MyAnna Buring
MyAnna Buring (born MyAnna Margaretha Buring Rantapää; 22 September 1979) is a Swedish-born British actress known for her roles as the vampire Tanya in The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 and Part 2, the sorceress Tissaia de Vries in the Netflix series The Witcher, and the brothel madam Long Susan Hart in the BBC period drama Ripper Street.[1][2] Born in Sundsvall, Sweden, Buring grew up in the Middle East, attending the American British Academy in Oman, before moving to England at age 16 to complete her education and train at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, from which she graduated in 2004.[3][4] Her early career included appearances in Doctor Who and stage productions such as Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, leading to film roles in Kill List—for which she received a British Independent Film Award nomination—and television work spanning multiple seasons of Ripper Street.[3][1] Buring's performances have garnered awards, including Best Actress at the 2011 Puchon International Fantastic Film Festival.[5]Early life
Childhood and family background
MyAnna Buring was born MyAnna Margaretha Buring Rantapää on 22 September 1979 in Sundsvall, Sweden, to Swedish parents.[3][6] Her father worked as an orthopaedic surgeon, which influenced the family's international relocations.[7][8] At the age of two, the family moved to the Middle East due to her father's professional opportunities, with Buring spending much of her early years in Oman.[4][9] She also resided in Kuwait during this period.[6] These expatriate experiences shaped her formative environment amid a Swedish family unit abroad, though specific details on siblings or daily family dynamics remain undocumented in public accounts.[7]Education and relocation to the UK
Buring relocated to England at the age of 16, in 1995, to advance her education in a British setting after growing up primarily in the Middle East.[3][10] She enrolled at a boarding school in Oxford, where she completed the International Baccalaureate qualification as part of her secondary education.[11] Following this, Buring pursued higher education at the University of Bristol, studying drama and Spanish, though she later discontinued the Spanish component.[3][7] To further her training in acting, she attended the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA), a prestigious conservatoire focused on classical and contemporary performance techniques, graduating with a bachelor's degree in acting in 2004.[3][12][13] Upon completing her LAMDA training, Buring commenced her professional entry into the industry by participating in auditions for stage and screen opportunities in London, leveraging the practical skills and network acquired during her studies.[12] This period marked her transition from formal education to seeking representation and casting calls within the competitive UK acting landscape.[13]Career
Early roles and breakthrough
Buring's professional acting career commenced in the mid-2000s with guest roles in British television productions. She debuted on screen in the Channel 5 crime drama Murder Prevention in 2004, followed by an appearance in the BBC medical series Casualty later that year.[14] These early credits provided initial exposure in domestic broadcasting, preceding more prominent genre work.[2] A pivotal advancement occurred in 2006 with her role as Scooti Manista in the Doctor Who episode "The Impossible Planet," part of the show's revived series under producer Russell T Davies.[15] This appearance in the long-running science fiction program highlighted her versatility in high-profile episodic television.[2] Her film breakthrough arrived with the 2005 horror thriller The Descent, directed by Neil Marshall, where she portrayed Sam amid an all-female ensemble navigating a deadly cave expedition against subterranean creatures.[16] Released with a modest £2.5 million budget, the film grossed over $57 million worldwide and earned praise for its visceral tension and practical effects, propelling Buring into international recognition within horror cinema. This role established her affinity for confined, survival-driven narratives in the genre.[2] Building on this momentum, Buring took the part of Shel, the wife of a troubled hitman, in Ben Wheatley's 2011 independent horror Kill List, which blended domestic drama with escalating psychological terror and cult elements.[17] Premiering at the Toronto International Film Festival, the film received acclaim for its genre subversion and secured Buring a British Independent Film Award nomination for Best Actress, solidifying her standing in low-budget British horror.Film work
Buring debuted in film with a leading role as Sam Vernet in the horror thriller The Descent (2005), portraying one of six women trapped in an uncharted cave system, a performance in a production nominated for Best Film at the British Independent Film Awards.[18] Her involvement marked an early showcase of her ability to handle intense ensemble dynamics in low-budget genre cinema. Subsequent roles expanded her visibility, notably as Tanya Denali, a vampire from the Denali coven allied with the protagonists, in The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 (2011) and Part 2 (2012); these installments grossed $712 million and $829 million worldwide, respectively, bolstering the franchise's commercial dominance and exposing her work to a global audience of over 3 billion in cumulative series earnings.[19][20] The ensemble nature of the character contributed to her transition toward higher-profile projects, leveraging the saga's fan-driven appeal without demanding lead status. In independent fare, Buring received a Best Actress nomination at the 2011 British Independent Film Awards for Shel in the psychological horror Kill List, where she depicted a strained spouse amid her husband's descent into contract killing, underscoring her skill in character-driven tension.[21] She later demonstrated versatility in historical drama as Jasmine in Official Secrets (2019), a supporting role in the account of a whistleblower's leak preceding the Iraq War, with the film achieving $10.1 million in global box office on a modest budget.[22] Her recent cinematic output includes Hanna, the first officer in the true-story survival thriller Last Breath (2025), centered on a deep-sea diver's ordeal, and a starring turn as Amy Watson in the action thriller Zip Wire, announced in May 2025 and directed by Howard J. Ford, signaling sustained demand for her in high-stakes genre leads.[23] These selections reflect a career arc prioritizing substantive roles over volume, with empirical markers like awards nods and franchise metrics evidencing causal boosts in recognition and opportunity.
Television roles
Buring first garnered significant attention in television with her portrayal of Edna Braithwaite, an ambitious and manipulative housemaid, in the third and fourth series of ITV's Downton Abbey (2012–2013).[2] The role involved her character pursuing romantic advances toward the valet Thomas Barrow and butler Charles Carson, contributing to interpersonal tensions in the early 20th-century estate drama that spanned six series overall. From 2012 to 2016, she took on a central recurring role as Long Susan Hart (also known as Caitlin Swift), a resilient brothel madam entangled in Whitechapel’s criminal underbelly, across all five seasons of BBC's Ripper Street.[2] Set in the late 19th century following the Jack the Ripper murders, the series followed Detective Inspector Edmund Reid and his team's investigations, with Buring's character evolving from a pragmatic sex worker to a figure navigating alliances, betrayals, and personal redemption amid gritty depictions of Victorian policing and vice.[24] Buring achieved international prominence as Tissaia de Vries, the authoritative sorceress and rector of the Aretuza academy, in Netflix's The Witcher from 2019 to 2023, appearing as a main cast member in the first three seasons comprising 24 episodes. Adapted from Andrzej Sapkowski's fantasy novels, Tissaia mentored apprentices like Yennefer of Vengerberg while wielding influence in the Continent's magical and political spheres, her arc culminating in a sacrificial suicide during an elven coup in season 3.[25] The performance highlighted her ability to convey stern mentorship and internal conflict in a high-stakes supernatural narrative.[26] In the BBC's The Responder (2022–2024), Buring played Kate Carson, the separated wife of night-shift officer Chris Carson (Martin Freeman), across two six-episode seasons exploring Liverpool's frontline policing and familial breakdown.[27] Her character's strained dynamics with Chris underscored themes of marital discord exacerbated by occupational stress, adding emotional depth to the thriller's portrayal of moral compromises in public service.[28] Demonstrating range in antagonist portrayals, Buring appeared as Melinda Ricci in the sixth season of ITV's Unforgotten (2025), a six-episode cold-case investigation where she embodied a television presenter for a right-leaning news outlet delivering provocative commentary.[29] Ricci's involvement in a decades-old murder probe revealed layers of media influence and ideological rigidity, contrasting Buring's prior empathetic roles and emphasizing her versatility in morally ambiguous figures.[30][31]Theatre performances
Buring trained at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA), graduating in 2004, where she participated in student productions that honed her stage skills before transitioning to professional theatre.[13] Her early professional stage work included the role of a working-class intruder in Seduced by Michael Kingsbury at the Finborough Theatre in London in 2006, a production noted for its exploration of class tensions through intimate, fractious character dynamics.[32] [2] She later portrayed Olivia in Twelfth Night at the Northcott Theatre in Exeter, directed by Ben Crocker, demonstrating her versatility in Shakespearean comedy amid the demands of live ensemble timing distinct from screen rehearsals.[1] In 2015, Buring starred as Carmen in Morgan Lloyd Malcolm's The Wasp at the Hampstead Theatre and subsequently the Trafalgar Studios, a two-hander that required precise emotional escalation in a confined space, with reviews highlighting her carefully observed portrayal of buried resentments resurfacing in real-time audience presence.[33] [34] Her 2019 performance as Marina Litvinenko in Lucy Prebble's A Very Expensive Poison at the Old Vic, under John Crowley's direction, emphasized controlled grace and unyielding determination in recounting real events, contrasting the immediacy of stage soliloquies with the edited precision of filmed dialogue.[35] [36] [37] Buring continued with the role of Vera, a new mother navigating postpartum recovery, in Milk and Gall at the Kiln Theatre in 2021, where her physically compelling movements—marked by winces from a depicted C-section—underscored the raw, unfiltered vulnerability of live performance over screen close-ups.[38] In 2023, she played Merril in Lauren Gunderson's Anthropology at the Hampstead Theatre, bringing a brittle, fractured intensity to a character grappling with AI and grief, with the production's pace demanding sustained emotional layering without retakes.[39] [40] These roles illustrate her preference for theatre's unforgiving immediacy, as evidenced by her involvement as associate director with the MahWaff Theatre Company, which produced experimental fringe works emphasizing actor-driven improvisation.[41]Personal life
Family and relationships
Buring gave birth to a son in 2017.[42][43] In a July 2017 appearance on ITV's Lorraine, she described her newborn as "so divine" and noted the appeal of babies' scent, while discussing the challenges of early motherhood alongside her acting commitments.[44] Details about the child's father or Buring's romantic partnerships remain undisclosed, consistent with her preference for privacy in personal matters.[43] Public records and interviews yield no confirmed information on a spouse or long-term partner.[45] In a 2018 testimonial for Raising Films, an organization advocating for parents in the film industry, Buring reflected on the tension between professional demands and family bonding, recounting her expectation of six months with her infant before resuming work, which was upended by scheduling needs.[46] This illustrates adaptations in her career to accommodate motherhood, though she continued roles such as in In the Dark shortly after the birth.[47]Approach to privacy
MyAnna Buring has consistently prioritized shielding her personal life from public scrutiny, a stance she has articulated in multiple interviews as essential to maintaining boundaries amid her acting career. Despite appearing in high-profile projects such as Twilight, Downton Abbey, and The Witcher, she avoids sharing details about her family or relationships, stating that her "private life belongs to me" and deeming it "out of bounds" for discussion.[48][42] This deliberate low profile contrasts with many contemporaries who leverage personal revelations for media attention, allowing Buring to evade tabloid speculation and focus on professional output without associated personal controversies. In line with this approach, Buring disengaged from social media platforms, particularly Twitter (now X), which she quit shortly after Elon Musk's acquisition in October 2022, describing the site as having become a "shouty, provocative platform that promotes division."[31] She cited the platform's toxicity as eroding constructive dialogue, noting a loss of "the ability to hold debates or conversations without losing tempers" and expressing a preference for emphasizing "shared humanity" over divisive exchanges.[31] Previously active on issues like refugee rights and climate change, Buring's withdrawal underscores her aversion to the performative aspects of online engagement prevalent in the entertainment industry. This privacy-focused strategy has empirically supported her career sustainability, evidenced by a trajectory of steady, diverse roles across film, television, and theatre spanning over two decades, unmarred by publicity-driven scandals or social media missteps that have derailed peers.[31] By minimizing personal exposure, Buring privileges substantive work over transient fame cycles, aligning with a professional ethos that values longevity through merit rather than constant visibility.[49]Activism and public engagement
Advocacy for working parents in film
In 2018, MyAnna Buring contributed a testimonial to Raising Films, a UK-based campaign advocating for improved support for parents and carers in the film and television industry, detailing her challenges and successes as a working mother. She described planning to continue acting through her pregnancy but being sidelined in the first trimester due to hyperemesis gravidarum and perinatal anxiety and depression. Upon returning to work when her son was three months old, Buring filmed a nine-week series in Oslo, involving 9-hour days and 10 pages of dialogue daily in two languages while breastfeeding every three hours.[46] Buring highlighted practical disruptions caused by inadequate on-set facilities and communication, such as initial miscommunications about breastfeeding breaks that led to her baby crying for 20 minutes before a feeding schedule was established; subsequent feeds took about 10 minutes with 20-minute breaks. She noted sets' unfamiliarity with infants, including conflicts over shared trailers exposed to hairspray and noise, which complicated childcare arrangements despite employing a nanny and receiving support like a dedicated trailer and her husband's visits. These experiences underscored causal issues like disrupted shoots from unmet parental needs, rather than inherent incompatibilities between motherhood and professional demands.[46] Through Raising Films, Buring advocated for empirical reforms, including formalized breastfeeding breaks, on-set childcare provisions, and flexible set policies to accommodate parents without compromising production efficiency. She emphasized that minor adjustments—such as clear communication protocols and basic facilities—enabled her to fulfill rigorous schedules, demonstrating feasibility for the industry to support working parents proactively. Her account prioritized real-world fixes over broader ideological impositions, aligning with Raising Films' focus on sustainable, evidence-based changes to retain talent.[46]Philanthropy and charity initiatives
In 2015, Buring hosted She Inspires Art, an event featuring installations, performances, and auctions at Bonhams auction house in London to benefit Women for Women International, an organization providing economic and psychosocial support to women survivors of war and conflict in countries such as Afghanistan, Iraq, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.[50] As an ambassador for the charity since at least 2014, she has participated in promotional activities, including attending galas that collectively raised £10,000 for programs aiding women affected by war.[51][52] In 2025, Buring organized an online auction of personal career memorabilia, including her annotated original script from the 2005 film The Descent, handmade skirts worn as Long Susan in Ripper Street (season 5), and a director's chair from The Witcher, with proceeds directed to All Our Relations, a grassroots group focused on humanitarian aid for marginalized communities in Gaza amid the Israel-Hamas conflict.[53] Bidding updates shared publicly indicated items fetching hundreds of pounds each, though total funds raised were not disclosed.[54] These efforts reflect occasional, targeted involvement rather than ongoing institutional commitments.Filmography
Films
- The Descent (2005), directed by Neil Marshall, as Sarah.
- Doomsday (2008), directed by Neil Marshall, as Cally 'Cally' Bunce.[55]
- Lesbian Vampire Killers (2009), directed by Phil Claydon, as Lotte.
- Kill List (2011), directed by Ben Wheatley, as Shel.[17]
- The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 (2011), directed by Bill Condon, as Tanya Denali.
- The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2 (2012), directed by Bill Condon, as Tanya Denali.
- Hyena (2014), directed by Gerard Johnson, as Lisa.
- The Riot Club (2014), directed by Lone Scherfig, as Lauren.
- The Woman in Black 2: Angel of Death (2014), directed by Tom Harper, as Jean Hogg.
- Official Secrets (2019), directed by Gavin Hood, as Thordis Ingadóttir.
- Last Night in Soho (2021), directed by Edgar Wright, as Ms. Collins.
- 97 Minutes (2023), directed by Timo Vuorensola, as Christina.
- Last Breath (2025), directed by Alex Parkinson, as Hanna.[56]
Television
- Murder Prevention (2004; ITV) as Debbie.[14]
- The Bill (2006; ITV) as Tanya.[2]
- Midsomer Murders (2009; ITV) as Catriona.[2]
- Doctor Who (2010; BBC One) as Jenny.[14]
- Downton Abbey (2011–2012; ITV) as Edna Braithwaite.[57]
- White Heat (2012; BBC Two) as Lilly Hobson.[58]
- Ripper Street (2012–2016; BBC One) as Long Susan Hart / Dr. Susan Grieves.[2]
- Blackout (2013; BBC One) as Natalie.[58]
- Banished (2015; BBC Two) as Elizabeth Bailey.[58]
- In the Dark (2017; BBC Three) as DCI Jessie Hodson.[58]
- The Witcher (2019–2023; Netflix) as Tissaia de Vries.[57]
- The Salisbury Poisonings (2020; BBC One) as Dawn Sturgess.[59]
- The Responder (2022–2024; BBC One) as PC Kate Carson.[57]
- The Fall: Skydive Murder Plot (2024; ITV) as Victoria Cilliers.[37]
- Unforgotten (2025; ITV) as DI Melinda Ricci.[57]