme Awards, Cooper won Comedy Performance - Female for her role as the chaotic single mother Nic.[60] She was also nominated for Female Performance in a Comedy Programme at the 2023 BAFTA Television Awards for the same series.[61] Earlier RTS recognition included a 2018 nomination for Breakthrough Award and a 2019 nomination for Comedy Performance - Female, both tied to This Country.[62] These awards and nominations affirm Cooper's sustained impact in British comedy television, blending humor with emotional depth.Public image and advocacy
Daisy May Cooper has cultivated a public persona marked by candid vulnerability, particularly in interviews discussing her post-2023 weight loss journey, during which she shed approximately 10 stone (63.5 kg) over three years through a ketogenic diet and abstinence from alcohol. She has emphasized that while she supports body positivity, her transformation addressed a personal "food addiction" and health struggles that left her at her most miserable, countering tabloid scrutiny and fan backlash that accused her of betraying plus-size representation. In 2024, Cooper shared a harrowing near-death experience involving severe illness and hospitalization, which she linked to her openness about life's fragility. Her fascination with the supernatural, detailed in her 2024 memoir Hexy Bitch: Tales from My Life, the Afterlife, and Beyond, reveals longstanding beliefs in ghosts, spirits, and the afterlife, including personal encounters like a paranormal visit from a late This Country cast member, positioning her as unafraid to embrace the unconventional despite public perceptions of eccentricity. Cooper's advocacy extends to mental health, where she has openly addressed battles with anxiety, depression, and alcohol dependency, crediting rehab in 2023 as "the best thing" she has done after experiencing suicidal thoughts from "hangover anxiety." Her memoirs and interviews highlight fears during depressive episodes, such as worries over child custody, contributing to broader conversations on stigma and recovery. On body image, she has confronted 2025 tabloid focus on her altered appearance—including lip fillers and weight loss—by advocating personal agency over societal expectations, stating that health improvements outweighed external judgments. Additionally, Cooper champions rural representation, drawing from her Gloucestershire upbringing in working-class poverty to underscore underrepresented voices in media and comedy. In charitable efforts, Cooper participated in Comic Relief fundraising through sketches tied to her early work, supporting causes like poverty alleviation in the UK and abroad. In 2025 interviews, she discussed postpartum challenges following her son's premature birth seven weeks early, which halted filming and amplified her advocacy for maternal mental health amid the stresses of new parenthood. Her commentary on feminism in comedy highlights empowering female-led narratives, evolving her role from relatable everyman figures to a bolder, self-assured commentator. This shift in media presence—from the grounded "everywoman" of her breakthrough to an empowered advocate by 2024–2025—has been amplified by award recognition, enhancing her platform for these discussions.Filmography
Television roles
Daisy May Cooper made her television acting debut in a minor role as Young Mum in the episode "Remember Me" of the series Doc Martin in 2011.[1] In 2013–2014, she appeared as PC Garvey in the BBC comedy thriller The Wrong Mans, a supporting role across the two-part series. In 2014, she starred as Kerry in the TV movie Kerry, a pilot developed with her brother Charlie that laid the groundwork for This Country.[63] Cooper gained prominence with her lead role as Kerry Mucklowe in the mockumentary sitcom This Country (2017–2020), which she co-created and co-wrote with her brother Charlie Cooper; she appeared in all 19 episodes across three series and a Christmas special. In 2020, she competed as a contestant on series 10 of the comedy panel show Taskmaster, ultimately winning the series. That same year, Cooper joined the HBO Max sci-fi comedy Avenue 5 in a recurring role as Sarah (season 1) and Zarah (season 2), appearing in 10 episodes from 2020 to 2022. She portrayed the lead character Thomasine Gooch, a suspected witch, in the 2022 BBC Two comedy series The Witchfinder, appearing in all six episodes. In 2022, Cooper starred as Nic in the psychological comedy-thriller Am I Being Unreasonable?, a role she also co-created and co-wrote; as of 2025, she has appeared in 12 episodes across two series. Cooper played the protagonist Costello Jones in the 2023 HBO/BBC miniseries Rain Dogs, featuring in all eight episodes. In 2023, she participated as the masked celebrity Otter on series 4 of The Masked Singer UK, performing in six episodes before being unmasked. In 2024, she appeared as Taxi Driver in the Amazon Prime Video comedy special Jack in Time for Christmas.[64] Cooper appeared as a contestant in series 1 of LOL: Last One Laughing UK in 2025, competing alongside other comedians in the Prime Video challenge show. In 2025, she voiced Impedimenta in the Netflix animated miniseries Asterix & Obelix: The Big Fight. In 2025, she co-hosted and appeared as herself in the BBC Two docuseries Daisy May and Charlie Cooper's NightWatch, exploring haunted locations across the UK in six episodes.[33]Film roles
Cooper's entry into feature films came following the acclaim of her television work on This Country, marking a transition to cinematic roles. Her debut was in the 2019 adaptation The Personal History of David Copperfield, directed by Armando Iannucci, where she portrayed Peggotty, the loyal housekeeper to the Copperfield family.[65] The film featured an ensemble cast including Dev Patel in the lead role as David Copperfield, alongside Tilda Swinton, Hugh Laurie, and Peter Capaldi, reimagining Charles Dickens' novel with a vibrant, comedic lens. Critics highlighted Cooper's performance for its witty delivery and comedic timing, particularly in scenes showcasing Peggotty's affectionate yet brusque demeanor, which elicited strong laughs amid the ensemble's dynamic interplay.[66][65]| Year | Title | Role | Director |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | The Personal History of David Copperfield | Peggotty | Armando Iannucci |