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Jean Anderson (12 December 1907 – 1 April 2001) was an English actress born in Eastbourne, Sussex. She is best remembered for her television roles as hard-faced matriarch Mary Hammond in the BBC drama The Brothers (1972–1976) and as rebellious aristocrat Lady Jocelyn "Joss" Holbrook in the Second World War series Tenko (1982–1985). She also had distinguished careers on stage and in 46 films.

Jean Anderson
Born(1907-12-12)12 December 1907
Eastbourne, Sussex, England
Died1 April 2001(2001-04-01) (aged 93)
Edenhall, Cumbria, England
OccupationActress
Years active1947–2000

Stage


She trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art from 1926-1928.[1] Her first professional engagement was in Many Waters at the Prince’s Theatre, Bristol, in 1929 with her fellow RADA student Robert Morley.[2]

In 1934 she joined the Cambridge Festival Theatre, appearing in The Circle by Somerset Maugham and Yahoo by Lord Longford. In 1935 she played Lady Macbeth with The Seagull Players in Leeds.[3]

In 1936 Lord Longford's company from the Gate Theatre Dublin were appearing at the Westminster Theatre in London. Anderson joined them to appear in Ah, Wilderness! and stayed on for the rest of their season, including Carmilla, The Moon in the Yellow River, Youth’s the Season . . . ? and Yahoo.[4][5] When the company returned to Dublin she went with them and appeared regularly at the Gate Theatre for three years. Among many notable productions were As You Like It, The Duchess of Malfi, The Cherry Orchard and Doctor Faustus.

John Cowell wrote:

Jean Anderson, with her fascinating voice and medieval good looks, became a tower of strength in Longford Productions... As Longford’s first leading lady, she brought a new and fresh charm to every role. Her Rosalind in As You Like It caught the scent of the musk-rose in the hidden places of the Forest of Arden.[6]

When Anderson returned to London in 1940 she joined the staff of the Players’ Theatre Club, which was a popular refuge from the war. When the director Leonard Sachs was called up for service, Anderson took over running the club and kept it going for the duration.[7]

Her acting career resumed after the war with 1066 and All That, Don Juan in Hell, The Apple Cart and The Moon in the Yellow River with Jack Hawkins.[8] At this point the focus of her work swung to television and film. But she continued to appear on stage in notable productions, such as Pirandello’s Six Characters in Search of an Author directed by Dame Ngaio Marsh,[9] Hedda Gabler, an all-star Uncle Vanya at Hampstead Theatre, and Les Liaisons Dangereuses with Alan Rickman and the Royal Shakespeare Company in London and also on Broadway. Her last stage work was in Terence Rattigan’s Harlequinade in 1988.[10]


Television


Her first appearance on television was in Weep for the Cyclops on BBC in 1947. [11]

Other TV credits include: Police Surgeon, Maigret, The Odd Man, The Man in Room 17, The Borderers, Paul Temple, Codename, Oil Strike North, Miss Marple, Inspector Morse, Campion, Rab C. Nesbitt, Keeping Up Appearances and Hetty Wainthropp Investigates. She also played the role of the Mother in The Railway Children in two separate BBC adaptations in 1951 and 1957.[12]

She reprised her role in the play The Moon in the Yellow River BBC 1953. [13] Her last television work was in Keeping Mum in 1998 on BBC.


Filmography


As Night Sister in Life in Her Hands (1951)
As Night Sister in Life in Her Hands (1951)

Her last role was in Conor McPherson’s film of Samuel Beckett’s Endgame, shot in Dublin just a few months before her death.[14]


Personal life


In 1934 she married Peter Powell, who directed her in many plays over the years. They divorced in 1949. They had a daughter, Aude, who became an agent.[15]

She had a London home in Barnes, and in her later years moved to Eden Valley in the north-west of England near her daughter. Her interests were collecting porcelain figurines and horse racing.[16]

She was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1985 when she was surprised by Eamonn Andrews.[17]


References


  1. The Times Apr. 4, 2001
  2. Theatricalia
  3. The Times Apr. 4, 2001
  4. Theatricalia
  5. Wearing, J.P. The London Stage 1920-39, Scarecrow Press, 1990
  6. Cowell, John No Profit but the Name: the Longfords and the Gate Theatre O’Brien Books, Dublin, 1988 p. 117
  7. The Times Apr. 4, 2001
  8. Wearing, J.P. The London Stage 1940-49, Scarecrow Press, 1991
  9. IMDb
  10. Theatricalia
  11. Radio Times
  12. IMDb includes a biography, pictures and videos.
  13. IMDb includes pictures.
  14. The Times Apr. 4, 2001
  15. The Times Apr. 4, 2001
  16. IMDb
  17. IMDb





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