- Nickname
- Rosie
- Height5′ 2″ (1.57 m)
- Rosa Fairfield, was born in Netherton, a small village in The Black Country, England. She was born to Linda and David Smith, a Teaching Assistant and Civil Servant.
Rosa started to dance and act from a young age, performing in a variety of theatre, dance and musical shows throughout her local area. Rosa was an intelligent child, always doing academically well; her KS2 SAT's results were in the top five per cent of the country. At the age of thirteen she won a clothing design competition, which got her the chance to model in an issue of BBC Girl Talk Magazine. She went on to attend a modeling course with Pat Keeling Modelling Agency, for which she graduated with a B. When she finished school Rosa attend Birmingham Theatre School, in which she got to perform in many experimental theatre performances, and study a BTEC in Acting. She graduated top of her class achieving Distinction*, Distinction*, Distinction, which was the highest grade anyone had ever achieved from the theatre school at that current time. Upon graduating from the theatre school Rosa spent the summer performing in a show for Birmingham Opera Company and then studied BA (Hons) Acting at Arts University Bournemouth.
After graduation, she appeared in a number of film projects and completed a theatre internship with Burning Coal Theatre Company in North Carolina. Upon her return, she appeared in the reality TV show Design Genius (2013-) and went on to create the web series (Oh Ducky Sketch Show) and a number of short films.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Laura Smith
- A keen artist and cartoonist.
- Loves to write, currently writing a novel.
- Decided she wanted to be a professional actress after watching The Mommy.
- She was the youngest filmmaker to work with Collabfeature at the time she joined the TV Series: A Billion to One. She was 17 years old.
- Plays the ukulele. Also had keyboard and guitar lessons when she was younger.
- Yeah, so I have a comedy sketch show... which I created. Does that mean I think I'm funny? Not really. I've never particularly thought about myself in that way and I've never really 'tried' to be funny. I just spent way too much time watching SNL and sit-coms and went that looks fun. I want to do that.
- Creating anything, even something you perceive as the most mundane and run of the mill something imaginable, still has an element of risk involved. It could still somehow go wrong by people interpreting it in the way you hadn't intended it to. This increases with more controversial topics and sometimes it can really back fire. I think everything you do has to be done with a pinch of salt.
- Doing anything creative is a bit like selling your soul. Not in a bad way... you just put a part of yourself into everything you create.
- I have finally found the world in which I belong. I really love this industry and I don't want to live on my parents' sofa anymore... I want a life of my own.
- I wanted to change the world! Well, at least make it a better place... The first moment I knew I wanted to act was when I went to watch this one action film, in the cinema, when I was little. I remember feeling like I could achieve anything when I left the cinema, like I was a super hero, and I wanted to act so I could give others that feeling.
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