Born in Marylebone, London, versatile character actress Rosalind Marie Knight was born to theatrical parentage. Her father was the accomplished thespian Esmond Knight. Her mother, the comedienne Frances Clare, often featured in Ivor Novello operettas. Rosalinds interest in theatre was first kindled at the age of six when she and her mother attended a staging of Novellos The Dancing Years at Drury Lane. Rosalind was evacuated to the countryside with her nanny during the war years. In 1949, she accompanied her father to the Old Vic Theatre and became enthralled by a production of The Snow Queen, primarily performed by drama school novices. The following year she won an audition and spent two years at the Old Vic Theatre School. This was succeeded by a lengthy apprenticeship in repertory which led to her gaining further experience as assistant stage manager for the West of England Theatre Company, the Midland Theatre Company in Coventry and the Piccolo Theatre Company in Manchester.In 1955, she made her first impact on screen as a lady-in-waiting in Laurence Oliviers Richard III (1955), which also featured her father in the cast. A year later, having come to the attention of a movie producer, she played Annabel, one of the schoolgirls, in Blue Murder at St. Trinians (1957) (decades later, she would return as a teacher in the sequel The Wildcats of St. Trinians (1980)). This set the tone for a number of subsequent comedic roles which included a couple of early Carry Ons and the Tony Richardson-directed Tom Jones (1963), in which she played the giddy Mrs. Harriet Fitzpatrick. While doing the Carry On films she was not under any form of contract and was paid a mere $50 a week. In 1957, Rosalind joined her father in an early BBC adaptation of Nicholas Nickleby (1957) as the spiteful Fanny Squeers. In a later miniseries based on Charles Dickens, Martin Chuzzlewit (1964), she was a splendidly shrewish Charity Pecksniff.During her prolific career, Rosalind relished every opportunity to portray a diverse range of characters, good and bad, from servants to princesses (Alice of Battenberg in The Crown (2016)) to old maids (Aspasia Fitzgibbon in The Pallisers (1974)) to wealthy socialites (Margot Asquith in Nancy Astor (1982)) and unpleasant aristocratic dowagers (Daphne Winkworth in Jeeves and Wooster (1990)). She even essayed a retired prostitute turned landlady in the sitcom Gimme Gimme Gimme (1999). In addition to a staple of period dramas she guested in numerous episodic TV dramas, including Poirot (1989), Dalziel and Pascoe (1996), Heartbeat (1992), Marple (2004), Midsomer Murders (1997) and Sherlock (2010). All the while, she remained heavily engaged in theatrical work with the Old Vic, The Royal Shakespeare Company and the Royal Court Theatre, her last appearance being the strict, incorruptible governess Mrs. Prism in Shaws The Importance of Being Earnest.Rosalind was married to director/producer Michael Elliott from 1959. In 1976, she helped rebuild and re-open the Royal Exchange Theatre in Manchester, of which her husband was involved as one of five artistic directors. She was also a patron of the Actors Centre in London and the Ladies Theatrical Guild (a charity founded in 1891). Rosalind Knight continued to perform as an actress right up to her death on December 19 2020, at the age of 87.
Evelyn Barnes
Film 1979
Felicity Wheeler
Film 1959
Mrs. Maynard
Film 1993
Felicity Wheeler
Film 1977
Nurse
Film 1960
Lady Longhorn
Film 1975
Student Nurse Nightingale
Film 1959
Horrible Grandma (archive footage)
Film 2021
Shirley
Film 1992
Lady
Film 2009
Doctor (uncredited)
Film 1960
Celia
Film 1963
Miss Walsh
Film 1980
Mrs Ramlin
Film 1976
Mrs Hargreaves
Film 1987
Miss Willow
Film 1998
Madame Desneuves
Film 1994
Sister Maidenhead
Film 1973
Receptionist
Film 1995
(uncredited)
Film 1957
Daphne
Film 1961
Annabel
Film 1957
Film 2011
Barbara
Film 1968
Mrs. Fitzpatrick
Film 1963
Dr Abbeydale
Film 1982
Matron
Film 1981
Art Student (uncredited)
Film 1958
Tv 1962
Tv 1999
Tv 1996
Tv 1983
Tv 1968
Tv 1974
Tv 1957
Tv 1984
Tv 1964
Tv 1985
Great Aunt Effie
Tv 1998
Mrs. Mattison
Tv 1974