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Joyce Carey

 
Quotes By: Joyce Carey

Quotes:

"A man of eighty has outlived probably three new schools of painting, two of architecture and poetry and a hundred in dress."

"A novel points out that the world consists entirely of exceptions."

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Actor: Joyce Carey
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  • Born: Mar 30, 1898 in London, England, UK
  • Died: Feb 28, 1993 in London, England
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '40s-'70s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Comedy
  • Career Highlights: Brief Encounter, In Which We Serve, The Horse's Mouth
  • First Major Screen Credit: In Which We Serve (1942)

Biography

The daughter of stage favorite Lillian Brainwaithe, Joyce Carey made her first theatrical appearance at age 18. In films from 1942, Carey made her mark in incisive character roles, playing everything from warmhearted lower-class types (Brief Encounter) to bitchy bourgeoisie (Way to the Stars). In her 70th year, she launched a new phase of her career as a co-star on the TV sitcom Father Dear Father. Active well into her eighties, Joyce Carey died just a month away from her 95th birthday. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Joyce Carey
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Joyce Carey, OBE (30 March 1898 – 28 February 1993) was a British actress, best known for her long professional and personal relationship with Noël Coward. Her stage career lasted from 1916 until 1984, and she was performing on television in her nineties. Though never a star, she was a familiar face both on stage and screen. In addition to light comedy, she had a large repertory of Shakespearean roles.

Contents

Biography

Career

Joyce Carey was the daughter of the actor Gerald Lawrence and his wife, the actress Lilian Braithwaite.[1] Lawrence was a handsome matinée idol, who had been a juvenile in Henry Irving's Shakespeare company; Braithwaite was a major West End star.[2] Carey was educated at the Florence Etlinger Dramatic School.[1]

Carey made her stage debut, aged 18, in October 1916 as Princess Katherine in an all-female production of Henry V. She joined Sir George Alexander's company at the St James's Theatre playing Jacqueline, a French countess, in The Aristocrat. After a succession of West End roles in light comedy, Carey took on further Shakespeare parts, appearing at Stratford-upon-Avon as Anne Page, Perdita, Titania, Miranda and Juliet. Over the next few years she added Hermia, Celia and Olivia to her Shakespearean repertoire, in between regular appearance in West End comedies.[1]

Her first appearance in a Noël Coward play was as Sarah Hurst in Easy Virtue in New York in 1926.[1] For most of the following seven years, Carey's career was chiefly in New York, following a great success in The Road to Rome in 1927.[2] In 1934 she wrote (pseudonymously), and acted a supporting role in, a comedy, Sweet Aloes, which ran in London for more than a year.[1] In 1936 she resumed her connection with Coward, playing a series of character roles in his cycle of short plays, Tonight at 8:30 in London and New York.[1]

During World War II, Carey toured with John Gielgud for the Entertainments National Service Association (ENSA) bringing theatre to members of the armed forces at home and abroad, recreating some of her roles from Tonight at 8:30. In 1942 she rejoined Coward to tour in his three newest plays, This Happy Breed as Sylvia, Blithe Spirit as Ruth, and Present Laughter as Liz – a character based partly on the actress herself.[3] She later played all three roles in London. After the war she played in new Coward plays, Quadrille (with Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne) and Nude with Violin (with Gielgud in London and Coward in New York).[1][2]

The Times said of her film work: "One role in a film written by Coward will remain always in the memory: with haughty disdain and an accent of fearful gentility Carey was the manageress of the station buffet in Brief Encounter, who froze her customers and slapped down attempts at familiarity from Stanley Holloway's ticket collector."[2] Carey's other Coward film roles were the petty officer's wife in In Which We Serve and Mrs Bradman in Blithe Spirit. Her other films included The Way to the Stars and Cry the Beloved Country.[1][2]

Her last stage performance, opposite Peter O'Toole, was as Mrs Higgins in Pygmalion in 1984, but she continued working on screen into her nineties, attracting enthusiastic notices for her portrayal of a frail old lady faced with eviction in Michael Palin's BBC play, No 27.[2]

Critical opinion and personal life

The Times wrote in its obituary of Carey:

Without ever becoming a big star, Joyce Carey was a graceful and distinctive actress whose performances consistently added lustre to the productions in which she appeared. Slight in build, with a wide-eyed and wistful face, she looked vulnerable and had a social poise that secured her many aristocratic roles among them Wilde's Lady Markby and the Hon. Gwendolen Fairfax. In private life her quiet, amusing personality endeared her to many people, notably Noel Coward and she became part of "the Master's" private world.

Award

Carey was awarded the OBE in 1982. She never married: she enjoyed the enduring friendship of Coward's adopted "family".[2]

When Coward received his knighthood in 1970, Carey, along with costume designer Gladys Calthrop, accompanied him to the ceremony at Buckingham Palace.[4] She died in London, aged 94. [2]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Gaye, pp 426–427
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "Obituary", The Times, 3 March, 1993, p. 17
  3. ^ Hoare, p. 294
  4. ^ Lesley pp. 428-29

Sources

  • Hoare, Philip. Noël Coward, A Biography. Sinclair-Stevenson 1995. ISBN 1-85619-265-2.
  • Gaye, Freda (ed). Who's Who in the Theatre, Fourteenth edition. Pitman Publishing, London, 1967
  • Lesley, Cole. The Life of Noël Coward. Cape 1976. ISBN 0-224-01288-6.

Joyce Carey biography and filmography at the British Film Institute's Screenonline


 
 
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