Kathleen Byron
Born
Kathleen Elizabeth Fell[1]

(1921-01-11)11 January 1921
Manor Park, Essex, England
Died18 January 2009(2009-01-18) (aged 88)
Other namesKathleen Jacob
OccupationActress
Years active1938–2001
Spouses
Daniel Bowen
(m. 1943; div. 1950)
    (m. 1953; died 1995)
    Children3

    Kathleen Elizabeth Fell (11 January 1921 – 18 January 2009), known professionally as Kathleen Byron, was an English actress.

    Early life

    Byron was born Kathleen Elizabeth Fell in Manor Park (then part of Essex)[1][2] to what she described as "staunch working-class socialists", who later became Labour mayors of the County Borough of East Ham. She attended the local grammar school and trained at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School. She had her first speaking film role in Carol Reed's The Young Mr. Pitt (1942), in which she had two lines as a maid opposite Robert Donat.[3]

    Career

    Kathleen Byron as Ann Peters in Life in Her Hands[4]

    In 1943, Byron married a USAAF pilot, Lt. John Daniel Bowen, and moved to the United States. The director Michael Powell persuaded her to return to Britain where she made her best remembered films.[3] She was cast in several films of the Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger partnership: as an angel in A Matter of Life and Death (1946), the disturbed Sister Ruth in Black Narcissus (1947, for which she was nominated for Best Actress by the New York Film Critics' Circle) and in The Small Back Room (1949). Byron was romantically linked with Michael Powell for a time; he was named as a co-respondent when her first marriage was dissolved in 1950.[3] Her success in Black Narcissus eventually led her to Hollywood, which resulted in a supporting role in Young Bess (1953). She found the experience an unrewarding one and soon returned to Britain. Her subsequent roles of the time were mostly in B films. She had an occasional role in the 1957–67 soap Emergency Ward 10, playing the alcoholic wife of the consultant gynaecologist Harold de la Roux (John Barron).

    In the 1960s and 1970s, Byron did extensive television work, including a 1961 appearance in a Danger Man episode entitled "Name, Date and Place" as Deidre, a small role as Queen Louise of Denmark in Edward the Seventh (1975), Madame Celeste Lekeu in two episodes of the BBC drama Secret Army (1977), entitled "Bait" and "Good Friday", a brief stint on the soap opera Emmerdale Farm in 1979, and one of the leads in the daytime soap Together (1980–81, its second series broadcast live). Byron continued to act into the new millennium, her film, theatre and television work including Agatha Christie's The Mousetrap (1990), an adaptation of Jane Austen's Emma (1996), Steven Spielberg's Saving Private Ryan (1998), Midsomer Murders (1999) (as Dorothea Pike in S2:E2 “Strangler’s Wood”) and Stephen Poliakoff's series, Perfect Strangers (2001).

    Personal life and death

    In 1953, Byron married her second husband, the British journalist and writer Alaric Jacob (who predeceased her); Jacob was then working for the BBC. They had one son and daughter; with a child from Jacob's previous marriage.[5]

    Byron died on 18 January 2009, aged 88, at Denville Hall in Northwood, London,[3][6] She had breast cancer.[1]

    Filmography

    Year Title Role Note
    1938Climbing HighModel on SofaUncredited
    1942The Young Mr. PittMillicent GreyUncredited
    1943The Silver FleetSchoolmistress
    1946A Matter of Life and DeathAn Angel
    1947Black NarcissusSister Ruth
    1949The Small Back RoomSusan
    Madness of the HeartVerite Faimont
    1950The Reluctant WidowMme. Annette de Chevreaux
    Prelude to FameSignora Anne Bondini
    1951Scarlet ThreadJosephine
    Life in Her HandsAnn Peters
    Hell Is Sold OutArlette de Balzamann
    I'll Never Forget YouDuchess of Devonshire
    Four DaysLucienne Templar
    Tom Brown's SchooldaysMrs. Brown
    1952My Death Is a MockeryHelen Bradley
    The Gambler and the LadyPat
    1953Young BessAnn Seymour
    1954Star of My NightEve Malone
    ProfileMargot
    Night of the Silvery MoonJane
    1955Secret VentureRenne L'Epine
    Handcuffs, LondonJanet Tedford
    1961Hand in HandMrs. O'Malley
    Design for MurderElizabeth CarrTV movie
    1962Night of the EagleEvelyn Sawtelle
    1967Who Is Sylvia?Mrs. ProudpieceTV series
    1968HammerheadLady Calvet
    The Portrait of a LadyCountess GeminiTV series
    1969The Confessions of Marian EvansTV movie
    Wolfshead: The Legend of Robin HoodKatherine of Locksley
    1971Private RoadMrs. Halpern
    Twins of EvilKaty Weil
    1972The Golden BowlFanny AssinghamTV series
    The MoonstoneLady VerinderTV series
    1973Nothing But the NightDr. Rose
    1974CrazeMuriel Sharp
    The AbdicationQueen Mother
    The Little MermaidQueenTV movie
    1975One of Our Dinosaurs is MissingColonel's Wife
    1980The Elephant ManLady Waddington
    1981Hedda GablerJuliana TesmanTV movie
    From a Far CountryTadek's Mother
    1996EmmaMrs. Goddard
    1998Les MisérablesMother Superior
    Saving Private RyanOld Mrs. Ryan
    DiaryShort
    2010Cameraman: The Life and Work of Jack CardiffHerselfDocumentary

    References

    1. 1 2 3 "Byron, Kathleen (1921–2009)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/100787. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
    2. 1921 Birth records index
    3. 1 2 3 4 Kathleen Byron obituary, The Daily Telegraph, 21 January 2009.
    4. "Watch Life in Her Hands". BFI Player. Retrieved 15 November 2020.
    5. Brian Baxter Kathleen Byron obituary, The Guardian,19 January 2009. Retrieved 21 January 2009
    6. "Kathleen Byron: Actress who played Sister Ruth in "Black Narcissus"". The Independent. 20 January 2009. Retrieved 27 January 2018.

    Sources

    • McFarlane, Brian. An Autobiography of British Cinema. London: Methuen. 1997; ISBN 0-413-70520-X
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