Kate Nash
Kate Nash | |
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![]() Nash in 2017 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Kate Marie Nash |
Born | Harrow, London, England | 6 July 1987
Genres | |
Occupations |
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Instruments |
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Years active | 2006–present |
Labels | |
Website | katenash |
Kate Marie Nash (born 6 July 1987) is an English musician, actress, and sex worker from North Harrow. Her singles "Foundations" (2007) and "Do-Wah-Doo" (2010) charted at numbers 2 and 15 on the UK singles chart and her albums Made of Bricks (2007) and My Best Friend Is You (2010) charted at numbers 1 and 8 on the UK Albums Chart. An attempt at diversifying her sound from indie pop prompted her record label to drop her and she released her third and fourth albums, Girl Talk (2013) and Yesterday Was Forever (2018), on her own label. She funded the latter two using PledgeMusic and Kickstarter and documented the making of Yesterday Was Forever for the 2018 documentary Under-Estimate the Girl.
A fifth album, 9 Sad Symphonies, was released on Kill Rock Stars in 2024, and Nash opened an OnlyFans account to subsidise losses from its tour. Her music was initially compared to that of Lily Allen, with tabloids criticising both it and her personally. Nash also co-wrote "Poison", a hit for Rita Ora, and featured on works by Lethal Bizzle, Kano, Fidlar, Watsky, Holychild, Baby Dave, and Soft Play. Aside from music, Nash also played Rhonda "Britannica" Richardson in the Netflix comedy-drama series GLOW (2017–2019) and has appeared in the films Greetings from Tim Buckley (2012), Powder Room (2013), Syrup (2013), Horrible Histories: The Movie – Rotten Romans (2019), and Coffee Wars (2023). She has also been involved in a wide range of philanthropy efforts.
Life and career
[edit]1987–2011: Early life and chart success
[edit]
Kate Marie Nash was born on 6 July 1987[1] and grew up in an Irish community in North Harrow[2] as the second of three daughters to a hospice nurse mother from Dublin and a systems analyst father[3] from Dartford.[4] She began playing the piano aged eight and writing music in her free time aged 15.[5] She attended St John Fisher Catholic Primary School in Pinner[6] and enrolled on a theatre course at the BRIT School after hearing that a girl in the year above her had transferred to a free musical theatre school.[7] She studied there until summer 2005,[5] after which she handed out flyers at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe,[8] took a gap year, and applied unsuccessfully to several drama colleges.[5]
In early 2006, on the day she received a rejection letter from Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, she fell down her home's staircase and had to spend several weeks recuperating, during which time her parents bought her an electric guitar and an amplifier and she uploaded several songs she had recorded to MySpace.[9] At the time,[10] Nash held a post at the Harrow branch of Nando's;[6] she subsequently transferred to the Watford branch of River Island.[5] That April,[11] she performed a gig at Trinity Bar in Harrow, for which she was paid £30;[12] realising she could be paid for performing live, she quit her job at River Island.[11]
Later that year,[13] Lily Allen featured Nash's MySpace page in her "Top 8";[9] by January 2007, Nash had taken part in writing sessions featuring Paul Epworth, Valgeir Sigurðsson, and Allen collaborator Future Cut.[13] She released her debut single, a double-A-side single comprising the industrial track "Caroline's a Victim" and the acoustic track "Birds", the following month[14] on Moshi Moshi Records;[13] she signed to the Polydor offshoot Fiction Records the month after that.[15] Nash's second single, June 2007's "Foundations",[16] spent five weeks at No. 2 on the UK singles chart behind Rihanna's "Umbrella" and Timbaland's "The Way I Are", once missing out on No. 1 by 16 copies.[17] The success of the single prompted the label to bring forward the release of her debut album by five weeks.[18]
Upon release in August 2007, Made of Bricks charted at No. 1 on the UK Albums Chart in August 2008,[19] where it sold 56,000 copies in its first week.[17] Made of Bricks was eventually certified Platinum in November 2007 by the British Phonographic Industry,[20] and also charted at number 36 on the US Billboard 200 chart in January 2008.[21] Among the album's tracks were "Birds", "Foundations", "Mouthwash", "Pumpkin Soup", and "Merry Happy",[22] the last three of which were also released as singles;[23] "Mouthwash" and "Pumpkin Soup" made the UK singles chart.[24] Nash also won the Q Award for Breakthrough Artist in October 2007,[25] the Best British Female Solo Artist award at the 2008 Brit Awards[26] and the NME Award for Best Solo Artist in February 2008.[27]
In July and August 2007, Nash featured on Lethal Bizzle's "Look What You Done" from his album Back to Bizznizz and Kano's "Me & My Microphone" from his album London Town.[28][29] The year after, following relentless touring and a lack of nutrition on tour, Nash developed alcoholism and candidiasis and suffered a breakdown in Germany, prompting her to take a year out and develop obsessive–compulsive disorder. She cut out wheat and dairy on the advice of a specialist and then meat before moving into a rented flat in Bethnal Green she later bought with her boyfriend Ryan Jarman,[30] who she met in 2007.[31] She also spent time working at a refuge for survivors of domestic violence and self-harm.[32] Jarman later introduced her to Bernard Butler, who she began recording her second album with August 2009.[33] She subsequently began playing bass guitar in The Receeders,[34] a punk band formed with two men who were supporting her solo content.[35]

In February 2010, Nash released "I Just Love You More" as a free download from her official website.[36] She released a music video for "Do-Wah-Doo" in March 2010,[37] with the song receiving a physical release the month after;[38] the track made No. 15 on the UK singles chart.[39] Both "I Just Love You More" and "Do-Wah-Doo" appeared on her second studio album My Best Friend Is You,[40] which made the UK Albums Chart at No. 8 in April[41] but left the chart quickly;[42] the album also contained "Kiss That Grrrl"[40] and "Later On",[43] which were subsequently released as singles.[44][45] To promote the record, Nash embarked on a series of smallscale gigs, which lacked Nash's hits and caused walkouts; subsequent gigs were received more positively[42] and featured Supercute! as an opening act.[46]
2011–2014: Change of musical direction
[edit]In April 2011, she set up Have 10p Records, an extension of an earlier performing arts trust fund she had set up[47] which had funded works by Sarah Solemani and Brigitte Aphrodite; Aphrodite and her single "I Dream Myself Awake" became the label's first signee and release.[48] Nash released a cover of "Last Christmas" with Jarman in December 2011,[49] though broke up with him shortly after.[31] By August 2011, Nash had signed to Greetings from Tim Buckley, a film about Tim and Jeff Buckley,[50] which premiered at the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival.[51] She wrote her third album between August 2011 and February 2012[52] in her Bethnal Green studio[53] and recorded it in Paramour Mansion in Los Angeles in March.[54] She recorded the album and several music videos at her expense as Fiction Records had told her they would reimburse her after her contract was renegotiated.[55]
Nash contributed a cover of Cub's "My Chinchilla", then a regular in her setlists, to the March 2012 Nardwuar and The Evaporators' album Busy Doing Nothing!.[56] By June 2012, Nash was best known for gentle indie pop music.[57] That month, Nash embarked on a 12-date Faster Pussycat Run Run Tour across the UK[58] and released the song "Under-Estimate the Girl" for free on her website,[59] which she had written, recorded, and made a video for in under 24 hours.[60] The punk rock track received mostly negative feedback[61] and compelled Fiction Records to drop her[10] in August 2012.[62] That summer, she had recorded a small role for Syrup with Aram Rappaport, who subsequently directed the music videos shot for her third album;[63] the film was released the following year.[23] By October 2012, she had covered Fidlar's "Cocaine"; that month, she featured on their track "Awwwkwaarrrddd"[64] and appeared as Buffy in a production of the Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode "Once More, with Feeling" at Hackney Picturehouse.[65]

She announced and released on Have 10p Records the EP Death Proof in November 2012, a stopgap between her second and third albums. The EP comprised five tracks including a slower take on The Kinks's "All Day and All of the Night"[66] and the title track, which had been written about a heart condition Nash had suffered as a teenager.[63] Marketed by Ingrooves Fontana, a then-recent merging of Ingrooves and Fontana Distribution,[67] the EP was promoted with videos for "Fri-End?"[68] and the title track[63] and funded by PledgeMusic,[63] a service artists used to sell goods and services. Emily Barker of NME wrote in July 2013 that Nash offered on PledgeMusic "a recording of your favourite children’s book/short and/or ghost story (£350), a pampering mani/pedicure date (£400), or a ‘Kate + cake + acoustic live songs combo’ (£2,000)", among other things.[69]
Nash released the Christmas song "Faith" in December 2012, by which time she had filmed for the film Powder Room,[70] which was released in December 2013.[71] In February 2013, she released her own single "3AM"[72] and featured on Watsky's "Hey, Asshole".[73] By that March, she had written Willow Smith's "I Am Me"[74] and had produced the bulk of an album for Supercute!. That month, they released "Love Love Leave Love" from the album[75] and she released her third full-length studio album, Girl Talk. Released through Have 10p Records,[76] it incorporated elements of punk rock and featured the tracks "Death Proof", "3AM",[77] "Fri-End",[78] and "OMyGod!", the last of which was subsequently remixed for single release.[79]
For Record Store Day 2013, she released "Free My Pussy" on heart-shaped vinyl, backed with "Free Pussy Riot Now!". She subsequently released a video for the former.[80] By December, she had released the Christmas EP Have Faith with Kate Nash This Christmas, which featured "Faith"[81] and a track by The Tuts.[82] That April, she and many others[a] featured on "Go Forth, Feminist Warriors", a track released as the theme for the teen blog Rookie.[83] In July 2014, she appeared in the advert The Distortion of Sound, which discussed declining sound quality caused by streaming,[84] and uploaded to SoundCloud the track "She Rules", which was accompanied by a video she recorded on her iPhone.[85]
2014–2020: GLOW and Underestimate the Girl
[edit]"I had horrible meetings with labels and they made me feel worthless. They were like ‘is this what Kate Nash looks like now?’ They were asking me about my looks and if I’m going to make this kind of music forever because they don’t really get me. I found that really fucking offensive. It was really judgmental. This is what I look like now; what the fuck do you mean? [...] I had a record label offer me a deal for no money. Seriously, do you expect me to sign that? That was really embarrassing and a blow to my ego; I felt like I’m literally worth nothing to the industry, like my career was over. I felt very lost."
Nash moved to Los Angeles in January 2014.[87] After suffering from loneliness as a result of not having a label and finding that touring was expensive without a backer, she sought a new label, but took offense at the way she was treated in meetings.[86] Later that year, she signed a publishing deal with Warner Chappell Music[88] and co-wrote a number of songs as part of writing rooms[89] including "Poison" with Julia Michaels,[90] but found the experience demoralising.[89] "Poison" was later a hit for Rita Ora.[86] In March 2015, she played Bridget Bishop in the HBO pilot Devil You Know, which had been written by Jenji Kohan[91] about the Salem witch trials but left unaired.[92] That year,[7] after finding that her manager had misappropriated her money to pay for his wedding[89] and left her almost bankrupt, she moved back to her parents's house in London and sold her belongings for survival. She later settled with her manager out of court.[7]
Later that year,[23] Nash returned to LA after Kohan offered her a part in a subsequent series, which would become Rhonda "Brittanica" Richardson of GLOW,[86] a Netflix series based on the 1980s TV series GLOW: The Story of the Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling.[23] Richardson was based on the latter series's Godiva, a British character played by Dawn Maestas.[23] The cast were taught how to wrestle by Chavo Guerrero Jr. specifically for the series[93] and Nash stopped drinking alcohol as part of the fitness regimen.[94] She has stated that the show was the first project she worked on that had a human resources department[2] and has credited her nude scenes with increasing her body confidence.[95] First broadcast in June 2017 and recommissioned for three further series,[96] the COVID-19 pandemic shut down production midway through the second episode of series 4[97] and filming did not resume before the show's cancellation in October 2020.[96]
Nash was featured on Holychild's "Rotten Teeth" in May 2016[98] and released a solo single that August, "Good Summer".[99] She followed this in November with "My Little Alien", a track about her dog.[100] In April 2017, she announced a Kickstarter campaign to finance a fourth studio album,[101] which lasted a month[102] and raised $155,000,[103] and released "Call Me"[104] and Agenda, a single and an EP.[102] The latter featured four tracks including "My Little Alien", "Call Me", and a title track,[105] for which a video was released in May.[102] She then mounted a self-funded tour to mark the 10th anniversary of Made of Bricks[106] as she associated the album with negative criticism from old men journalists,[107] before releasing the singles "Drink About You" in February 2018[103] and "Life in Pink" that March.[108] Later that month, she released her fourth studio album, Yesterday Was Forever;[109] by the time of the album's release, Nash was living in Atwater Village.[90] The album featured "My Little Alien" and "Call Me" from Agenda[110] and the tracks "Drink About You", "Life in Pink",[111] and "Hate You", the last of which Nash released a video for in September 2018.[112]

Nash was the subject of the September 2018 documentary Kate Nash: Underestimate the Girl, which premiered that month at the LA Film Festival in September 2018[113] and was aired by BBC Three in June 2019[114] as part of its Storyville strand.[115] Its director Amy Goldstein had the idea for the documentary after watching Nash's 2014 Coachella set,[116] during which she had performed in front of a giant pink vagina.[117] Over the course of 86 minutes, the show depicted the aftermath of Made of Bricks,[118] her move to Los Angeles,[119] her temporary move back to London after being defrauded, and ends with Nash crowdfunding and releasing Yesterday Was Forever and then performing in front of a supportive audience.[7] Joel Golby of The Guardian suggested that much of its footage was otiose and that it would be better for a tighter edit and a 40 minute duration.[118]
In October 2018, she signed on to play Boudica in Horrible Histories: The Movie – Rotten Romans,[120] which premiered in July 2019.[121] She then released the grunge song "Trash" in January 2019, in which she condemned environmental pollution.[122] To mark the BBC premiere of Underestimate the Girl, she released the track "Bad Lieutenant" and released a video for "Body Heat",[114] which had previously appeared on Yesterday Was Forever.[110] By April 2020, Nash had tired of regular social media and had created a Patreon account,[123] which she used throughout the COVID-19 pandemic to livestream gigs.[124]
2020–present: Only Gold and Coffee Wars
[edit]Nash started writing her fifth album in autumn 2020 over Zoom with Frederik Thaae,[124] with whom she had worked on Yesterday Was Forever[89] and Only Gold,[124] a musical she had cowritten with Andy Blankenbuehler and Ted Malawer. Only Gold had been in development since 2010[125] and originally featured an Indian Maharaja.[126] Nash and Thaae had completed the album by the end of 2021; at the time, Nash did not have a manager,[124] having fired them during the pandemic.[93] She played Mary in Truth Seekers in October 2020;[127] her participation had been announced a year earlier.[128] In March 2021, she began hosting Kate Nash's Lovely Music Programme on the Highgate-based radio station Boogaloo Radio.[129]
Nash released "Misery" in May 2021 and "Horsie" that September; both were written about the lethargy she was suffering from during lockdown.[130][131] The music video for "Horsie" had been shot at the Grand Canyon, one of several stops Nash had visited earlier that year on her Safely Out of the Bedroom tour, which she had streamed from places she found interesting such as national parks.[132] Her music during this period was largely released whenever she felt like it,[93] though her February 2022 single "Imperfect" was specifically written for the Netflix series The Baby-Sitters Club.[133] The following month, Wild Bitch, an absurdist thriller she had created with her GLOW co-star Rebekka Johnson and contributed music for, premiered at SXSW’s Midnight Shorts Competition.[134] The pair later collaborated again on the same basis for Bad Rabbit, which was released that October as part of the third series of 20th Digital Studio's Bite Size Halloween.[135]
In August 2022, she released a new single, "Wasteman", with a music video starring Danny Dyer and his daughter Sunnie.[136] That November, Only Gold premiered at the MCC Theater in New York City, where it ran for three weeks. Directed and choreographed by Blankenbuehler and set in Paris in 1928, the show focused on a rebellious princess, queen, and clockmaker's wife and also features their men chasing their childhood dreams. Only Gold featured copious quantities of songs by Nash, who also wrote songs specifically for the musical and narrated it.[137] Among the critics to review the show were New York Stage Review's Sandy MacDonald, The New York Times's Jesse Green, Queerty's Matthew Wexler, Theatermania's Meg Masseron, Theatrely's Amanda Marie Miller, and TheWrap's Robert Hofler.[138]

Nash appeared in Coffee Wars in March 2023,[139] a production which used the working title Higher Grounds[140] and had been filmed in Belgrade and Bogotá in summer 2019.[141] She played Jo, a struggling coffee shop owner who entered the World Barista Championship,[139] and had been explicitly hired due to her veganism,[142] having adopted the practice in July 2017 after watching Okja.[143] The film was directed by Randall Miller, who was on probation at the time after pleading guilty to involuntary manslaughter over a killing in his earlier film Midnight Rider, and featured Nash and co-star Toby Sebastian singing a duet over its end credits.[144] In July 2023, Nash released a different duet; a feature on Baby Dave's "Telephobia", the second single from his second album, Different Gravy.[145] The following month, she produced and occasionally appeared in the Edinburgh Fringe run of The Retreat, a stage show by Johnson and Parks and Recreation actress Anne Gregory, having previously seen the show in Los Angeles.[8]
Nash announced that she had signed to Kill Rock Stars in February 2024, her first label in a decade.[146] Nash came to the label's attention after posting a video to TikTok outlining her career and pondering how to release her album.[124] To coincide with the announcement, they released her single "Change".[146] In subsequent months, Nash released the singles "Millions of Heartbeats",[147] "Space Odyssey 2001",[148] and "My Bile".[149] She released her fifth album 9 Sad Symphonies in June 2024,[150] which comprised ten tracks[124] including "Misery", "Horsie", "Wasteman",[107] "Millions of Heartbeats", "Space Odyssey 2001", and "My Bile".[151] She promoted the record with a tour of North America[152] and Europe,[153] by which time she had become a naturalized citizen of the United States.[154] In March 2025, she featured on Soft Play's "Slushy",[155] from their album Heavier Jelly.[156]
Artistry and personal life
[edit]When Nash started out, she was frequently compared to Lily Allen, as both sung with London accents.[22] Nash has stated that she considers such comparisons lazy and sexist.[157] Nash's success was the subject of ridicule by tabloids, who considered her hair, clothes, and weight acceptable topics for articles[93] and regularly filled their sidebars of shame with her pimples.[10] The Daily Mail described her music as "Little Britain’s Vicky Pollard set to cheap synths".[93] Her lyrics were also frequently criticised for their mundanity.[158] In April 2007,[159] elements of "Caroline's a Victim" and Allen's "LDN" were as parodied as "LDN Is a Victim"[160] by an anonymous MySpace rapper, which mocked many successful London artists of the time[159] and accused Nash of affecting her working-class image.[22]

Nash stated in July 2019 that Buzzcocks were the reason she began writing songs due to their ordinary topic matter; she also stated in that interview that she was influenced by Celine Dion, the Spice Girls, Nirvana, Misteeq, the Beatles, and UK garage.[10] My Best Friend is You was influenced by punk music and 1960s girl groups,[161] while Girl Talk was influenced by riot grrrl[162] and Yesterday Was Forever was influenced by Pink, Blink-182, and Sum 41.[163] In addition, Wild Bitch was inspired by Wendy Carlos's score for The Shining,[134] while 9 Sad Symphonies was inspired by musical theatre[107] and "Imperfect" was inspired by female pop singers of her teenage years, such as Stacie Orrico, Michelle Branch, Vanessa Carlton, and Ashlee Simpson.[136]
Nash has stated that she is attracted to men and women and is attracted to people for who they are.[164] She became one of the founding members of Featured Artists' Coalition in March 2009[165] and supported the Office of Fair Trading's Just Tick It campaign that September.[166] After releasing her second album, Nash spent her time visiting schools and donating instruments, and setting up the Kate Nash Rock 'N Roll for Girls After School Music Club.[48] She was inspired to do the last of these by Kathleen Hanna, who had run similar in America, and after learning at a 2010 panel that 14% of songwriters registered with PRS for Music were women.[167] In addition, she, Sam Duckworth, two of the Kaiser Chiefs, and Emmy the Great batted cleanup after the August 2011 London riots.[168] In August 2012, she, Jarvis Cocker, Johnny Marr, and Alex Kapranos all signed a letter calling on Vladimir Putin to release Pussy Riot from prison;[169] later that month, she and several other musicians[b] appeared in a Peaches video supporting Pussy Riot.[170] Nash also became a global ambassador for Because I Am a Girl in January 2013,[171] with whom she later mounted her own campaign, Protect a Girl;[74] her campaign was named with the intention of gaining support from men.[62]
Nash set up Girl Gang in 2015, a YouTube and Tumblr community encouraging people like her to be themselves.[172] After BuzzFeed listed Nash at number nine on a 2017 listicle titled "33 Singers That Only Exist In The Memories Of British Millennials", she responded passionately on Twitter, prompting BuzzFeed to defend the article as tongue-in-cheek.[173] She then became an ambassador for Keychange in 2019, a PRS-funded initiative campaigning for gender equality in music festivals.[174] In 2021, having been inspired by the collapse of Burger Records and her own poor sex education, she set up Safety Chain, which aimed to teach sex education to those in the music industry.[175] In November 2024, after discovering that her 9 Sad Symphonies tour was making a loss,[176] she announced that she was selling pictures of her backside on OnlyFans to subsidise its losses; her account was marketed with the slogan "Butts for Tour Buses".[177] By March 2025, her account had diversified into pay-per-view feet content and comedic food-based erotica.[176] As part of the campaign, and in collaboration with Save Our Scene, she protested outside the offices of Spotify and Live Nation Entertainment to raise awareness of their profits.[178] She also became a patron of Music Venue Trust in February 2025.[179]
Discography
[edit]- Made of Bricks (2007)
- My Best Friend Is You (2010)
- Girl Talk (2013)
- Yesterday Was Forever (2018)
- 9 Sad Symphonies (2024)
Filmography
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2008–24 | Never Mind the Buzzcocks | Herself | Two episodes[180][181] |
2012 | Greetings from Tim Buckley | Carol | Feature |
2013 | Syrup | Beth | Feature |
2013 | Powder Room | Michelle | Feature |
2014 | The Distortion of Sound | Herself | Documentary |
2017–19 | GLOW | Rhonda "Britannica" Richardson | Series |
2018 | Under-Estimate the Girl | Herself | Documentary |
2019 | Horrible Histories: The Movie – Rotten Romans | Boudicca | Feature |
2020 | Truth Seekers | Mary Coleford | Series |
2022 | Wild Bitch | Melanie Fischer | Short |
2022 | Bad Rabbit | Elspeth | Short |
2023 | Coffee Wars | Jo | Feature |
Awards and nominations
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Tavi Gevinson, Suzy X., Kimya Dawson, Psalm One, Katie Crutchfield, MNDR, Thao Nguyen, Geneviève Castrée, Storey Littleton, Carrie Brownstein, Tegan and Sara, Dee Dee Penny, Ted Leo, Aimee Mann, Katy Davidson, and Marianna Ritchey.
- ^ The Knife, Lykke Li, Peter Bjorn and John, Nick Zinner, The Hives, Miike Snow, Le Tigre's JD Samson, and others.
References
[edit]- ^ "Kate Nash - Universal Music France". www.universalmusic.fr (in French). Retrieved 22 April 2025.
- ^ a b Gibsone, Harriet (22 June 2024). "Kate Nash looks back: 'I trusted the wrong people with my money and had to move back in with my parents; 15 female wrestlers saved me ...'". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 22 April 2025.
- ^ Day, Elizabeth (14 March 2010). "Kate Nash: 'I felt as if I was having a nervous breakdown'". The Guardian. London.
- ^ Patterson, Sylvia (20 July 2007). "It's great when you're Kate ... Yeah!". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
- ^ a b c d McLean, Craig (4 August 2007). "The making of Kate Nash". www.thetimes.com. Retrieved 22 April 2025.
- ^ a b Proctor, Ian (11 October 2013). "Harrow pop starlet Kate Nash to write Broadway musical". My London. Retrieved 22 April 2025.
- ^ a b c d Segalov, Michael (1 May 2022). "Kate Nash: 'Giving up would have been so easy'". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 30 April 2025.
- ^ a b "Kate Nash on The Retreat: 'Theatre in that Fringe setting is really exciting because it's very raw'". The List. Retrieved 4 May 2025.
- ^ a b Frere-Jones, Sasha (7 January 2008). "Full Exposure". The New Yorker. Retrieved 15 January 2014.
- ^ a b c d Godwin, Richard (15 July 2019). "Kate Nash: '40-year-old men were hanging out with me, happy to profit, not concerned about my health'". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 July 2019.
- ^ a b Nir, Sarah Maslin (10 January 2007). "More savage than Lily". www.thetimes.com. Retrieved 22 April 2025.
- ^ "Pop star Kate Nash returns to Harrow to shoot music video". Harrow Times. 2 December 2013. Retrieved 22 April 2025.
- ^ a b c Cairns, Dan (15 January 2007). "Kate Nash second to none". www.thetimes.com. Retrieved 23 April 2025.
- ^ Swash, Rosie (6 February 2007). "The hits, misses and the essentially meaningless". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 23 April 2025.
- ^ Diver, Mike (30 March 2007). "You couldn't make it up: Kate Nash signs with Fiction". Drowned in Sound. Archived from the original on 9 July 2008. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
- ^ "Single Review: Kate Nash - Foundations". DrownedInSound. 25 June 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
- ^ a b "Firm foundations". BelfastTelegraph.co.uk. 9 November 2007. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
- ^ NME (24 July 2007). "Kate Nash reveals album title". NME. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
- ^ NME (12 August 2007). "Kate Nash is Number One". NME. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
- ^ NME (15 November 2007). "Kate Nash celebrates platinum album in London". NME. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
- ^ "Alicia Keys returns to No. 1 on U.S. pop chart". Reuters. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
- ^ a b c Petridis, Alexis (2 August 2007). "Kate Nash, Made from Bricks". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
- ^ a b c d e "Kate Nash On 'GLOW': Meet The Gorgeous Ladies Of Wrestling's Brainy Scene-Stealer | Decider". 29 June 2017. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
- ^ "Kate Nash goes back to school". Bournemouth Echo. 24 March 2011. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
- ^ Gibson, Owen (9 October 2007). "Q award winners revel in the harmony". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
- ^ "Kate Nash shocked to beat Winehouse". Digital Spy. 29 February 2008. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
- ^ "NME Awards 2008 - The winners". The Independent. 28 February 2008. Retrieved 27 April 2025.
- ^ Petridis, Alexis (20 July 2007). "Lethal Bizzle, Back to Bizznizz". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 27 April 2025.
- ^ Jelbert, Steve (31 August 2007). "Kano: London Town". www.thetimes.com. Retrieved 27 April 2025.
- ^ Cavendish, Lucy (24 July 2010). "What Kate Nash did next". www.thetimes.com. Retrieved 25 April 2025.
- ^ a b Crossan, Jamie (19 March 2012). "The Cribs' Ryan Jarman reveals 'psychological' illness". NME. Retrieved 25 April 2025.
- ^ "Kate Nash prepares principled new album". BBC News. 16 March 2010. Retrieved 8 May 2025.
- ^ Fullerton, Jamie (5 August 2009). "Kate Nash begins work on new album with Bernard Butler". NME. Retrieved 25 April 2025.
- ^ Blog, N. M. E. (20 January 2010). "The Receeders - Kate Nash's Punk-Rock Side Project". NME. Retrieved 25 April 2025.
- ^ Goodman, William (28 January 2010). "In the Studio: Kate Nash". Spin.
- ^ Fullerton, Jamie (11 February 2010). "Kate Nash announces new album release date and free download". NME. Retrieved 11 February 2010.
- ^ "Watch: Kate Nash - "Do Wah Doo"". Consequence. 10 March 2010. Retrieved 25 April 2025.
- ^ Dean, Will (9 April 2010). "Singles out this week". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 25 April 2025.
- ^ Sharp, Rob (19 March 2011). "Kate Nash launches scheme to get girls into songwriting". The Independent.
- ^ a b Sharp, Johnny. "BBC - Music - Review of Kate Nash - My Best Friend Is You". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 25 April 2025.
- ^ Sexton, Paul (26 April 2010). "'Iron Man 2' is No. 1 on U.K. music chart". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 25 April 2025.
- ^ a b Murray, Robin (22 June 2010). "Kate Nash Adds October UK Tour Dates". Clash Magazine Music News, Reviews & Interviews. Retrieved 25 April 2025.
- ^ Keefe, Jonathan (19 April 2010). "Review: Kate Nash, My Best Friend Is You". Slant Magazine. Retrieved 25 April 2025.
- ^ "Kate Nash: 'Kiss That Grrrl'". Digital Spy. 21 June 2010. Retrieved 25 April 2025.
- ^ "Kate Nash: 'Real sexiness is about art, mystery and intelligence'". The Independent. Retrieved 25 April 2025.
- ^ "Kate Nash + Supercute! at Music Hall of Williamsburg". Time Out New York. Archived from the original on 29 April 2010. Retrieved 11 March 2010.
- ^ "Kate Nash launches Have 10p Records". Digital Spy. 28 April 2011. Retrieved 26 April 2025.
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- ^ "Anthrax bassist Frank Bello joins Penn Badgely's Jeff Buckley film". HitFix. Uproxx. 23 August 2011. Retrieved 2 October 2012.
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- ^ "Moving to LA, Coachella and Writing for Only Gold the Musical". HuffPost UK. 29 May 2014. Retrieved 3 May 2025.
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- ^ a b "Kate Nash Returns with 'Yesterday Was Forever' LP, Shares "Drink About You" │ Exclaim!". Kate Nash Returns with 'Yesterday Was Forever' LP, Shares "Drink About You" │ Exclaim!. Retrieved 2 May 2025.
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- ^ "Kate Nash documentary to air on BBC Three". Dunfermline Press. 9 June 2019. Retrieved 2 May 2025.
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- ^ "Kate Nash & Her Giant Pink Vagina at Coachella". Fuse. 13 April 2014. Retrieved 28 December 2019.
- ^ a b Golby, Joel (22 June 2019). "Kate Nash: Underestimate the Girl – a televised SD card dump". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2 May 2025.
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- ^ Wiseman, Andreas (3 October 2018). "Kim Cattrall, Derek Jacobi & Kate Nash Among Cast For Altitude-BBC-Amazon Tie-Up 'Horrible Histories'". Deadline. Retrieved 2 May 2025.
- ^ "Horrible Histories: The Movie - Rotten Romans". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 2 May 2025.
- ^ Spanos, Brittany (18 January 2019). "Kate Nash Goes Grunge in New 'Trash' Video". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2 May 2025.
- ^ Ehrlich, Brenna (22 April 2020). "Kate Nash Talks Isolation, Quarantine, and 'My Best Friend Is You' at 10". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2 May 2025.
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- ^ Anabel, Anita (7 October 2020). "'Shaun of the Dead' Creators Team Up for New Series 'The Truth Seekers'". The Latch. Retrieved 3 May 2025.
- ^ Bennett, Steve. "Cast announced for Pegg & Frost's Truth Seekers : News 2019 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide". www.chortle.co.uk. Retrieved 3 May 2025.
- ^ Cuttle, Jade (21 May 2021). "The 10 best apps and new digital radio stations". www.thetimes.com. Retrieved 3 May 2025.
- ^ "Kate Nash returns with 'Misery'". DIY. 20 May 2021. Retrieved 3 May 2025.
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- ^ "Kate Nash has released her new single 'Imperfect': "Please play it loud whilst applying lip gloss" - Dork". readdork.com. 11 February 2022. Retrieved 3 May 2025.
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- ^ a b Daly, Rhian (14 August 2022). "Watch Danny Dyer star in video for Kate Nash's new single 'Wasteman'". NME. Retrieved 3 May 2025.
- ^ "Go Inside Opening Night of Kate Nash's Only Gold at MCC Theater". Playbill.com. Retrieved 4 May 2025.
- ^ "Reviews: Critics Weigh In On the World Premiere of Kate Nash's Only Gold". Playbill.com. Retrieved 4 May 2025.
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- ^ Robb, David; D'Alessandro, Anthony; Patten, Dominic (28 May 2020). "Sarah Jones' Parents Urge DGA To Remove Randall Miller From Guild After Learning Of His New Film". Deadline. Retrieved 6 May 2025.
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- ^ a b Smith, Caspar Llewellyn (3 April 2007). "LDN Is A Victim: are you?". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
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- ^ a b Sarmiento, Isabella Gomez (31 March 2025). "Why would a musician join OnlyFans? Because making a living is only getting harder". NPR. Retrieved 7 May 2025.
- ^ Ian Youngs (22 November 2024). "Kate Nash says OnlyFans will earn more than tour". BBC News. Retrieved 25 November 2024.
- ^ Rigotti, Alex (28 November 2024). "Kate Nash and her "bum on the back of a fire truck" take to Live Nation offices to protest". NME. Retrieved 7 May 2025.
- ^ Walsh, Carmel (14 February 2025). "NEWS: Kate Nash And, MP, Siân Berry Become Patrons Of Music Venue Trust - God Is In The TV". Retrieved 7 May 2025.
- ^ Guide, British Comedy. "Never Mind The Buzzcocks: Series 21, Episode 7". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 9 May 2025.
- ^ Guide, British Comedy. "Never Mind The Buzzcocks: Series 32, Episode 4". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 9 May 2025.
External links
[edit]- 1987 births
- Living people
- 21st-century English actresses
- 21st-century English women singers
- 21st-century English singer-songwriters
- 21st-century English guitarists
- 21st-century English bass guitarists
- Actors from the London Borough of Harrow
- Actresses from London
- Anti-folk musicians
- Brit Award winners
- English activists
- English expatriate actresses in the United States
- English expatriate musicians in the United States
- English women guitarists
- English women pop singers
- English feminists
- English film actresses
- English keyboardists
- English people of Irish descent
- English women singer-songwriters
- English television actresses
- British women bass guitarists
- British feminist musicians
- Fiction Records artists
- Labour Party (UK) people
- English LGBTQ rights activists
- NME Awards winners
- Actors educated at the BRIT School
- Musicians from the London Borough of Harrow
- Singers from the London Borough of Harrow
- People from Harrow, London
- Moshi Moshi Records artists
- Geffen Records artists
- Dine Alone Records artists
- British women punk rock singers
- English women rock singers
- 21st-century British women guitarists
- Bisexual singer-songwriters
- English bisexual musicians
- Bisexual women musicians
- English bisexual actresses
- Kill Rock Stars artists
- OnlyFans creators