From the BBC:
“Obituary: Dame Maggie Smith”
Dame Maggie Smith brought an
incredible range of expression to her roles, winning high praise from directors
and fellow actors alike. It was said of her that she never took a role lightly
and would often be pacing around at rehearsals going over her lines while the
rest of the cast was on a break. In a profession notorious for its
uncertainties her career was notable for its longevity. She made her acting
debut in 1952 and was still working six decades later having moved from
aspiring star to national treasure.
Margaret Natalie Smith was born
in Ilford, Essex on 28 Dec 1934 the daughter of a pathologist. With war looming
the family moved to Oxford and the young Maggie, the name by which she was
known from her early childhood, attended the Oxford School for Girls. She
started out in the theatre as a prompt girl and understudy at the Oxford
Repertory. She once claimed that she never got onto the stage there as not one
of the company ever fell ill. Her company moved to a small theatre in London in
1955 where she attracted the attention of an American producer, Leonard
Stillman, who cast her in New Faces, a revue that opened on Broadway in June
1956. She stood out among the cast of unknowns and, on her return to London,
was offered a six month stint in the revue Share My Lettuce opposite Kenneth
Williams. Her first film role was an uncredited part in the 1956 production
Child in the House. Two years later she was nominated for a Bafta as best
newcomer n the 1958 melodrama, Nowhere to Go, in which she played a girl who
shelters an escaped convict. The Times, describing her role in the hit London
production of Mary Mary in 1963, said that she was "the salvation of this
fluffy Broadway comedy."
She nearly stole the show from
Richard Burton in the film The VIPs when she appeared in a pivotal scene with
the Welsh star. One critic noted that "when Maggie Smith is on the
screen, the picture moves," and Burton afterwards teasingly described her
upstaging of him as "grand larceny." Later in 1963, Laurence
Olivier offered her the part of Desdemona opposite his Othello, at the National
Theatre. The production, with the original cast, was made into a film two years
later, with Smith being nominated for an Academy Award. The role which
brought her international fame came in 1969 when she played the determinedly
non-conformist teacher in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. The part won her a
best actress Oscar. She also married her co-star Robert Stephens. The
actress continued with the National Theatre for another two years including a
performance as Mrs Sullen in the Restoration comedy The Beaux' Stratagem in Los
Angeles. She received another Oscar nomination for best actress after
playing Aunt Augusta in the George Cukor film, Travels With My Aunt, in 1972.
She and Stephens divorced in 1975, and a year later she was married to the
playwright, Beverley Cross, and also moved to Canada and spent four years in a
repertory company where she took on weightier roles in Macbeth and Richard III.
One critic, writing of her
performance as Lady Macbeth, decided she had "merged her own vivid
personality with that of her charismatic subject." Despite her success she
was modest about her achievements, stating simply that "One went to school,
one wanted to act, one started to act, and one's still acting." She
continued to work in the cinema playing opposite Peter Ustinov in the 1978
film, Death on the Nile and, in the same year, the part of Diana Barrie in Neil
Simon's California Suite. She won critical acclaim for her role as Betsey
Trotwood in a BBC adaptation of David Copperfield
The 80s saw a number of memorable
cinema performances, and more awards including Baftas for A Private Function
and A Room With A View, the latter also garnering her a Golden Globe and an
Oscar nomination. There were more Baftas, first for her interpretation of the
ageing alcoholic in The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne and then in Bed Among
The Lentils, one of Alan Bennett's Talking Heads series for the BBC. It was
back to the stage in 1987 in Lettice and Lovage at the Globe Theatre in London
before the production transferred to New York. But her run was interrupted
after she suffered a bicycle accident and then learned she would need eye
surgery. When she finally resumed work on Lettice and Lovage, after a 12 month
break, her New York performance won her a Tony.
In 1990 she was created DBE and,
a year later, appeared as the ageing Wendy in Hook, Stephen Spielberg's sequel
to Peter Pan. Other films followed including Sister Act, alongside Whoopi
Goldberg, and The Secret Garden for which she was nominated for a Bafta. The
new century brought a Bafta and an Emmy nomination for role as Betsey Trotwood
in the BBC production of David Copperfield.
A year later the average age of
her fan base plummeted after she appeared as Professor McGonagall in Harry
Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, a role she would reprise in all of the
subsequent Potter movies. She was, reportedly, the only performer the author JK
Rowling specifically asked for, bringing a small touch of Miss Jean Brodie to
Hogwarts. In 2004 she appeared with her long time friend and fellow Dame Judi
Dench, in the gentle drama Ladies in Lavender. The New York Times decided that
Smith & Dench "sink into their roles as comfortably as house cats
burrowing into a down quilt on a windswept, rainy night". Two years later
she was the cash-strapped Countess of Trentham in Gosford Park, Robert Altman's
take on the English country house murder. Her performance was a delight, with a
veneer of snobbery from which would emerge the masterly put down, particularly
in the case of Mr Novello's failed movie.
It was a role that she arguably
reprised in all but name when she was cast in ITV drama, Downton Abbey. The
name of her character may have changed to the Dowager Countess of Grantham but
the performance was similar in essence. "It's true I don't tolerate fools,
but then they don't tolerate me, so I am spiky," she once said.
"Maybe that's why I'm quite good at playing spiky elderly ladies." She
remained with the Downton Abbey cast until 2015 when the series finally came to
an end, reprising the role for two films in 2019 and 2022.
In 2007, while filming Harry
Potter and The Half-Blood Prince she was diagnosed with breast cancer. She was
given the all-clear after two years of treatment. Despite being left feeling
weak after her illness, she went on to star in the final Harry Potter film and
received a Bafta nomination for her role in the 2012 film, The Best Exotic
Marigold Hotel. In 2015 she gave a moving performance in the film, The Lady in
the Van, based on the true tale of Mary Shepherd, an elderly woman who lived in
a dilapidated van on the writer Alan Bennett's driveway in London for 15 years.
She had previously appeared in the stage version of the story, for which she
won an Olivier for Best Actress, and a 2009 BBC Radio 4 adaptation of Bennett's
play. Dame Maggie gave few interviews but she was once asked to define the
appeal of acting. "I like the ephemeral thing about theatre, every
performance is like a ghost - it's there and then it's gone."
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