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Nova Pilbeam

 
Actor: Nova Pilbeam
  • Born: Nov 15, 1919 in Wimbledon, Surrey, England, UK
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '30s-'40s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Spy Film
  • Career Highlights: Young and Innocent, The Three Weird Sisters, Green Fingers
  • First Major Screen Credit: Nine Days a Queen (1934)

Biography

15-year-old Nova Pilbeam was already a seasoned stage veteran when she made her screen debut as the youthful kidnap victim in Alfred Hitchcock's The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934). She went on to deliver a superb performance as the ill-fated Lady Jane Grey in Nine Days a Queen (1934). Her first significant adult role was in Young and Innocent (1937), again for Hitchcock. Nova Pilbeam retired in 1939 upon marrying director Pen Tennyson, returning to the screen after Tennyson's death in WWII. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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Nova Pilbeam

In Young and Innocent (1937)
Born 15 November 1919 (1919-11-15) (age 90)
Wimbledon, London, UK
Occupation Actress

Nova Margery Pilbeam (born 15 November 1919) is a British film and stage actress. She was born in Wimbledon.

Pilbeam had widely noted roles as a child stage actress. This led to much work in her teen years, appearing in Alfred Hitchcock's film The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934), followed by her lead performance as Lady Jane Grey in Tudor Rose (1935). In 1937 when she was seventeen Pilbeam had a starring role in Hitchcock's Young and Innocent, for which she is most widely known. Her film career may have stalled somewhat when she was considered for Hitchcock's The Lady Vanishes (1938), but lost the role to Margaret Lockwood. In 1939 she appeared on an early British television drama. That year, David O. Selznick wanted Pilbeam for the lead in Hitchcock's Rebecca (1940) and thought she could be an international film star. However, her agent was worried about the length of a five-year contract and meanwhile Hitchcock, whose outlook on the film was not the same as Selznick's, auditioned hundreds of others over many months, at last giving the role to Joan Fontaine. Unlike other widely known English film actors of the 1930s Pilbeam never made a film in Hollywood. She carried on with appearances in at least nine English films along with many stage roles throughout the 1940s. One of Pilbeam's last films was The Three Weird Sisters (1948), its post-war gothic-drama screenplay credited to five writers, among them Dylan Thomas. By 1949, before the age of 30, she had left her acting career.

Personal life

In 1939 Pilbeam married Pen Tennyson, a great-grandson of the poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson and an assistant director to Hitchcock. Tennyson became a film director the year they were married but died in a 1941 plane crash. Pilbeam was married to BBC Radio journalist Alexander Whyte from 1950 until his death in 1972. Their child Sarah Jane was born in 1952. Pilbeam was last known to be living in Highgate, north London.

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Learn More
Banana Ridge (1941 Comedy Film)
Counterblast (1948 Action Film)
Cheer Boys Cheer (1939 Romance Film)

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Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Nova Pilbeam" Read more