Margaret Lockwood, CBE (15 September 1916 – 15 July 1990) was an English actress, notable for her performance in the 1945 Gainsborough movie, The Wicked Lady.Margaret Mary Lockwood Day was born in Karachi, British India (now Karachi, Pakistan), to an English administrator of a railway company and his Scottish wife. Lockwoods family returned to the United Kingdom when she was a child, along with her brother. She attended Sydenham High School for girls, and a ladies school in Kensington, London.She began studying for the stage at an early age at the Italia Conti, and made her debut in 1928, at the age of 12, at the Holborn Empire, where she played a fairy in A Midsummer Nights Dream. In December of the following year, she appeared at the Scala Theatre in the pantomime The Babes in the Wood. In 1932, she appeared at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in Cavalcade.Lockwood then trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London, where she was seen by a talent scout and signed to a contract. In June 1934, she played Myrtle in House on Fire at the Queens Theatre, and on 22 August 1934 appeared as Margaret Hamilton in Gertrude Jennings play Family Affairs when it premiered at the Ambassadors Theatre; Helene Ferber in Repayment at the Arts Theatre in January 1936; Trixie Drew in Henry Bernards play Miss Smith at the Duke of Yorks Theatre in July 1936; and back at the Queens in July 1937 as Ann Harlow in Anns Lapse.Lockwood entered films in 1934, and in 1935 she appeared in the film version of Lorna Doone. In 1938 she starred in her most successful film, Alfred Hitchcocks The Lady Vanishes, in which she first appeared with Michael Redgrave. In 1940, she played the role of Jenny Sunley, the self-centered, frivolous wife of Michael Redgraves character in The Stars Look Down. In the early 1940s, Lockwood changed her on-screen image to play villainesses in both contemporary and period films, becoming the most successful actress in British films during that period. Her greatest success was in the title role in The Wicked Lady (1945), a film which was controversial in its day and brought her considerable publicity. In 1946 Lockwood gained the Daily Mail National Film Awards First Prize for most popular British film actress.She made a return to the stage in a record-breaking national tour of Noel Cowards Private Lives in 1949, and also played Eliza Doolittle in Pygmalion at the Edinburgh Festival of 1951, and the title role in Peter Pan in 1949, 1950, and 1957 (the latter with her daughter as Wendy). Her subsequent long-running West End hits include an all-star production of Wildes An Ideal Husband (1965/66, in which she played the villainous Mrs Cheveley), Somerset Maughams Lady Frederick (1970), Relative Values (Noel Coward revival, 1973), and the thrillers Spiders Web (1955, written for her by Agatha Christie), Signpost to Murder (1962), and Double Edge (1975).In 1969, she starred as barrister Julia Stanford in the TV play, Justice is a Woman. This inspired the Yorkshire Television series, Justice, which ran for three seasons (39 episodes) from 1971 to 1974, and featured her real-life partner, John Stone, as fictional boyfriend, Dr Ian Moody. Lockwoods role as the feisty Harriet Peterson won her Best Actress Awards from the TV Times (1971) and The Sun (1973). Her last professional appearance was as Queen Alexandra in Royce Rytons stage play, Motherdear (Ambassadors Theatre, 1980). She was created a CBE in the New Year Honours of 1981.Margaret Lockwood had married and been divorced from Rupert Leon. She lived her final years in seclusion and died in the Cromwell Hospital, Kensington, London from cirrhosis of the liver, aged 73. She was cremated at Putney Vale Crematorium. She was survived by her daughter, actress Julia Clark (née Margaret Julia Leon, born 1941).
Betty Stanton
Filme 1936
Barbara (archive footage)
Filme 1984
Clarissa Hailsham-Brown
Filme 1955
Freda Jeffries
Filme 1955
Imogene Clegg
Filme 1937
Barbara Worth
Filme 1945
Ann
Filme 1935
Anna Bomasch
Filme 1940
Annette Allenby
Filme 1945
Hesther Shaw Barbary
Filme 1943
Lydia Garth
Filme 1949
Jenny Sunley
Filme 1940
Catherine Lawrence
Filme 1938
Stepmother
Filme 1976
Bedelia Carrington
Filme 1946
Margaret Manderson
Filme 1952
Frances Gray
Filme 1950
Anne Graham
Filme 1940
Mary Shaw
Filme 1939
Marissa Mengues
Filme 1954
Helene Ardouin
Filme 1942
Vera Barton
Filme 1935
Jeannie McAdam
Filme 1938
Donna Agnes
Filme 1935
Janet Royd
Filme 1941
Jassy Woodroofe
Filme 1947
Ann Markham
Filme 1948
Lucy
Filme 1947
Laughing Anne
Filme 1953
Lissa Campbell
Filme 1944
Nina
Filme 1944
Nell Gwynne
Filme 1949
Blanquette
Filme 1936
Jenny Green
Filme 1937
Georgina Huntstanton
Filme 1936
Eliza Doolittle
Filme 1948
Leslie James
Filme 1939
Julia Stanford
Filme 1969
Annie Ridd
Filme 1934
Filme 1945
Penny Randolph
Filme 1943
Emily
Filme 1935
Mildred Perry
Filme 1935
Tv 1965
Tv 1957
Tv 2011
Jean Forrest
Tv 1963
Self (archive footage)
Tv 1948