Brittish Actors

Collection of Classic Brittish Actors

Iain Gregory
Iain Gregory

Iain Gregory was in British films and television series in the 1960’s.   His first film role was in “Konga” in 1961.   Among his other films are “Lancelot and Guinevere” and “The System”.   His last known credit was in “In the Shadow of the Tower” on television in 1972.

Paul Barber
Paul Barber
Paul Barber

Paul Barber was born in Liverpool in 1951.   He is best known for his part of Denzil in television’s “Only Fools and Horses” and as Horse in “The Full Monty” in 1997.   Article on Paul Barber here.

Anna Kashfi
Anna Kashfi
Anna Kashfi
Anna Kashfi
Anna Kashfi

Anna Kashfi obituary in “The Telegraph” in 1980

It was thought that Anna Kashfi was from India but she was in fact born Joan O’Callaghan in 1934 in Cardiff in Wales.   Her entire career was in movies and television shows in Hollywood.   Her major films were “The Mountain” in 1955 with Spence Tracy and Robert Wagner, “Cowboy” with Jack Lemmon and Glenn Ford and “Battle Hymn” with Rock Hudson and Martha Hyer.   Her career seemed to stall after her short lived marriage to Marlon Brando.   She died in 2015 at tyhe age of 80.

Her obituary in the ” Telegraph”:

Anna Kashfi, who has died aged 80, was an actress of exotic appearance who was the first wife of Marlon Brando, and the mother of his first child, Christian; she played “foreigners” in several Hollywood films of the 1950s.   Her origins were never clarified beyond doubt: when she was thrust into the spotlight there were suggestions that she had invented her Indian ancestry, with one newspaper offering the theory that she browned her skin by bathing in coffee.   She insisted that she was Indian, the daughter of Devi Kashfi, an architect, and a woman called Selma Ghose. But the day after she married Marlon Brando in late 1957 – she wore a sari for the ceremony – one William O’Callaghan from Cardiff and his wife Phoebe emerged claiming to be her parents. Her real name, they said, was not Anna Kashfi but Joan O’Callaghan.   The truth may be that, as the actress explained in her memoirs, she was the result of an “unregistered alliance” and was subsequently adopted by O’Callaghan.

Her films included, most notably, her debut The Mountain (1956), a thriller starring Spencer Tracy in which she played a Hindu woman who survives an aeroplane crash in the French Alps. Edward Dmytryk, the director, told reporters at the time that he was aware of Anna Kashfi’s “real” name, but assumed she was Anglo-Indian.   It was during production that she met Marlon Brando in the Paramount studio commissary. Recalling the meeting years later, the actress wrote: “The face, with an incipient heaviness about the jawline, reflected a wistfulness, an open sensuality, and an ineffable indifference.” She was pregnant by the time she married the star and they were divorced within two years. Their relationship had been violent and tempestuous while they were together – Anna Kashfi was reported to have thrown a tricycle at Brando – and it remained difficult.   For 15 years a painful dispute rumbled on over custody of their son Christian, whom Anna Kashfi preferred to call by his second name Devi. During legal proceedings it was claimed that she had been emotionally unstable and at times reliant on alcohol and barbiturates.    Christian was also troubled: he dropped out of school, failed to make a career out of acting, and was sent to prison after shooting dead the boyfriend of his half-sister Cheyenne. He died at the age of 49 of pneumonia.

Anna Kashfi was born Joan O’Callaghan on September 30 1934 in Darjeeling, where her father was a traffic superintendent on Indian state railways; she was brought up there until she was 13, when the family moved to Cardiff, where William O’Callaghan worked in a factory producing steel. Anna attended St Joseph’s Convent School then the Cardiff School of Art. Early on she had jobs in a butcher’s shop in the city and in an ice cream parlour at Porthcawl. She soon started modelling and in 1952 was spotted by an MGM talent scout.   Her flourishing as an actress was brief. After The Mountain she played a Korean woman in Battle Hymn (1957), opposite Rock Hudson as a Christian minister turned fighter pilot; then the daughter of an over-protective Mexican cattle baron whom Jack Lemmon has fallen for in Cowboy (1958); the next year she had a small part in Night of the Quarter Moon.   Anna Kashfi published a “tell-all” memoir, Brando for Breakfast, in 1979.

Latterly she lived in California and then in Washington state. In 1974 she married James Hannaford, a salesman. He died in 1986.

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

IMDB mini biography:

Anna Kashfi has appeared in a number of films including The Mountain (1956) (withSpencer Tracy) and Battle Hymn (1957) (with Rock Hudson) but is best known for beingMarlon Brando‘s first wife. Kashfi is often thought of as being Indian but is, in fact, the daughter of a Welsh factory worker, William Callaghan, and simply reinvented herself to increase her screen appeal. She met Brando in 1955 in the Paramount commissary and after an on-off relationship (mainly due to Brando’s relentless womanizing) married him in 1957. (Brando claimed that he married her only because she had become pregnant.) She gave birth in May 1958 to their son, Christian, who became notorious in 1990 for shooting dead Dag Drollet, a crime that earned him a ten-year jail sentence. Kashfi divorced Brando in 1959.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Charles Lee < charleslee@tinyworld.co.uk

Valerie Hobson
Valerie Hobson
Valerie Hobson

“Valerie Hobson was-  to her disadvantage- ineffably ladylike.  The British film industry of the 30s and 40s was a man’s world and the female stars got short shrift.   Those British stars who did go to Hollywood were criticized back home for resubmitting to that town’s despised glamour treatment.   Hobson’s time in Hollywood was not at all worthwhile, and she might have made no stronger mark in the British industry had not she managed to assert her distinctive personality from time to time. ” – David Shipman in “The Great Movie Stars” (1970)

Valerie Hobson obituary in “The Guardian” in 1998.

Valerie Hobson has two distinct phases to her acting career.   She was born in 1917 in Larne in Northern Ireland.   She started her career in British films but by 1935 when she was only 18 she was acting in Hollywood.   She starred in two classic Universal horror movies “”The Werewolf of London” and the magnificent James Whale directed “The Bride of Frankenstein” with Boris Karloff and Colin Clive.   By the late thirties she was back in Britain and and continued her career there.   Her second period of fame was with a series of films she made from the mid 1940’s onwards in the U.K. including David Lean’s “Great Expectations”, “KInd Hearts and Coronets”, “The Years Between” and “The Card”.   In 1954 after a period playing Mrs Anna in the West End production of “The KIng and I”, Valerie Hobson retired from acting.   Her name came into the headlines nine years later when her husband MP, John Profumo got involved in a scandal with Russian diplomats and Christine Keeler.   Valerie Hobson and John  Profumo remained together and weathered the storm and spent their remaing years involved in many charitable causes especially in the East End of London.   She died in 1998 at the age of 81.   Her son David has written a terrific book about his remarkable parents entitled “Bringing the House Down” which was published in 2006.

“Independent” obituary by Tom Vallance:LIKE MANY British female film stars of the Thirties and Forties, Valerie Hobson exuded breeding and class, but she also brought to her performances a delightfully sophisticated sense of humour and a refreshing element of spunk, whether as the wise-cracking heroine of Q Planes, the resourceful double agent of The Spy in Black, the haughty Estella of Great Expectations, the shrewd widow in Kind Hearts and Coronets, or, on stage, the dignified but determined governess Anna Leonowens in The King and I.

She was to display similar grit in her real life when her husband, the politician John Profumo, became notorious for his relationship with a call-girl who was also involved with a Russian official. In an admirable display of stoicism and loyalty, Hobson stood by her husband and they were to remain married until her death.

She was born Valerie Babette Louise Hobson, in Larne, Northern Ireland, in 1917, the daughter of a British naval officer who was serving on a minesweeper at the time. She was educated at St Augustine’s Priory, London and started dancing lessons at three:

When we moved to Hampshire and I was five, I was taken to London twice a week to be taught ballet by Espinosa. These lessons were intended to “give me grace”, but were precious training for the stage, which I’d been heading for ever since I grabbed a bath towel and pretended to be the Queen of Sheba, with nanny for an audience.

After training at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, she made her stage debut at the age of 15 in Orders Are Orders. Oscar Hammerstein II, who saw her in the show, spotted her lunching with her mother at Claridge’s, went over to their table and offered her a small part in his production Ball at the Savoy, starring Maurice Evans, at Drury Lane. While appearing in the show, she made her first film, a minor thriller Eyes of Fate (1933).

Evans then asked her to appear with himself and Henry Daniell in the film version of L. DuGardo Peach’s radio play The Path of Glory (1934), a satire on war so biting that it was taken out of distribution after one day. Hobson had a small stage role in Noel Coward’s Conversation Piece, during the run of which she played the romantic lead in a popular screen adaptation of R.C. Sherriff’s play Badger’s Green. As the daughter of a developer whose plans will wreck a village’s beloved cricket green, she complicates things by falling in love with the son of a protestor.

Her performance in the film led to tests for Hollywood and the offer of a contract by Universal Pictures. With her mother, the 17-year-old Hobson departed for the US, but was disappointed with the parts she was given. Ironically her first role, that of Biddy in the studio’s version of Dickens’ Great Expectations (1934) was eliminated from the final print – years later Hobson was to have notable success as Estella in David Lean’s masterly version of the same tale.

The studio started her in B films (briefly as a platinum blonde), and though one of Hobson’s subsequent American films is a true classic, James Whale’s baroque Bride of Frankenstein (1935), the actress was unhappy with the other horror films and minor thrillers she was offered. Even in the best, The Mystery of Edwin Drood (1935) and Werewolf of London (1935), her roles were colourless. “I’d been there 18 months and learnt a great deal, but I was getting tired of horror pictures and doing nothing but scream and faint . . . In The Bride of Frankenstein, I was

carried by Boris Karloff over almost every artificial hill in Hollywood.” Universal in fact kept her screams in their sound library to use in subsequent horror movies.

Hobson returned to England in 1936, where in such films as the intriguing thriller No Escape (1936) she quickly established herself as a stylish leading lady. In this pre-war period Hobson reputedly also made more television appearances than any other actress. The producer Alexander Korda, after seeing Hobson’s performance opposite Douglas Fairbanks Jr in Raoul Walsh’s Jump For Glory (1937), tested her for the role of a colonel’s wife on the North West Frontier in his production The Drum (1938).

Her next film, the comedy-thriller This Man Is News (1938), was the first to display Hobson’s innate flair for comedy and was favourably compared by critics to America’s “Thin Man” films, with Hobson and Barry K. Barnes as a pair of wise-cracking, cocktail-drinking married sleuths. “It had an extraordinary success,” Hobson told Brian McFarlane a few years ago. “As a nation we hadn’t made a high comedy successfully until then. When they put it on at the Plaza there were queues literally round the block to see it.”

A sequel, This Man in Paris (1939), was even better than the first. Both films were produced by Anthony Havelock-Allan, with whom Hobson fell in love, and they were married in 1939. Meanwhile the Korda production Q Planes (1938) had consolidated Hobson’s stardom. As the sister of Ralph Richardson and sweetheart of Laurence Olivier, Hobson brought infectious sparkle to a lively and witty espionage thriller, and she followed this with two more highly entertaining thrillers, The Spy in Black (1939) and Contraband (1940), both co- starring Conrad Veidt, scripted by Emeric Pressburger and directed by Michael Powell, who was to recall, “Valerie was a tall, strong, intelligent girl with glorious eyes and a quick wit (too quick a wit, some people thought, but I had suffered too many English ladies to complain about that).”

The Spy in Black opened in London the week that war was declared, was a great hit in both England and the US, and prompted the second pairing of the two stars in Contraband, aptly retitled Blackout in the US since a great deal of the film’s action takes place in a blacked-out West End. During the war years Hobson’s career faltered after she turned down David O Selznick’s offer of a Hollywood contract because she did not want to leave her husband.

She was off screen for three years after The Adventures of Tartu in 1943, and other actresses became more popular, notably those of the Gainsborough pictures, such as Margaret Lockwood, Phyllis Calvert, Jean Kent and Patricia Roc, all of whom could play earthier roles than Hobson, who was becoming increasingly patrician.

She returned to the screen as an MP who finds it difficult to adjust to life with a husband returned from the war in The Years Between (1946), then was cast as Estella in Great Expectations (1946), regarded by many as the finest screen adaptation of a Dickens novel. The film was produced by Cineguild, a company formed by Hobson’s husband along with Ronald Neame and David Lean, and the same group produced Hobson’s next film, a lavish costume melodrama Blanche Fury (1947).

In this gloomy tale, Stewart Granger was the illegitimate but rightful heir to the Fury estate who murders Hobson’s husband and father-in-law. He is hanged for his crimes and Hobson dies giving birth to his son. An attempt to appeal to the audience who had flocked to Gainsborough melodramas, it was too sombre for popular acceptance. Said Hobson, “I had just had our son, who was born mentally handicapped, and Tony meant the film as a sort of `loving gift’, making me back into a leading lady.”

The film’s beautiful production values and stunning colour photography prompted critic Richard Winnington to comment: “Let’s have some bad lighting and some bad photograph and perhaps a bit of a good movie.” More highly thought of today, the film remains Hobson’s own favourite.

In 1949 she starred in a film unanimously praised as a classic comedy, Robert Hamer’s Kind Hearts and Coronets. Hobson stated:

I have always thought that the main reason for the success of Kind Hearts was that it was played absolutely dead straight. I think they were very clever and cast two such contrasting types as Joan Greenwood and myself as the women.

Hobson had an unsympathetic role as a selfish mother in The Rocking Horse Winner (1948) and played the Countess in The Card (1951), again co-starring with Alec Guinness (“a wonderful film actor with the most subtle integrity”). In 1952 she and Havelock-Allan were divorced.

Good film roles were becoming scarce again when Hobson was offered the starring role of Anna in the Drury Lane production of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s musical The Kind and I. The show’s original Broadway star, Gertrude Lawrence, had planned to recreate her part in London prior to her untimely death. (Hobson had studied singing at RADA, and during her Hollywood stay had sung on Bing Crosby’s radio programme.)

With Herbert Lom playing the King the show was a smash hit and a great personal success for Hobson. It opened in October 1953 and Hobson stayed in it for a year and a half, announcing that at the end of the run she would retire since she doubted anything in her career could top this. Her last film was Rene Clement’s witty comedy, Knave of Hearts (Monsieur Ripois) (1954) in which she was the accommodating wife of a philanderer (Gerard Philipe). She had married an MP, John Profumo, and stated that she would devote the rest of her life to being his wife.

When in March 1963 her husband admitted his affair with Christine Keeler and resigned from his post as Secretary of State for War, Hobson’s name was again in the headlines. “Of course I am not leaving Jack because this ghastly thing has happened,” she said at the time. “I hope to spend the rest of my life with him and my family – the rest of my life.” She continued to deal with the matter with restraint and dignity but did not flinch from the facts.

A few weeks after the headlines dozens of reporters and photographers rushed to Dymchurch in Kent where Hobson was making her first public appearance since the scandal, opening a home for mentally handicapped children. Before the ceremony, she told the crowd of over 1,000 people:

I hope you will forgive me if I start on a more private note. The personal affairs of my family have been so greatly in the limelight recently that it has not been quite easy for me to decide whether or not I should have fulfilled this engagement. The invitation which I accepted with great joy last October, has turned out to be a little of an ordeal. But when I see you all and know how friendly and kind you always are I know that, in fact, it is one of my great joys. There are occasions when all personal circumstances come secondary.

At the end of the ceremony the actress received a prolonged ovation. Her involvement with the mentally handicapped started after one of her two sons by Havelock-Allan was born with Downs Syndrome and she also devoted time to Lepra, a leprosy relief organisation. John Profumo, after his resignation, worked tirelessly for charity, notably at Toynbee Hall, a welfare organisation for the poor and victims of alcohol and drugs, and his wife assisted him in this. In 1975 he was appointed Commander of the British Empire and Hobson, who accompanied him to Buckingham Palace, made evident her great pleasure that her husband’s public service had been recognised.

Tom Vallance

Valerie Babette Louise Hobson, actress: born Larne, Co Down 14 April 1917; married 1939 Anthony Havelock-Allan (one son and one son deceased; marriage dissolved 1952), 1954 John Profumo (one son); died London 13 November 1998.

This “Guardian” obituary can also be accessed online here.

TCM Overview:

Upper-crust beauty who established herself on the British stage and made her film debut in “Moulin Rouge” (1952). Bennett appeared in several plays written by her then-husband John Osborne, including “A Patriot for Me”, “Watch It Come Down” and “Time Present,” for which she won the London Evening Standard Award and Variety Club of Britain awards

Dictionary of Irish Biography:

Hobson, Valerie (1917–98), actress, was born 14 April 1917 at Larne, Co. Antrim, daughter of Commander Robert Gordon Hobson (1877–1940), naval officer, and Violette Hobson (née Hamilton-Willoughby). Educated at St Augustine’s Priory, London, she was stage-struck from a young age. Starting ballet at three, she was taught by Espinosa in London from the age of five. However, she was too tall to be a ballerina and settled instead on acting, enrolling in RADA. Her stage debut, at the age of 15, was in Basil Foster’s ‘Orders are orders’, where she was spotted by Oscar Hammerstein, who cast her in his West End show ‘Ball at the Savoy’ in Drury Lane. This showcased her talents as a comedienne and led to a series of appearances in British B movies, including Two hearts in waltz timeThe path to glory, and Badger’s Green, all in 1934. Still a minor, she had to be accompanied to the studio by her nanny. At 18 she won a contract with Universal Studios; however, Hollywood proved a disappointment. After appearing in a succession of farces and thrillers, of which only The bride of Frankenstein (1935) is remembered, she fell victim to the reorganisation of the studios in the mid 1930s, following a financial crisis, and her contract was not renewed, though her marked prowess as a screamer meant that Universal filed her top decibels in the studio sound library.

Back in England she was cast opposite Douglas Fairbanks, jr, in Jump for glory (1937), in which she caught the eye of Alexander Korda, who signed her to a long-term contract. She made, however, only two films for Korda: The drum (1938), about the North-West Frontier, and Q planes (1939) with Ralph Richardson and Laurence Olivier. During this period she also worked twice for Michael Powell: in The spy in black (1939) and Contraband(1940), both with Conrad Veidt. In 1939 she married Anthony Havelock-Allan, her former co-star in Badger’s Green and now a producer. Three years later she was offered a second Hollywood contract by David O. Selznick, who wanted her for Jane Eyre. However, with the war at its height she was unwilling to leave her husband. He subsequently founded, with David Lean and Ronald Neame, the Cineguild production company, of which he was eventually head. Cineguild provided Hobson with some of her strongest roles, including Estella in David Lean’s Great expectations (1946) and the title role in Blanche Fury (1948), a period melodrama with Stewart Granger. Excellent as Estella, a part that suited what the Daily Telegraph (14 Nov. 1998) called the ‘slightly smug, lecturing strain in her on-screen personality’, she was not in general convincing as the love interest. Although beautiful, with long auburn hair, she was upper-crust and aloof and seemed too prim and ladylike to appear opposite matinée idols such as Granger and Gérard Philippe.

Havelock-Allan left Cineguild in 1947, taking Hobson with him. Together they made The small voice (1948), about an ordinary family held to ransom by escaped convicts. Her subsequent career consisted of minor melodramas and comedies, of which the most celebrated is Kind hearts and coronets (1949) opposite Alec Guinness. The part of the prudish, aristocratic Edith D’Ascoyne suited her talents perfectly, as did that of the governess in the Rogers and Hammerstein musical ‘The king and I’, which she played in Drury Lane in 1953 after a long absence from the stage. Though not musically trained, she made a success of the part and the play ran for a year. Remarking that she was unlikely to be offered as good a role again, she retired at the age of 37. Her last screen appearance was in Knave of hearts (1954). That year she married (31 December) the wealthy tory MP for Stratford (1950–63), Jack Profumo, having divorced Havelock-Allan in 1952.

A life as socialite, MP’s wife, and mother was disrupted by the ‘Profumo scandal’ of 1963. Her husband, secretary of state for war since 1960, denied in the house of commons (22 March 1963) having had an affair with Christine Keeler, the lover of a Soviet official. Subsequently proved to have lied, he had to resign both from his ministry and his seat three months later. Hobson told Lord Denning, who conducted an inquiry, that stress, exhaustion, and sleeping pills contributed to her husband’s making his false statement to the commons. She stood by him and joined him in his later career as charity worker. He established the Toynbee Hall centre in east London for people experiencing alcoholism and drug addiction (for which he received a CBE in 1975) while she put her energy into working for children with intellectual disabilities (with whom she had an affinity, as her eldest son from her first marriage had Down’s syndrome). For Lepra, a leprosy relief organisation, she dreamed up the ‘ring appeal’, which encouraged wealthy people, including members of the royal family, to hand over rings to raise money. She died 13 November 1998 in England, and was survived by both husbands and a son from each marriage: Mark Havelock-Allan and the writer David Profumo

Brenda Bruce
Brenda Bruce
Brenda Bruce
 

Brenda Bruce was born in Manchester in 1918.   She acted with the Brimingham Repertory Company from 1936 until 1939 and then went on to act with the Royal Shakespeare Company.  Her first film was “Laugh With Me” in 1938.   Her other films include “Millions Like Us” with Patricia Roc, “I Live in Grosvenor Square” with Anna Neagle and “Night Train to Dublin”.   In 1985 she had a major role in Joseph Losey’s “Steaming ” with an all female cast including Vanessa Redgrave, Sarah Miles and Diana Dors.   She was acting until shortly before her death in 1996 at the age of 77.

Her “Independent” obituary by Adam Benedick:
Brenda Bruce was one of the most seasoned interpreters of the classics on the post-war stage. Whether in comedy or tragedy, fantasy or farce, she could be counted on to give a performance to relish.

Her career was so long and rewarding that to the generation that thinks of her mainly as one of the Royal Shakespeare Company’s leading lights – as a marvellously galvanised Mistress Page in The Merry Wives of Windsor (from 1964 to 1975), a witty but eerie witch in David Rudkin’s Hansel and Gretel (1980) or a hilarious Mrs Groomkirby in N.F. Simpson’s One Way Pendulum (Old Vic, 1988) – it is worth recalling her earlier days when her West End career in Rattigan, Shaw, Maugham, T.W. Robertson, Anouilh, Arthur Macrae and John Mortimer made it seem as if she must become a star.

Who, for example, who had the luck to see it, could forget her Mabel Crum – in Rattigan’s While the Sun Shines (Globe, 1944)? Did we not hang on every word uttered in that lovely husky voice and every look from those huge blue eyes and enchanting snub nose? The performance should have set her on the path to fame and fortune; but Bruce did not set great store by such banalities.

Her pre-war training at Barry Jackson’s Birmingham Rep had made her a serious-minded actress. It was to Shaw rather than Hollywood that her young affections were drawn; and as Eliza to the actor-manager Alec Clunes’s Higgins in Pygmalion (Lyric, Hammersmith), a jolly Dolly Clandon in You Never Can Tell (Wyndham’s), and Vivie Warren in Mrs Warren’s Profession (Arts Theatre, 1950), she proved a real Shavian when that guru was still in vogue.

She followed Clunes to the Arts Theatre which he ran as a miniature national theatre for his festival of one-act Shaws. But her range had already begun to extend itself through authors like Aldous Huxley (The Giaconda Smile), Somerset Maugham (Home and Beauty), Eric Linklater (Love in Albania), and as Peter Pan (Scala, 1952).

Even so her talent never looked as if it would lie outside comedy in roles as dear little things, charming or irritating, asserting her fluffy, chubby femininity through that warm and always human personality.

Then, in 1962, came the turning-point. As Winnie in Happy Days (Royal Court) by Samuel Beckett, up to her waist, then her neck, in earth, she gazed out at the audience under the bright stage lights with her big eyes and in a slightly Scottish voice as if she had found a new authority.

It was the play’s first English performance and for her a nightmare. Having replaced Joan Plowright who had withdrawn, pregnant, she had had to get up the part in a hurry, studying it until the early hours every night; and the author himself turned up while she was still struggling with her words.

Easily awed, George Devine, the director, promptly withdrew as the author came up with more and more changes to his text; and Miss Bruce ended up being directed by Samuel Beckett, who had never directed a play before in his life. Beckett demanded from just one line as many as 11 different inflections. The performance was a triumph. “Peaked and wan but resilient to the last” (as Tynan put it), “she sustains the evening with dogged valour and ends up almost looking like Beckett.”

Both on and off stage, Brenda Bruce was “resilient to the last” – the landlady in Michael Frayn’s Here (Donmar 1993); though it was as characters of more consequence – like the pert and very funny Mistresses Quickly and Page in the Merry Wives of Windsor which she seems to have made her own from the 1960s, or the bald, cruel Duchess in The Revenger’s Tragedy (1966-67), or as the wailing Margaret in Richard III (1975) while her own first husband was dying – that her acting reached its highest charge.

She worked more often in television than in the cinema and in 1962 was nominated television actress of the year. Her credits included the series Rich and Rich, Girl in a Birdcage, A Chance to Shine, Death of a Teddy Bear and Hard Cases.

Brenda Bruce was twice married, first to the theatre manager, director and broadcaster Roy Rich, who died in 1975, and then to the actor Clement McCallin who died two years ago.

Adam Benedick

Brenda Bruce, actress: born Manchester 7 July 1918; married firstly Roy Rich (two daughters; died 1975), secondly Clement McCallin (one adopted son deceased; died 1994); died London 19 February 1996.

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

Brian Deacon
Brian Deacon
Brian Deacon

Brian Deacon was born in Oxford in 1949.   He trained with the Oxford Youth Theatre.   In 1972 he made his film debut with a leading role with Glenda Jackson and Oliver Reed in “The Triple Echo”.     Other films include “Vampyres”, “Jesus” and “A Zed and Two Noughts” in which he appeared with his brother Eric.

TCM Overview:

A successful actor, Brian Deacon lent his talents to the big screen, most notably in drama.

Deacon began his career with roles in “The Triple Echo” (1973) and the Marianne Morris horror movie “Vampyres” (1974). He then acted in “Jesus” (1979), “Separate Tables” (HBO, 1982-83) and “Nelly’s Version” (1983).

Later in his career, Deacon acted in “A Zed and Two Noughts” (1988).

Alma Cogan
Alma Cogan
Alma Cogan

Alma Cogan was one of the most popular singers in Britain in the early to mid 1950’s with a string of Top Ten hits to her credit.   She did too have make a number of films in the UK.   She was born in 1932 in London.   Among her films were “Dance Hall” in 1950 and “For Better, For Worse” in 1954.   Alma Cogan died in 1966 aged only 34.

“MailOnline” article by Michael Thornton in 2006:

 

By MICHAEL THORNTON

Alma Cogan was the first female pop star – yet was dead by 34. For years, there were cruel whispers about her sexuality. But now her sister reveals she was John Lennon’s lover:

Late on an October night, 40 years ago last month, in a private room at London’s Middlesex Hospital, one of the most famous women in Britain lay in a coma as her young life slowly ebbed away. Her face, once so alive and radiant with health and vitality, had been instantly recognisable for 12 years to millions of television viewers and record fans.

But as cancer had spread inexorably through her body, she had lost so much weight that she now appeared almost skeletal. One of her closest friends, visiting her during her final days, was so devastated by her appearance that he rushed weeping from the room into the street.

When, on October 26, 1966, giant headlines across the front of newspapers informed a shocked public that Alma Cogan, Britain’s greatest female recording star of the Fifties and early Sixties, had died from cancer at the tragically young age of 34, there was universal grief and incredulity.

It just didn’t seem possible that the bouncy, bright and bubbling Alma, with her sequinned, voluminous dresses, brunette beehive, sparkling eyes and wide, dynamic smile, could be snuffed out of existence with such shocking suddenness at so early an age.

During her life, Alma’s brio and talent had brought her extraordinary fame – but with it came unwelcome attention. There were questions about her sexuality and rumours of a secret affair with John Lennon which was conducted under his wife Cynthia’s nose.

But what no one could have predicted when she died was that today, four decades on, Alma would still be creating controversy. Years after her death, she caused her immediate family to feel that they were being ‘stalked’ and haunted by disciples of her legend. And then she was publicly – and preposterously – linked to Myra Hindley.

In a brief but meteoric career, Alma packed theatres all over the country, dazzled millions of TV viewers with her exuberant Jewish chutzpah, and clocked up 20 hit records, more than any other British female singer, spending an astonishing total of 109 weeks in the charts.   As she belted out one novelty hit after another – Bell Bottom Blues, Dreamboat, I Can’t Tell A Waltz From A Tango, Twenty Tiny Fingers, Never Do A Tango With An Eskimo, Cowboy Jimmy Joe, and Just Couldn’t Resistor – her style was the very quintessence of kitschand the height of high camp.

A BBC television documentary to be screened on Friday and a DVD just released to mark the 40th anniversary of her death present Cogan as a sexual enigma. Two of the men who regularly escorted her, composer Lionel Bart and Beatles manager Brian Epstein, were both gay.   And one of Cogan’s closest friends, the broadcaster David Jacobs, says: ‘I always thought of her as a virgin.’

One story, allegedly told by the young Dusty Springfield, an admitted lesbian herself, with whom Cogan was said to be closely involved, was that Alma was not really gay, but had been raped as a young teenager and had developed a mental block about sex with men as a consequence.

Her younger sister, West End stage star Sandra Caron, who is also Alma’s biographer, dismisses this rape story, saying: ‘People just make these things up.’ But Sandra, some years Alma’s junior, would have been a small child at the time and might well not have been told about the rape, if it happened.

One more dramatic twist in the mystery of Cogan and sex is the clandestine love affair between Alma and John Lennon.

Sandra Caron, who knew the Beatles even earlier than Alma and became very close to Paul McCartney, breaks her silence on this story for the first time.

She told me: ‘I knew about Alma and John, of course, but it was something no one admitted because John was married. We had a very strict Jewish upbringing and my mother would never have approved of a relationship between Alma and a married man.’

Ironically, before The Beatles rose to fame, Cogan represented everything Lennon most disliked. As a student at the Liverpool College of Art, Lennon ‘used to make horrible jokes against the singer Alma Cogan, impersonating her singing: “Sugar In The Morning, Sugar In The Evening, Sugar At Suppertime.” He’d pull crazy expressions on his face to try to imitate her.’

 

But in 1962, when The Beatles appeared with Cogan in Sunday Night At The London Palladium, it was obvious that Lennon rapidly revised his view. ‘John was potty about her,’ George Harrison revealed later. ‘He thought her really sexy and was gutted when she died.’  After the Fab Four’s first visit to Alma’s home in Stafford Court, Kensington High Street, where she lived with her widowed mother, Fay, and her younger sister, Sandra, Lennon gave Cogan the name ‘Sara Sequin’, while Fay became ‘Ma McCogie’.   The Cogan flat was probably the most celebrated showbusiness salon in London history. Princess Margaret, Audrey Hepburn, Cary Grant, Sir Noel Coward, Ethel Merman, Danny  Kaye and Sammy Davis Jr were all regular visitors. Of her first visit to Stafford Court, Lennon’s first wife, Cynthia, records: ‘John and I had thought of her as out-of-date and unhip. We remembered her in the oldfashioned cinched-in waists and wide skirts of the Fifties.

But in the flesh she was beautiful, intelligent and funny, oozing sex appeal and charm. Walking into her home for the first time was like walking into another world.   ‘It was decorated like a swish nightclub with dark, richly coloured silken fabrics and brocades everywhere. Every surface was covered with ethnic sculptures, ornaments and dozens of photographs in elaborate silver, gold and jewelled frames.’

Cynthia became convinced that Alma and John were lovers. ‘I could see the sexual tension between them,’ she recalled, ‘and how outrageously she flirted with him. But I had no real grounds for suspicion…just a strong gut feeling.’   Her suspicions were correct. Alma and Lennon, both heavily disguised, took to meeting for passionate interludes in anonymous West End hotel suites, where they sometimes registered as ‘Mr and Mrs Winston’ (Lennon’s middle name).   The Beatles became regular visitors to the Cogan residence. It was on Alma’s piano, with Sandra at his side, that Paul McCartney composed Yesterday. It was 3am and McCartney first called the tune Scrambled Eggs because that’s what ‘Ma McCogie’ had just cooked them.

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This article can also be accessed on “MailOnline”  here.

As the emergence of The Beatles and of younger female singers – such as Lulu, Sandie Shaw and Dusty Springfield – revolutionised the pop music scene, Cogan’s records ceased to become hits and her star dimmed in Britain, though not internationally.   In Japan, her recording of Just Couldn’t Resist Her With Her Pocket Transistor topped the charts for an unprecedented ten months.   Andrew Loog Oldham, the manager of the Rolling Stones, also thought Alma ‘very sexy…we all fancied her’. He considered her later recordings ‘naff’, but noted Lennon’s anxiety to help Cogan recover a foothold in the charts.

Alma’s pianist, Stan Foster, who accompanied her on world tours, allegedly had a sexual relationship with her, but he says: ‘She was Jewish and I wasn’t. Her family wouldn’t have approved of that. I’m sure they didn’t.’   Unlike Lennon and Foster, the last man in her life was Jewish: Brian Morris, who managed the Ad Lib, one of London’s trendiest nightclubs.

He was desperate to marry her, and Sandra Caron says: ‘They were engaged. It was absolutely serious.’ But no engagement was ever announced, and some of her friends still believe that he was much more in love with her than she was with him.’   Whatever the truth, it was now academic. She had started to lose weight. ‘Alma had these weight-losing injections,’ the singer Anne Shelton told the music critic Chris White. ‘At the time, they were highly experimental and quite controversial. She certainly lost the weight, but after those injections, she was never well again.’

hortly afterwards, ovarian cancer was diagnosed, but no one seems certain now whether she knew this or not. Her photographer cousin Howard Grey took a last colour closeup of her with her arms around Brian Morris’s neck, and caught a look of almost unearthly beauty. Was it because her time was short? Or had she, at long last, found the love that had so long eluded her?   Sandra Caron, who had scored a major success herself as a performer in the United States, was in New York, preparing to appear on the Merv Griffin Show, when Alma’s condition suddenly deteriorated. Sandra cancelled her appearance and flew back to London.

On the morning after her death, shocked radio listeners switched on to hear Cogan’s voice singing an Irving Berlin number, opening with the words: ‘Heaven, I’m in Heaven.’ At the funeral, attended by almost every star in show business, a distraught Brian Morris had to be restrained from throwing himself into Alma’s grave.

Two weeks after Cogan died, Lennon met Yoko Ono, the woman who was to control and dominate the rest of his life, until he too, like Alma, came to an untimely end at the age of 40, from an assassin’s bullet.   The fallout from Cogan’s tragically early death was destined to cast a long shadow over the life and career of her younger sister, Sandra Caron. Now in her 60s, and happily married to the American stage and screen actor Brian Greene, Sandra is an actress of skill and distinction.

Merryn Threadgould’s elegiac and moving BBC documentary provides us with an answer: ‘Alma Cogan,’ it concludes, ‘seemed to wear life lightly. Maybe that’s why her early death remains so shocking, a denial of the optimism she represented. Yet it’s that optimism which has become her legacy. She still gives people reasons to be cheerful

Annie Ross
Annie Ross
Annie Ross

Guardian obituary in July 2020

The jazz singer Annie Ross, who has died aged 89, consistently brought the best out of good songs – and sometimes the best out of her expert admirers, too. The critic Kenneth Tynan memorably characterised the cool intelligence of Ross’s methods and manner as that of “a fallen angel”, and the Observer’s Dave Gelly once described her sound as exhibiting “a kind of dreamy watchfulness that is a definition of 1950s hip”.

London-born but raised in Hollywood by a jazz-singing aunt, Ross modelled her methods on the 40s vocal stars Ella Fitzgerald and Sarah Vaughan, as well as on the quicksilver instrumental melodies of that era’s bebop movement.

It was her spirited marriage of the instrument-mimicking 50s “vocalese” singing style that set her musical career alight as a 22-year-old in 1952, with a version of Wardell Gray’s instrumental song Twisted. Ross added a sardonically funny lyric that reflected both her abandoned-child anxieties and her self-possessed intelligence, featuring lines such as: “My analyst told me that I was right out of my head/he said I’d need treatment but I’m not that easily led”.

Joni Mitchell, Bette Midler and the jazz singer Mark Murphy would later make their own recordings of the hit, and its popularity helped Ross to pick up work with members of the jazz aristocracy such as Lionel HamptonGerry Mulligan and Chet Baker, as well as in the popular West End musical revue Cranks, which was staged at the St Martin’s theatre in 1956 and spawned an album of the same name.

Five years after Twisted there was another transformative moment in 1957, when Ross found herself in the role of vocal coach to the backing singers on a New York recording session devoted to vocalising the work of the swing big-band star Count Basie. It turned out that the singers were not up to the job, and so it was suggested that Ross and the venture’s initiators, Dave Lambert and Jon Hendricks, could rescue the project by overdubbing the vocal parts themselves – Ross imitating the trumpets and piano, while Lambert and Hendricks mimicked the reeds, low brass, bass and drums.

The outcome was the album Sing a Song of Basie (1957), which became a big commercial hit. As Ross told me in a 1996 interview for the magazine Boz: “Dave had said, ‘We’ll have to overdub. Will you do it?’ I said yes of course, even though I didn’t even know what an overdub was. So we did it all, and it was one of the greatest moments of my life when I heard those tapes back. I knew we had something incredible.”

Following the success of Sing a Song of Basie, the trio of Lambert, Hendricks & Ross was formed, and for five years they were one of the most innovative and commercially successful jazz-singing ensembles in history, touring the world and recording extensively with their lyrically inviting and virtuosically fast-moving brand of modern jazz. In 1962 they won a Grammy award for the album High Flying.

Though it was as an improvising singer that Ross expressed herself most vividly, in her later years she also acted, playing character roles in movies from Superman III (1983) to Robert Altman’s Short Cuts (1993), and she even did a voiceover for Britt Ekland in The Wicker Man (1973). “I don’t feel there’s a split between those two parts of my career,” she said. “All good actors are like singers, I think, working with others to make a great rhythm section.”

Born Annabelle Short in Mitcham, south London, Ross was the daughter of the Scottish vaudeville partners John “Jack” Short and May Dalziel (nee Allan), who performed as Short and Dalziel. One of four siblings, her brothers were Jimmy and Buddy Logan, who also took to the stage, the former as a successful comic and impresario, the latter as a singer. The family travelled to New York when Annabelle was four, and while out there she won a children’s radio contest. The first prize was a movie contract with MGM and so when her parents returned to Scotland they left her for good in the care of her mother’s sister Ella Logan (a singer) in Hollywood, where she grew up. As Annabelle Logan she sang Loch Lomond at the age of seven in the 1937 Hal Roach short movie Our Gang Follies of 1938, and she later played Judy Garland’s kid sister in the 1943 film Presenting Lily Mars.

Her aunt gave her a copy of Fitzgerald’s 1938 hit A Tisket a Tasket, thereby triggering the revelation that Fitzgerald’s agile vivacity “was what I wanted to sound like and sing like”. She soon realised that her vocal range allowed her to sing high for school choral music, but lustrously deep when she sang jazz alone in her room. She also discovered a talent for songwriting, when Let’s Fly – a song she wrote at just 14 – was recorded by the Tin Pan Alley singing star Johnny Mercer.

After leaving school she decided to go her own way – returning to the UK, adopting the stage name Annie Ross, and then moving to Paris, which by the late 40s was a popular refuge from homeland conflicts for African-American jazz musicians. She shared rooms with the great jazz composer and pianist Mary Lou Williams, gave birth to a son (Kenny Clarke Jr) from a short relationship with the bebop drummer Kenny Clarke, and joined the songwriter Hugh Martin’s vocal group, an experience that quickly honed her understanding of both ensemble singing and the songwriter’s craft.

Shuttling between Europe and the US in those years, Ross met Bob Weinstock, founder of the Prestige Records label, and he invited her to write a song in the style of the vocalese pioneer King Pleasure. Ross came back the next day with Twisted.

During her work with Lambert, Hendricks & Ross she also made a fine recording, in 1959, of the songs from the Stephen Sondheim-penned Broadway musical Gypsy, with Buddy Bregman’s Hollywood orchestra. However, by 1962, distracted by a heroin habit and in a stormy relationship with the comic Lenny Bruce, Ross quit Lambert, Hendricks & Ross.

She returned to London, kicked heroin with support from her brother Jimmy, married the actor Sean Lynch, and in 1964 opened a nightclub, Annie’s Room, which hosted several star singers including Nina SimoneAnita O’Dayand Hendricks. Following a bankruptcy in the mid-70s and a divorce from Lynch, she returned to stage and movie work, as well as occasional reunion gigs with Hendricks.

As an actor, as well as appearing in Superman III and Short Cuts she was seen in the 1972 Hammer thriller Straight On Till Morning and the 1983 British crime film Funny Money.

Ross became a US citizen in 2001, and a play by Brian McGeachan, Twisted: The Annie Ross Story, premiered in London on her 76th birthday in 2006, with a visibly moved and astonished Ross present.

She received the National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master award in 2010, and made one of her late-career performances in 2011 at the Pizza Express Jazz Club in London at the age of 80. While no longer possessed of her legendary vocal athleticism, she was coolly charismatic still, cannily adapting slippery long tones into semi-spoken exclamations, but as alert to the rhythmic undertow of songs as ever.

Ross is survived by her partner, Dave Usher, and by Kenny.

• Annie Ross (Annabelle Short), singer, songwriter and actor, born 25 July 1930; died 21 July 2020Topics

Ella Logan
Ella Logan
Ella Logan
Ella Logan
Ella Logan

 

Ella Logan was born in 1913 in Glasgow.   She made her West End debut in 1930 with the play “Darling I Love You”.   In the mid 1930’s she emigrated to the U.S. and in Hollywood she made “Flying Hostess” in 1936, “52nd Street” and “The Goldwyn Follies” in 1938.   During World War Two she entertained the troops in Europe and Africa.   In 1947 she had a hufe success o Broadway as Sharon in “Finian’s Rainbow”.   It was her final Broaway show.   In the 1950’s she starred on television and inconcert and supper clubs.   She died in 1969 at the age of 56.   Her niece is the actress/singer Annie Ross.

Article in “The Scotsman”:

THE singer and entertainer Georgina Allan made her stage debut as a toddler, when she performed songs made famous by Sir Harry Lauder in music halls across Scotland. Briefly known as “Daisy Mars” and, by her late teens, as “Ella Logan”, this daughter of a spirit salesman and a warehouse worker was singing with London’s top dance bands, broadcasting on the BBC, and starring in West End revues. In the early 1930s she toured Europe – once apparently singing for a Cologne audience that included Hitler and several senior Nazis – before moving to the US where she is believed to have married for the first time. There she recorded with jazz greats including Benny Goodman. By the late 1930s, her exuberant swing recordings of traditional Scottish songs earned her the names “The Swinging Scots Lassie” and “The Loch Lomond Lass” when she topped the bill in nightclub revues. From 1935, she was based in Hollywood. Just before she left New York, her sister Mary Dalziel Short (May) (190169), and her family visited from Glasgow. May Allan and her husband, Jack Short, had a music hall act as The Logan Family, featuring their five children, including James Short (actor and comedian Jimmy Logan, 19282001) and Annabelle Short (the jazz singer Annie Ross, born 1930).

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The above article can be accessed online here.

Article on Ella Logan on “Masterworks Broadway” website can be accessed here.

They believed that Annabelle could be the next Shirley Temple, and left the five-year-old in her aunt’s care in Hollywood, where Ella Logan was trying to forge a movie career. Between 1936 and 1938 she had minor roles in five films: Flying Hostess (1936), Top of the Town (1937), Woman Chases Man (1937), 52nd Street (1937) and The Goldwyn Follies (1938), in which she introduced two of George Gershwin’s last songs. In 1941, Ella Logan married the screenwriter and producer Fred Finkelhoffe, a marriage that raised her status in Hollywood society. After the Second World War, during which she entertained American forces in Italy and in Britain, she enjoyed her greatest triumph playing Sharon, a part written specially for her, in the original 1947 Broadway production of the musical Finian’s Rainbow.

Divorced in 1954, she was subsequently romantically linked to several well-known bachelors, including former New York City mayor William O’Dwyer. During the 1950s she worked occasionally on television. In 1955, she returned to Scotland for a high-profile run at the Glasgow Empire and, the following year, she visited Glasgow to perform in jazz legend Louis Armstrong’s show