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Éloge de l'interdisciplinarité

British postcard in the Picturegoer Series, London, no. W 153. Photo: Gainsborough.

 

Anne Crawford (1920-1956) was a beautiful, sadly short-lived British leading lady with a gentle, good-humoured personality. From 1938 through 1954 she starred in 24 films.

 

Anne Crawford was born in 1920 in Haifa, Palestine (now Israel) as Imelda Anne Crawford. She was the child of an English mother and a Scottish father, who worked as a paymaster for the Palestine Railway. The family returned to Britain when she was 7 years old. Raised in Edinburgh, she went to school at St. Margrets convent in Marchmont. Afterward, she studied drama in Edinburgh and at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts (RADA) in London. Her professional career started at a repertory theatre in Manchester where she soon was playing juvenile leads. She changed her name from Imelda to Anne. She had a tiny role in Prison Without Bars (Brian Desmond Hurst, 1938) with Corinne Luchaire and Edna Best, and a better role in They Flew Alone (Herbert Wilcox, 1942) starring Anna Neagle. It was the smash hit Millions Like Us (Frank Launder, Sydney Gilliat, 1943) that crystalised her star persona: posh, selfish but basically a good sort. During her career, there were a few attempts to get away from this template, notably her poor mill worker in Master of Banksdam. During the war, she also appeared in such women's pictures as Two Thousand Women (Frank Launder, 1944) with Phyllis Calvert and Flora Robson, and They Were Sisters (Arthur Crabtree, 1945) with James Mason.

 

After the war, Anne Crawford became known for the wild Gainsborough melodrama Caravan (Arthur Crabtree, 1946) starring Stewart Granger and Jean Kent, and the classic horror film Daughter of Darkness (Lance Comfort, 1948). In his Guide to British Cinema, Geoff Mayer writes, "Daughter of Darkness, with a budget of two hundred thousand pounds and three weeks of location shooting in Cornwall, was not a financial success and represented a setback to Comfort's career, which saw him relegated to low-budget films in the 1950s and 1960s. Yet the film's mixture of gothic and horror establishes it as one of the most startling British films of the 1940s." In 1953 she starred as Morgan Le Fay in Knights of the Round Table (Richard Thorpe, 1953), with Robert Taylor and Ava Gardner. She made her West End debut in 1949 in 'Western Wind' at the Piccadilly Theatre, followed by a not very successful stint on Broadway in 1951 in 'The Green Bay Tree'. Her television career ran in parallel to her film career, and in 1955 she topped a viewers poll for her performance in the BBC teleplay The Leader of the House. She died in 1956 in London of leukemia. She was 35. At the time of her death, she was appearing in the Agatha Christie play 'The Spider's Web', at the Savoy Theatre, London. Co-stars Margaret Lockwood, Patrick Barr, and Ronald Howard attended her funeral. Her resting place is the Kensal Green Cemetery. Anne Crawford was married to James Hartley (1939-?) and stage and television producer/director Wallace Douglas (1953-1956). David Absalom at British Pictures: "For modern audiences, Crawford's perceived poshness can seem a bit distancing, and it's hard to judge how her career would have panned out had she not died so early. I suspect she would have done okay. She showed enough wit and timing in her few comedy outings and there was always something of the grande dame about her to suggest that she would have only improved with age."

 

Sources: David Absalom (British Pictures), Fritz Tauber (Find A Grave), Find A Grave, Wikipedia, and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

P.G. Wodehouse - Uncle Dynamite

Dell Books 469. 1950

Cover Artist: unknown

 

"Wild escapades and mad nonsense at Ashenden Manor."

Boxes - catches them every time

 

Theme 13 in 52 in 2016

If you cant find a horse then a bicycle will do nicely.

The next portrait of our Border Collie using ultra wide angle and superb timing by me :-)

Not sure if I like the changes in Flickr again, what do you think.

.....On apprendrait à naviguer en eaux troubles ?

Christmass would be a lot better if it only came round every leap year..bah-humbug..lol

Whenever Ryanair resumes flying, perhaps another cost-saving idea for Michael O'Leary to consider? Would he pay royalties to the Meccano Magazine’s cartoonist, Summerfield?

Avec Artaud, c'est "L'ombilic des limbes ", mais avec Arthaud, c'est plutot " L'alambic des dingues"

...Vu l'état des tracteurs, j'aurais pu parler de confidences sur le rouillé...!

 

Les clients passent de l'une à l'autre et jamais le contraire, sauf peut être à la gare Saint Lazare......

 

Il y avait un moment que je n'avais pas rencontré d'objets parlant, alors je reprends la série !

Un Canard mandarin albinos à Sevran.

Un des rares qui ne parle pas.

Ce n'est pas qu'il est muet, mais simplement il n'a rien à dire....!

 

...Du lourd !

C'est pour cela que l'on fait le pied de grue ?

and one says

 

"OOH OOH OOH AH AH AAAH OOH OOOH"

 

So the other one says

 

"Well put some more cold in then."

   

Sorry, its the only clean joke I know.

Pas de problème, j'y étais avec mon chaperon...!

....Comme je n'étais pas sûr de l'orthographe, finalement j'ai pris un taxi !

While my wife was making a hospital visit, I took a few minutes at the community park.

 

There she was, on the stage of the amphitheater. It must've been a brutal concert! There was Barbie, torn asunder on the stage. Apologies for the grusome sight!

Après tout, on n'est que de passage...

Aujourd'hui une seule photo présentée avec 4 textes différents, car je n'ai pas réussi à me décider pour le Définitif !

D'après la police, avec les sites de banlieue, Il faut toujours faire attention ,car on peut se faire basculer sur le terrain de l'enquête....

 

Voix off : Je m'en fous je ne joue qu'au handball...!:-))

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