| Margaret Rutherford was one of a kind. Not many actresses come
along with her sense of comic timing, and with her unusual looks,
which was far from the 'Hollywood' glamour that was around, she was
a natural for the comic roles in which she became famous. The
biography below was taken from
http://www.britishpictures.com/stars/Rutherford.htm where
you can find more if you would like to look.
If Alastair
Sim was the King of British character actors, then the undoubted
Queen was Margaret Rutherford. With her impeccable comic timing and
a face like a startled bloodhound she was a natural; the sort of
player that only comes along once in a generation.
Like Alastair Sim, she was a late-comer to
professional acting and chose to teach elocution. She was in her
thirties before she made her professional debut and slogged away in
rep. for the best part of a decade. In the mid-thirties she started
to get West End roles and made her film debut in Vorhaus'
quota-quickie
Dusty Ermine. As a lady jewel thief, she steals the show;
particularly when she does an unexpected bit of stunt work
clambering about a fast moving car.
A few more low-budget movies followed until
she really hit it big in theatre, first in Spring Meeting and then
in Blithe Spirit. When she came back to the movies she had better
roles in better films, but it took the film version of
Blithe Spirit to make her a true star. Her definitive Madame
Arcati was unforgettable, a weird combination of heartiness and
spirituality.
After this there was no stopping her. Good
films and bad films followed but she always made them worthwhile.
The fifties opened with a version of another of her stage triumphs:
The Happiest Days of Your Life. She spends the film battling
with Alastair Sim: two school heads sharing one building. The match
is a delight from start to finish and was a big hit.
The sixties brought the role she is probably
most famous for: that of Agatha Christie's Jane Marple (in Murder
She Said, ... at the Gallop, . . . Ahoy, ... Most Foul). By any
sensible criteria she is hopelessly mis-cast – but who cares? She's
wonderful even if the material isn't. This series also gave her
husband Stringer Davis his most prominent role in films (as her
side-kick Mr Stringer). They'd married in 1945 and he had small
parts in most of her films since then.
The sixties also brought her a best
supporting actress Oscar for The VIPs. In a film packed with stars
she out-classed them all. She followed that with her best dramatic
performance as Mistress Quickly in The Chimes at Midnight and got a
Damehood in the same year.
Ill-health meant she didn't film much after
that. She died in 1972 and her husband passed away the following
year.
More can be found here,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Rutherford
 |