Brittish Actors

Collection of Classic Brittish Actors

Norman Rosssington
Norman Rossington
Norman Rossington
 

Norman Rossington was a gifted character actor who was born in 1928 in Liverpool.   He has the distinction of having featured in “Help” in 1965 with The Beatles and in 1967 in “Double Trouble” with Elvis Presley which he made in Hollywood.   He also made “Tobruk” in the U,S.   He played Albert Finney’s loyal friend in “Saturday Night and Sunday Morning”.   He died in 1999.

Tom Vallance’s obituary in “The Independent”:

USUALLY PLAYING a cheerful, down-to-earth, if slightly suspect working-class lad, the comic actor Norman Rossington was a veteran of dozens of films and television shows, though his face was more familiar than his name (“It’s more important for me to be recognised in my profession,” he once said).

The stocky, curly-haired actor first achieved prominence as one of the motley bunch of idle privates in ITV’s The Army Game, and went on to feature in three “Carry Ons” and such movies as A Night to Remember and Lawrence of Arabia. A master of working-class accents from cockney to his native Liverpudlian, he spent much of his career portraying servicemen of the lower ranks, but also appeared with the Old Vic, the National Theatre (with Laurence Olivier) and the Royal Shakespeare Company, and only last year was on the West End stage playing the father of Belle, the beauty of Beauty and the Beast. He could also claim to be the only actor to have appeared in films with both Elvis Presley and the Beatles.

The son of a publican, he was born in 1928 in Liverpool, and left school at 14 to work on the docks as a messenger boy. After becoming an apprentice carpenter, he studied French and building at night school and trained to be a draughtsman, but at 19 a visit to a church social with his friend Kenneth Cope (also later to become an actor) changed the course of his life.

He took part in a sketch just for fun, was invited to join the local drama group, and took to his new interest with such enthusiasm that he was soon training for the professional stage at the Bristol Old Vic, making his stage debut at the Theatre Royal in Bristol, where his work ranged from Shakespeare to the musical Salad Days. In 1954 he played Snout in a production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream that toured America, and in 1955 made his screen debut with a small part in a weak vehicle for the comic Ronald Shiner, Keep It Clean. However, work was not consistent and for a time he worked as a chef in police station canteens.

He had his first major success with the television series The Army Game (1957), ITV’s biggest comedy hit in the early years of commercial television. This Bilko-like series featured a bunch of conniving and lazy soldiers, with Michael Medwin as their ringleader, William Hartnell their tough sergeant, and Rossington as Private “Cupcake” Cook, always eating and opening food parcels from his family in Liverpool. The show ran for five years and in 1959 Rossington and four other cast members performed a shortened version of it before the Queen Mother at the Royal Variety Show.

In 1958 The Army Game was filmed as I Only Arsked, the title coming from the catchphrase of the gormless “Popeye” (Bernard Bresslaw). In this box- office hit the group, initially dismayed when posted to the Middle East, find a secret passage to the king’s harem, put down a revolution and find an oil well. In the same year Rossington had a small role in Roy Baker’s fine account of the Titanic disaster A Night to Remember.

He was cast once again as an army recruit in the first of the “Carry On” series, Carry On Sergeant, getting laughs as a private who keeps failing to pass out. (Kenneth Williams, in his diaries, referred to Rossington as “a good fellow”.) He later featured in Carry On Nurse (1959) as Norm, constantly running errands up and down the corridor, and Carry On Regardless (1960) as the referee of a boxing match in which Charles Hawtrey is one of the contestants.

Norman Hudis, writer of those early “Carry Ons”, was to script several of the actor’s television series, including Our House (1960) which found Rossington part of an ill-assorted group of people (including Hattie Jacques, Joan Sims and Charles Hawtrey) who buy a ramshackle house. Other notable television appearances included parts in Johnny Speight’s controversial series about discrimination, Curry and Chips (1969), in which he was a bigoted shop steward, Dennis Potter’s six-part Casanova (1971), starring Frank Finlay, a striking portrayal of mid-19th century explorer Samuel Baker in The Search for the Nile (1971), and countless comedy shows with such stars as Beryl Reid, Bob Monkhouse and Spike Milligan.

On the cinema screen he was the stolid chum of rebellious Albert Finney in Karel Reisz’s key film of the British “New Wave”, Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1960), and was in the military again for two 1962 epics, The Longest Day and Lawrence of Arabia. He had one of his best-remembered roles in the first and best of the films starring the Beatles, Richard Lester’s A Hard Day’s Night (1964), in which as Norm, the group’s manager, he provided a gentle parody of Brian Epstein.

Two years later he appeared with the decade’s other pop sensation Elvis Presley in Double Trouble. One of Presley’s poorest films, it featured Rossington and Chips Rafferty as two inept crooks who switch suitcases with Presley and his girlfriend. He journeyed to Hollywood for this, and for the war film Tobruk (1966) with Rock Hudson, but turned down offers that would have kept him there. He had one of his favourite roles as Sergeant- Major Corbett in The Charge of the Light Brigade (1968), and more recent films included The Krays (1990) and Let Him Have It (1991).

Rossington’s stage work included Brecht on Brecht with Lotte Lenya at the Royal Court, Shaw’s Saint Joan with Olivier’s embryo National Theatre company at Chichester in 1963, and the role of Doolittle in a revival of the musical My Fair Lady. He convincingly switched to an American accent for two musical roles – as the gambler Nathan Detroit in the National Theatre revival of Guys and Dolls (1985) with Lulu as his long-suffering sweetheart Adelaide, and as the circus promoter Charlie Davenport in the 1992 revival of Annie Get Your Gun.

In 1997 he sang again in the spectacular musical Beauty and the Beast, but had to leave the show last November after a fall on stage which preceded a six-month battle with cancer.

Norman Rossington, actor: born Liverpool 24 December 1928; twice married; died Manchester 21 May 1999.

The above “Independent” obituary can be also accessed online here.

ry Brumburgh’s entry:

Spade-jawed British character actor Norman Rossington was born in Liverpool, so it shouldn’t be considered THAT ironic that he would end up appearing in The Beatles‘ debut film smash, A Hard Day’s Night (1964), as “Norm”, the Fab Four’s chagrined road manager. The son of a publican, he never finished high school, leaving at age 14 and living a rather wanderlust adolescent life as messenger, office boy, carpenter apprentice, etc. Later, he went to night school and studied industrial design in order to become a draughtsman. Interest in acting happened by accident and, eventually, Rossington joined a local theatre group. He trained seriously at the Bristol Old Vic and began appearing in both straight plays (“A Midsummer Night’s Dream”) and musicals (“Salad Days”) by the mid-50s. Within a few years, he had extended his visability to films and TV, setting up his rather bumbling persona as “Private Cupcake” on the TV comedy series, The Army Game (1957). Along with roles in a few of the zany “Carry On…” slapstick films, Rossington established himself firmly as a comedy performer with I Only Arsked! (1958),Crooks Anonymous (1962) and Nurse on Wheels (1963), representing a few of his farcical credits. Yet his finest creation was arguably in the “kitchen sink” drama, Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1960), as Albert Finney‘s sensible, down-to-earth, blue-collar pal. Though he never attained outright stardom, Rossington became a reliable, familiar mug with minor roles in such epic British and U.S. films as Saint Joan (1957), The Longest Day(1962), Lawrence of Arabia (1962), Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines or How I Flew from London to Paris in 25 hours 11 minutes (1965), The Charge of the Light Brigade (1968) and Young Winston (1972), not to mention the equally epic TV miniseries, I, Claudius (1976) and Masada (1981). Rossington’s greatest impression would lie in musical theatre, especially in his later career. Such spirited roles in “Peter Pan” (as “Starkey”), “My Fair Lady” (as “Alfred Doolittle”), “Annie Get Your Gun” (as “Charlie Davenport”), “Pickwick: The Musical” (as “Tony Weller”), “Guys and Dolls” (as “Nathan Detroit”) and, lastly, as Beauty’s father in “Beauty and the Beast”, made him an endearing favorite in the West End. Cancer claimed him at age 70 in 1999.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net

Dave Allen
Dave Allen
Dave Allen

Dave Allen was a brilliant Irish comedian who achieved great success in Britain.   He was born Tynan O’Mahoney in Dublin in 1936.   His father was the editor of “The Irish Times”.   He also had a successful stage career. In 1972 he starred in The Royal Court‘s production of Edna O’Brien‘s play A Pagan Place, and appeared as both Mr Darling and Captain Hook in the London Coliseum‘s production of Peter Pan.In 1979 he played a troubled property man suffering a mid-life crisis in Alan Bennett‘s television play One Fine Day.   He died in 2005.

Stephen Dixon’s “Guardian” obituary:

At the height of his career, Dave Allen, who has died aged 68, was Britain’s most controversial comedian, regularly provoking outrage and indignation in a society that got upset more often – and more easily – than it does today. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, he introduced a laid-back, satirical, personal, storytelling style, first in Australia, and later on British television shows, such as Tonight With Dave Allen and the hugely successful Dave Allen At Large, with a mixture of elaborate sketches and intimate, sit-down comedy.Behind the calm facade, as he paused to sip his whiskey, or flick cigarette ash off his immaculate suit, he was quietly, humorously furious about political hypocrisy, the church domination of Ireland, and, in fact, all forms of authoritarianism. His stance, at its best wholly uncompromising, made him a godfather of comedy, and won him the admiration of a later generation of stand-ups.

Allen was a little like the reporter he once wanted to be; he simply told people about funny things he had seen or experienced, adding the spin of a natural storyteller. “I don’t know if there’s somebody out there, some god of comedy, dropping out little bits saying, ‘Here, use that, that’s for you, that’s to keep you going,'” he said in 1998.

He scandalised countless people in the 1970s with a sketch which involved the Pope doing a striptease; he was banned from Australian television for a year after telling his producer on air to go and masturbate, and leave him to continue an interview instead of going to the advertisements; he upset Mary Whitehouse in 1984 with an account of a post-coital conversation; his use of the word “lavatory” on the Ed Sullivan Show in the 1960s was objected to; and the BBC apologised when, in 1990, he used the word “fuck” in the punchline to a joke – an incident which provoked questions in the Commons.

He explained why it was necessary, in a routine about employees living their lives by the clock – and then being presented with one when they retired – to use the word: “It’s a disdainful word, because it’s not a damn clock, it’s not a silly clock, it’s not a doo-doo clock. It’s a fucking clock!”

Sometimes, Allen just sat there and told straight gags, and sometimes they were sexist, and sometimes they smacked a bit of paddywhackery. It would be rewriting history to pretend that his material consisted entirely of insightful, observational monologues about life.

But it must be remembered that when he started on TV, Arthur Askey was still a big name, Benny Hill and Dick Emery were stars and Jimmy Tarbuck was “youth comedy”. To an extent, Allen had to play by established rules; what was groundbreaking about him was that there were rules he chose to ignore.

He had wonderful timing. You can tell great technical stand-ups when they deliver the punchline just when you think they’re going to do something else. And there’s another one, just when you think they’ve finished. He was paid large amounts of money to attack institutions in a subtle and subversive way. He, and the slightly later Billy Connolly, traded in alternative comedy long before that phrase was coined – observational stories laced with satire, or very long versions of old jokes in which he would digress into lots of comedy byways.

“The hierarchy of everything in my life has always bothered me,” Allen said in 1998. “I’m bothered by power. People, whoever they might be, whether it’s the government, or the policeman in the uniform, or the man on the door – they still irk me a bit. From school, from the first nun that belted me.

‘People used to think of the nice sweet little ladies … they used to knock the fuck out of you, in the most cruel way that they could. They’d find bits of your body that were vulnerable to intense pain – grabbing you by the ear, or by the nose, and lift you, and say ‘Don’t cry!’ It’s very hard not to cry. I mean, not from emotion, but pain. The priests were the same. And I sit and watch politicians with great cynicism, total cynicism.”

For his 1970s BBC shows, Allen often impersonated a priest; another scenario had him facing a firing squad in some banana republic, delaying his execution with increasingly preposterous last requests. He also had a successful stint compering ITV’s Sunday Night At The London Palladium. His interest in journalism re-emerged in documentaries, shot in Britain and the United States, in which he sought out oddballs and eccentrics. And then there was the West End stage – “In case you wonder what I do,” he would tell the audience, “I tend to stroll around and chat. I’d be grateful if you’d refrain from doing the same.”

In the 1980s, Allen made several shows for Carlton Television, minus his trademark cigarette. “I just realised it was crazy spending so much money on killing myself. It would have been cheaper to hire the Jackal to do the job.”

After the early 1990s, he retreated from the limelight, partly due to ill health, but occasionally released videos of earlier material; one such opened with him saying he had retired, but that every so often he had to do a bit of work to keep himself in the style to which he had become accustomed – “a bit of an Irish retirement, actually”. As he grew older, he brought a rueful awareness of ageing to his material, with reflections on the antics of teenagers and the sagging skin and sprouting facial hair of age. He won a lifetime award from the British Comedy Awards in 1996.

Allen was born David Tynan O’Mahony, the youngest of three boys, into a reasonably prosperous Dublin family. His grandmother, Norah Tynan, was the first women’s features editor on the Freeman’s Journal; his aunt, Katherine (KT) Tynan, was a poet. His father, Cullen “Pussy” O’Mahony, who died when David was 12, was the general manager of the Irish Times, the paper on which his brother Peter later worked as a journalist.

Pussy was also a drinking partner of Brian O’Nolan (Flann O’Brien/Myles na Copaleen), then an Irish Times columnist, and Allen recalled that his father threw big birthday parties on new year’s eve, which the boys would watch from the stairs.

Although his father was an agnostic, Allen was brought up as a Roman Catholic, the faith to which his English mother had converted from Anglicanism. His early religious upbringing, in an era dominated by state and church control, influenced the direction his material took later on.

Newspapers were in the family, and in those days, said Allen, “you didn’t go off and make a career for yourself. You tended to take up what the family did.” So he started work as a clerk at the Irish Independent, and, after a short period on the Drogheda Argus, moved to London. But journalism was not a runner and, after a variety of factory jobs, and a stint at Butlin’s, a career in entertainment beckoned.

It was Sophie Tucker, the American vaudeville star and “Last of the Red Hot Mommas”, who spotted Allen’s potential when he played a minor role in her London show in the early 1960s. She suggested he try his luck in Australia, and there he first hit the TV big time.

In Sydney, he worked with opera singer Helen Traubel, another woman who profoundly influenced his career. She suggested he replace the corny one-liners with material based on the reality of his youth. Thus was born a style that made the public, and a generation of comics then in its infancy, think a little differently about humour, about the power of words, about authority, and about the world around them.

Allen’s first marriage to actor Judith Stott ended in divorce. He is survived by his wife Karin, and three chidren from his first marriage.

· David Tynan O’Mahony (Dave Allen), comedian, born July 6 1936; died March 10 2005

The above “Guardian” obituary can be accessed also online here.

Gary Cockrell
Gary Cockrell
Gary Cockrell

American born Gary Cockrell originally trained as a dancer and choreographer before turning to acting. He had studied with Matt Maddox in New York and had danced in several Broadway productions before joining the cast of West Side Story. The play was first performed at the Winter Garden in New York in 1957 before transferring to London’s West End in 1958. Gary moved to London, with the production, which took place at Her Majesty’s Theatre, and lived there throughout the 1960’s and 1970’s. He left West Side Story to play the leading acting role in Tennessee Williams Orpheus Descending at both the Royal Court Theatre and the Mermaid Theatre. Following this, he starred in a production of The Golden Touch  at the Piccadilly Theatre and performed in the musical Carnival at the Lyric Theatre in Shafetsbury Avenue.

Although he was based in London, he worked as an actor on both sides of the Atlantic. In Britain, he had a leading role in the television series The Corridor People and guest-starred in series such as The Saint, Danger Man and The Persuaders. He had a supporting role in Stanley Kubick’s controversial film Lolita and appeared in Gonks Go Beat!. In America, he played opposite Steve McQueen in the film The War Lovers and had small roles in The Americanisation of Emily, The Bedford Incident and Man in the Middle. He acted on television in Wagon Train and Route 66.

 He left the UK to live in St. Lucia in the West Indies, where he opened a hotel. Today, Gary is retired and lives in St. Lucia with his wife, Marie.

James Roache
James Roach
James Roache
 

is the son of actor William Roach and has appeared in “Coronation Street”.   He was born in 1985.

James Roache was born on December 29, 1985 in England as William James Roache. He is an actor, known for Coronation Street (1960), The Road to Coronation Street (2010) and The Marchioness Disaster (2007).   Son of William Roache and Sara Roache. Half-brother of Linus Roache and Vanya Roache. Brother of Verity and the late Edwina.   He played his father William Roache in The Road to Coronation Street (2010).

Margaret Barton
Margaret Barton
Margaret Barton

Article from “Daily Echo”:

SMALL, sparkling and immaculately turned out, there’s still something of the film star about Margaret Barton.

Not the modern film star, you understand, with their entourages and their diva-ish ways, but a British film star of the black and white era. And a big one at that.   Margaret may be better known as Mrs James of Wimborne these days, trustee of the music charity set up with her husband Raymond in memory of their son, Michael. But for one night only on April 8 she’ll be gracing the town’s Tivoli Theatre for a gala screening of her most famous film: Brief Encounter.

“I am very excited,” she says, in a voice as clear and crisp as new-fallen snow. That voice is nothing like the one she employed 60 years ago as Beryl, the put-upon junior tea-girl in Brief Encounter, but Margaret is nothing if not a fine actress.   So good, in fact, that far from having to audition for her most famous part, she was picked out by the film’s director David Lean and by its writer, Noel Coward, who had seen her performing in the West End.

“It was very flattering indeed because it was my first film.”

Exciting enough, then, but what no one could possibly have foreseen was that this little film about unrequited middle-class love in a suburban town, which mainly takes place at a train-station tea-room, would become a cult classic, still being screened worldwide, and now just about to be released on Blu-Ray.

“Nobody had any idea of what it would become,” says Margaret. “David Lean would have been utterly surprised. I think he thought it was a nice little film to put into the schedules and he wasn’t going to think about it too much. But he worked on it very hard and was a lovely director.”
On set at Denham film studios, where she was chauffeured each day, Lean took Margaret under his wing.   “I was only 18 and he used to ask me down on the set, just to see what Celia Johnson and Trevor Howard (the actors playing the main characters) were going to do in a little bit of scene that he was directing.”   Because of this Margaret had a ring-seat view at the making of cinematic history. She was able to observe the acting skills of Celia Johnson, who plays bored housewife Laura Jesson, and who was nominated for an Oscar for her performance.   “She was a lovely person and I worked with her again in later years,” she says.

Another firm favourite on the set was Stanley Holloway, who played the station master. “Waiting for them to set up the next scene with the lighting and sound could be boring but Stanley used to go through some of his recitations to keep us amused,” she says.   Why does she think the film remains so popular?  “It’s partly to do with the music they used, the Rachmani-nov concerto Number 2. That piece was David Lean’s idea and it just fits like a hand in a glove.”

Margaret also believes the steam trains with their mournful whistles were another element that cemented the film in the public consciousness. “People love the nostalgic setting of the railway station.”   And, of course, the film was shot in atmospheric black and white, with lighting that Margaret says took ‘hours’ to create.   As the sole surviving member of the principal cast – she was seventh on the bill – Margaret has found herself as keeper of the Brief Encounter flame.

“I still get letters from all over the world; America, Australia, Italy, there’s even a Friends of Brief Encounter.   ”What do they most want to know?   “Mainly they ask ‘would they be able to remake it now’ and I usually say no, I’m afraid not, because I think they would have been in bed together the first time they met!   “It’s that sort of nostalgic feeling for the past that I think people love.”

After losing their only son, Michael, to cancer when he was just 31, she and husband Raymond, a former Professor at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, have built a fabulous memorial to him in the shape of the Michael James Music Trust.   “We support young people to get through their training and become especially good musicians as Michael was,” says Margaret. “He was a former assistant organist at the Minster and an organ scholar at Durham University.”   It was because of Michael that Margaret abandoned her acting career. “I did carry on when he was a baby but after a while realised he needed me at home.”   Now Margaret works for the trust and as a public speaker. Naturally, there is one topic that everyone wants to hear about.

“I know it sounds funny because it was so long ago but in a way I am still working for Brief Encounter,” she smiles.

  Her other movies include “Temptation Harbour” and “Good-Time Girl”.

The above “Daily Echo” can also be found online here.

Lorraine Chase
Lorraine Chase
Lorraine Chase

Lorraine Chase was born in 1951 in Deptford, Kent.   She was featured in an advert for ‘Campari’ in 1975 that made her a national figure in the UK.   She wnet on to star on TV and the stage and is best known for her long running role in “Emmerdale”.

IMDB entry:

Lorraine started her career as a model in the 70s and did numerous modelling jobs until the famous advert for Campari which spawned her very famous catchphrase “Nah, Luton Airport!” An all-rounder she has tried it all, modelling, journalism, stage and TV. Her role as Stephanie in Emmerdale comes after a tough year out of the limelight.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Anon

In 2000, she was almost killed in a car crash when the car she was driving plummeted 30 foot down a bridge and she had to be cut from the wreckage. She spent four day in hospital with facial injuries and had to have part of her ear sewed back on after it was ripped off.
Lorraine is well known for her strong cockney accent, and people often need to translate what she says because of her frequent use of cockney slang
Bears a striking resemblance to actress Sheree Murphy and Emmerdale executive producer Steve Frost chose her to play Sheree’s mother in the program especially for the likeness.
Marked her first year in long running soap Emmerdale. [September 2003]
The above IMDB entry can also be accessed online here.
John Gordon Sinclair
John Gordon Sinclair
John Gordon Sinclair

John Gordon Sinclair was born in Glasgow in 1962.   He came to fame with his performance in “Gregory’s Girl” in 1981.   Other movies include “Local Hero” and “Walter and June”.

Nora Swinburne
Nora Swinburne
Nora Swinburne

Nora Swinburne was born in 1902 in Bath.   She studied drama at RADA and made her stage debut in London 1914 in “Paddy Pools”.   Her films include “Branded” in 1920, “The Man in Gray” in 1943, “Fanny By Gaslight”, “Jassy” and “Anne of the Thousand Days” in 1969.   She was married to actor Esmond Knight.   She died in 2000 at the age of 97.

Eric Shorter’s “Guardian” obituary:

Whatever she did on the West End stage – and her career spanned more than 60 years – the actress Nora Swinburne, who has died aged 97, did with grace and poise. Here was a profile of striking beauty: a touch haughty, perhaps, but with a hint of that silent command to which playgoers and filmgoers were content to be subject in the heyday of light comedy. She was also intelligent enough to enliven the most routine dramaturgy – and between the wars it could indeed be mechanical.

How many other actresses knew how to twirl three rows of pearls as expertly and expressively as to make James Agate doubt, in Daphne du Maurier’s The Years Between (1947), whether – in her supposed widowhood as a woman of parliamentary ambition – Swinburne would care “twopence whether working-class houses are provided with baths or not?” Who could more effectively lighten a dark scene of marital strife, or keep the home fires burning more brightly, even down to the handling of the drawing-room tongs (when, by rare chance, no servant was there to do it)?

Nearly all of Swinburne’s plays were set amid the middle or upper-middle classes, with her caressing voice to smooth many a troubled male brow, or her beguiling feminity to bestow consolation on an anxious husband. If she did not dominate all the stage drawing-rooms of the period, her gracious presence brought dignity and a dry wit to scores of forgotten farces.

Is it ill-mannered now to wonder why she seemed so often, and for so long, to have played the same kind of ladylike part? To wonder, in a word, why she never developed into a more powerful actress? The short answer may be that Swinburne’s attractive art flourished in an era when drawing-room comedy, however silly, pleased. Audiences could be sure of seeing, without envy or disdain, their social betters leading sometimes lurid lives of graceful and secure splendour, so unlike the lives of most spectators. It was a distraction from reality.

So, for the stage-struck daughter of a west country toy manufacturer, who trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and, at 14, got her first West End chance in something called Paddly Pools, the spirit of the age was on her side. When the troops who survived the trenches came home on leave, they crowded those theatres playing revues and musical comedy. By then, the young Elinore Johnson (she soon changed her name) was part of Clive Currie’s Young Players learning the ropes.

Swinburne would appear in up to three West End plays every season. And even when the demand for floozies and flappers in such trivial-sounding shows as This And That, Yes, It’s You I Want, Lovers’ Leap, and Married For Money began to dwindle in the 1940s, her theatrical presence was such that no playgoer felt able to miss it. Even the sternest critics said she never bored them, however boring her part.

The upshot was two or three more decades on stage, including two stints with the ’69 Theatre, Manchester, playing Violet in TS Eliot’s The Family Reunion (1973) and Julia Shuttleworth in The Cocktail Party (1975). Then she retired.

Meanwhile, since 1919, there had been a less intense career both in silent cinema and the talkies. Her films ranged from Branded (1920) to Up The Chastity Belt (1971). Quartet (1948), drawn from Maugham short stories, was perhaps the best. But Swinburne’s heart was always in the theatre. Between the wars, she sailed twice to Broadway; and in 1938 went successfully into management with Peter Blackmore’s Lot’s Wife, in which she played the title role.

In Turgenev’s A Month In The Country (1943), Swinburne took over the role of Nathalia Petrovna from Valerie Taylor, and from Diana Wynyard in Lillian Hellman’s Watch On The Rhine. Later stage credits included Mrs Arbuthnot in Wilde’s A Woman Of No Importance (1953), Peter Coke’s Fool’s Paradise (1959), in which she co-starred with Cicely Courtneidge, and Donald Howarth’s All Good Children (1964). Her television roles included Aunt Hester in the Forsyte Saga (1967).

There was a walkover look about much of her acting. But when it looks easy it seldom is. In the name part of Maugham’s Caroline (Arts Theatre, 1949), for example, Swinburne played the siren, as Harold Hobson remarked, “gently and charmingly”. It was a familiar role for her to be “an object of desire”.

Nora Swinburne was thrice married and twice divorced; her first husband was the actor Francis Lister; her second was Edward Ashley-Cooper; and her third was the actor Esmond Knight, who died in 1987.

She leaves her son Francis, from her first marriage.

Nora Swinburne, actress, born July 24 1902; died May 1 2000

Gary Brumburgh’sentry:

nown for her genteel ways and stately beauty in tea service drama, British actress Nora Swinburne was born Elinore Johnson on July 24, 1902, in Bath, England. Performing on stage as both actress and dancer from the age of 10, her father, Henry Swinburne Johnson, manufactured toys for a living. She was a member of Clive Currie‘s Young Players in 1914 and appeared in shows during that year. Educated at Rosholme College, she trained for the arts at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. Building up her stage reputation with such pieces as “Suzette” (1917), “Yes, Uncle!” (1918), “Scandal” (1919), and the title role in “Tilly of Bloomsbury” (1921), her attractiveness proved quite suitable for films, entering silent pictures in 1920. She appeared in a handful of sophisticated fare throughout the early part of the decade such as Branded (1920), The Fortune of Christina McNab (1921), Hornet’s Nest (1923), and A Girl of London (1925). Divorced from actorFrancis Lister, she was married to actor Edward Ashley at the time she met Esmond Knight while appearing in the play “Wise Tomorrow” in 1937. Actually, both actors were married at the time, but they engaged in a long, discreet affair until both were free. They finally married in the late 1940s and enjoyed a long union together. They would appear in several plays over the years from “Autumn Crocus” (1939) to “The Cocktail Party” (1974). Ms. Swinburne enjoyed great theatrical success playing the role of Dinah Lot in the play “Lot’s Wife” (1938), which she subsequently reproduced under her own management, and later replaced Diana Wynyard in the memorable war drama “Watch on the Rhine” in 1943. By the advent of sound, Ms. Swinburne had been related to opulent supports in films, usually appearing as ladylike mothers or socialite types in plush Gainsborough dramas. Some of her later films would include Perfect Understanding(1933), The Citadel (1938), The Man in Grey (1943), Man of Evil (1944), Jassy (1947),Christopher Columbus (1949), Quartet (1948), The River (1951) (with husband Knight),Quo Vadis (1951) (as Pomponia), Helen of Troy (1956) (as Hecuba), Decision at Midnight(1963) (again with Knight), Interlude (1968) and Anne of the Thousand Days (1969). An avid gardener by nature, Ms. Swinburne would die of old age in 2000, thirteen years after husband Knight.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net