Margaret Lockwood Biography |
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Miss Margaret Lockwood, CBE, film, stage and television actress who became Britain's leading box-office star in the 1940s,
died of cirrhosis of the liver in London on 15th July, 1990 aged 73. She was born on 15th September, 1916.Margaret Lockwood, the daughter of an English administrator of an Indian railway company, by his Scottish third wife, was born in Karachi, where she lived for the first three and a half years of her life. In 1920, she and her brother, Lyn, came to England with their mother to settle in the south London suburb of Upper Norwood, and Margaret enrolled as a pupil at Sydenham High School. Her childhood was repressed and unhappy, largely due to the character of her mother, a dominant and possessive woman who was often cruelly discouraging to their shy, sensitive daughter. As a result, Margaret took refuge in a world of make believe and dreamed of becoming a great star of musical comedy. After becoming a dance pupil at the Italia Conti school, she made her stage debut at 15 as a fairy in A Midsummer Night's Dream at the Holborn Empire.
In 1933, she enrolled at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, where she was seen in Leontine Sagan's production of Hannele by a leading London agent, Herbert de Leon, who at once signed her as a client and arranged a screen test which impressed the director, Basil Dean, into giving her the second lead in his film, Lorna Doone when Dorothy Hyson fell ill. Seven ingenue screen roles followed before she played opposite Maurice Chevalier in the 1936 remake of The Beloved Vagabond. A year later she married Rupert Leon, a man of whom her mother disapproved strongly, so much so that for six months Margaret Lockwood did not live with her husband and was afraid to tell her mother that the marriage had taken place.
In 1938, Lockwood's role as a young London nurse in Carol Reed's film, Bank Holiday, established her as a star, and the enormous success of her next film, Alfred Hitchcock's taut thriller The Lady Vanishes, opposite Michael Redgrave, gave her international status. A visit to Hollywood to appear with Shirley Temple in Susannah of the Mounties and with Douglas Fairbanks, Jnr, in Rulers of the Sea was not at all to her liking. She returned with relief to Britain to star in two of Carol Reed's best films, The Stars Look Down, again with Redgrave, and Night Train to Munich, opposite Rex Harrison.
In 1941, she gave birth to a daughter by Leon, Julia Lockwood, affectionately known to her mother as "Toots", who was also to become a successful actress. The Leons separated soon after her birth and were divorced in 1950. Lockwood gained custody of her daughter, but not before Mrs Lockwood had sided with her son-in-law to allege that Margaret was "an unfit mother".
The turning point in her career came in 1943, when she was cast opposite James Mason in The Man in Grey, as an amoral schemer who steals the husband of her best friend, played by Phyllis Calvert, and then ruthlessly murders her. Spectral in black, with her dark, dramatic looks, cold but beautiful eyes, and vividly overpainted thin lips, Lockwood was a queen among villainesses. The film inaugurated a series of hothouse melodramas that came to be known as Gainsborough Gothic and had film fans queuing outside cinemas all over Britain.
In 1944, in A Place of One's Own, she added one further attribute to her armoury: a beauty spot painted high on her left cheek.
An unpretentious woman, who disliked the trappings of stardom and dealt brusquely with adulation, she accepted this change in her fortunes with unconcern, and turned to the stage, where she had successes in Peter Pan, Pygmalion, Private Lives and Agatha Christie's thriller, Spider's Web, which ran for over a year.
In 1965, she co-starred with her daughter, Julia, in a popular television series, The Flying Swan, and surprised those who felt she had never been a very good actress by giving a superb comedy performance in the West End revival of Oscar Wilde's An Ideal Husband.

Margaret Mary Lockwood, the last totally English film star to have stayed at the top of the cinema box office polls for several years in succession, died last night in the Cromwell Hospital in west London at the age of 73. Whereas the rest of her 1940s generation, from Jean Simmons and Deborah Kerr to James Mason and Stewart Granger, went to seek international fame in Hollywood, Miss Lockwood maintained a totally local kind of stardom that nevertheless altered radically over the decades. Born Margaret Day in India (1917 was the date she usually gave, though some reports put it as early as 1911) she started in films with ingenue roles in the middle 1930s, notably Lorna Doone and The Beloved Vagabond, before she was taken up by Hitchcock for the classic 1938 thriller The Lady Vanishes, in which she
played opposite Michael Redgrave. The Lady Vanishes made Lockwood a star and took her almost immediately to Hollywood. She was there for less than a year and only two movies, from which she returned to some very much better wartime work in England, notably in another train thriller Night Train to Munich, The Stars Look Down and Quiet Wedding. But it was in 1943 with The Man in Grey that she, Phyllis Calvert, Stewart Granger and James Mason formed themselves into the quartet of Gainsborough stars most often to be found through the rest of the war years in a succession of snobbery-with-violence pictures, usually involving period costumes and a good horsewhipping. Lockwood would end up in these bruised by James Mason (The Wicked Lady, probably her best-known film). As Granger and Mason moved on to sunnier Californian contracts, Lockwood's career went into roughly the same decline as the English cinema itself, before finishing up in Bryan Forbes's The Slipper and the Rose, her last big screen appearance in 1976. In the meantime, however, she had begun to carve out a new career in the theatre. She played Peter Pan for three seasons and had a long Savoy run in the thriller Spider's Web. She also had three long-running television serials, notably Justice. She was married once (to Rupert Leon), divorcing 40 years ago, and leaves a daughter, the actress Julia Lockwood. Phyllis Calvert said last night: 'Over the last ten years she lived quite like a hermit. As a young actress, though, she was very gay but very serious about her work.'
A service of thanksgiving for the life and work of Miss Margaret Lockwood was held yesterday at St Paul's, Covent Garden. The Very Rev David Elliott officiated. Miss Jean Kent read from the works of Rudyard Kipling and Miss Phyllis Calvert from the works of Alfred Lord Tennyson. Miss Polly James paid tribute. Mr Barrie Bignold, piano, played The Cornish Rhapsody by Hubert Bath from the film Love Story; and Miss Anne Rogers sang Love Steals Your Heart from the film The Wicked Lady.
Among those present were: Mr Ernest Clark and Miss Julia Lockwood (son-in-law and daughter), Mr Tim Clark and Mr Nicholas Clark (grandsons), Lucy and Catherine Clark (granddaughters), Miss Penny Robinson, Mrs Betty Lait, Mr Simon Lait, Miss Jean Lait, Miss Sarah Gall, Mr Nicholas Gall, Miss Tamara Gall, Mr Andrew Clark, Mrs Ginny Tristan, Mrs Rosanna Cheyney. Sir Peter and Lady Saunders, Miss Chili Bouchier, Mr Maurice Denham, Mr Robert Flemyng, Mr Desmond Llewellyn, Miss Kathleen Byron, Mr Francis Burrow, Miss Eve Southwood, Miss June Wyndham-Davies, Mrs Beryl Cook, Mr Anthony Holland, Mr Theo Cowan, Mr Michael Thornton, Miss Deddie Davies, Miss Hazel Bainbridge, Miss Patricia Dainton, Mr Norman Williams, Mr John Stone, Mr A Jackson, Mr Robert Eddison, Mr and Mrs Michael Cochrane. Mr Alan Sleath (chairman, Associates of RADA) with Miss Barbara Todd; Miss Ella Slack (BBC), Mr Frank Coven (London director, Nine TV Network of Australia) and Mrs Coven, Mr E Gansler (British Music Hall Society), Miss Judith Craig (Henry Sherwood Productions), Mr Ken Gibson (Contact Artists Association), Mr William Quinn (Irish Actors' Equity Association), Mr Ken Sefton (Gallery First Nighters Club) and Mr Patrick Newley (Stage and TV Today).
1) Forum: Site Update: New Pictures, Film Clips And Forum Structure (16th August, 2010)
2) Forum: The Lady Vanishes At Modern Art Oxford (6th July, 2010)
3) Forum: Site Update: One Night With You On DVD (15th June, 2010)
4) Forum: Site Update: Harry Black On DVD (29th April, 2010)
5) Forum: Night Train To Munich DVD Release (17th March, 2010)
6) Forum: Lost Lockwood (14th March, 2010)
7) Forum: Sid Field Documentary On BBC Four (24th February, 2010)
8) Forum: RIP John McCallum (4th February, 2010)
9) Forum: How Much Is My Pic Of Margaret Lockwood Worth Please? (27th January, 2010)
10) The Stars Look Down in cinema mining season
(12th September, 2009)
11) Forum: At The Coalface Night (23rd May, 2009)
12) The Stars Look Down in British coal mining TV evening
(23rd May, 2009)
13) Forum: "Missing" Films (15th April, 2009)
14) New production of Spider's Web at the New Theatre
(16th February, 2009)
15) Sidney Gilliat season at the BFI in November 2008
(4th November, 2008)
16) Lockwood and Greenwood film screenings at American cinema
(26th September, 2008)
17) Forum: Margaret Lockwood Close (5th August, 2008)
18) The Lady Vanishes DVD release on 18th August, 2008
(19th July, 2008)
19) The Man in Grey poster found in the Paris Metro
(25th April, 2008)
20) Forum: The Bad Lord Byron (27th March, 2008)
21) Forum: Lockwood Boxset Announced (1st March, 2008)
22) Margaret Lockwood DVD release on 16th June, 2008
(1st March, 2008)
23) Two Margaret Lockwood film screenings in Edinburgh
(25th January, 2008)
24) Alfred Hitchcock DVD boxset release on 25th February, 2008
(12th January, 2008)
25) Forum: Any Posters? (9th January, 2008)
26) Forum: Margaret Lockwood Season (5th December, 2007)
27) Margaret Lockwood season at the BFI in January 2008
(4th December, 2007)
28) Forum: Another Margaret Lockwood! (27th November, 2007)
29) Forum: Margaret Lockwood's Movies On Australian TV (27th November, 2007)
30) Forum: A Beautiful And Talented Actress (27th November, 2007)
31) Forum: The Wicked Lady At The Stockport Plaza (27th November, 2007)
32) Forum: Related To Margaret Lockwood (27th November, 2007)
33) Forum: Flowers For Margaret Lockwood (27th November, 2007)
34) Forum: School Project On Margaret Lockwood (27th November, 2007)
35) Forum: Margaret Lockwood Vs. Patricia Roc (27th November, 2007)
36) Forum: Once A Wicked Lady, By Hilton Tims (27th November, 2007)
37) Forum: The Elegant Margaret Lockwood (27th November, 2007)
38) Forum: Remembering Margaret Lockwood (27th November, 2007)
39) Trent's Last Case DVD release on 28th January, 2008
(22nd November, 2007)
40) 55 year-old diary records thoughts on 'Honours Easy'
(20th June, 2007)
41) Location filming for Jassy highlighted in new exhibition
(10th June, 2007)
42) Man in Grey released as part of James Mason DVD on 23rd July, 2007
(9th June, 2007)
43) Susannah of the Mounties released on DVD on 14th May, 2007
(12th May, 2007)
44) The Man in Grey released on DVD on 15th January, 2007
(2nd January, 2007)
45) Margaret Lockwood featured in unique Virgin Trains advertisement
(16th June, 2005)
46) The Wicked Lady to be released as part of a DVD box set
(23rd May, 2005)
47) The Wicked Lady to be released on DVD
(2nd February, 2004)
48) The Stars Look Down to be released on DVD
(8th June, 2003)
49) Quiet Wedding at the National Film Theatre
(4th February, 2003)
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