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Susan Hampshire

 
Actor: Susan Hampshire
  • Born: May 12, 1938 in London, England, UK
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '60s-'70s, '90s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama
  • Career Highlights: Paris au Mois d'Aout, The Three Lives of Thomasina, Baffled
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Three Lives of Thomasina (1963)

Biography

Susan Hampshire was an actress from childhood, but stardom eluded her until she played a colorful one-scene bit in the 1958 London stage production Expresso Bongo. Hampshire was not cast in the 1959 film version of this play, but instead made her "official" starring film debut (after a couple of earlier bit parts) in the class-conscious comedy Upstairs and Downstairs (1959). She endeared herself to American audiences with her performance in Disney's Three Lives of Thomasina (1963) then went out of her way to avoid being typecast in kiddie-movie parts by playing the scantily clad lady friend of Albert Finney in Night Must Fall (1964). Two years later, she was seen as the completely un clad leading lady in the French Paris in the Month of August (1966), directed by her future husband Pierre Granier-Deferre. With her portrayal of Agnes Wakefield in the all-star 1969 television adaptation of David Copperfield, Hampshire established herself as one of the business TV miniseries performers in the English-speaking world. Her performances as Fleur Forsythe in the internationally popular The Forsythe Saga (1967), Sarah Churchill in The First Churchills (1970) and Becky Sharp in Vanity Fair (1972) won her accolades from all over the globe, including three American Emmy awards. She also starred as Lady Glencora Palliser in the 22-episode adaptation of Anthony Trollope's The Pallisers (telecast in the U.S. in 1977). Though she breezes through archaic classical dialogue with seeming effortlessness, Susan Hampshire has been a lifelong dyslexic, a fact she elaborates upon in her 1982 book Susan's Story. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Susan Hampshire
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Susan Hampshire
Born 12 May 1937 (1937-05-12) (age 72)
London, England
Spouse(s) Eddie Kulukundis (1981-present)
Pierre Granier-Deferre (1967-1974)

Susan Hampshire, Lady Kulukundis, OBE (born on 12 May 1937 in London) is an English actress best known for her many television and film roles. [1] Her appeal has always been that of an "English rose".

Contents

Biography

Susan Hampshire was born in 1937, the youngest of four children. She had two sisters and one brother. Her mother was a teacher and her father was a director of ICI. Her parents separated before she was born. From early in her life, Susan struggled with reading. Only as an adult with her own child would she be diagnosed with dyslexia. Having the undiagnosed learning disorder caused her great problems, especially as her parents were both educated people. But her mother was determined to give her the best start she could. Therefore she was educated at the school her mother founded and ran.

The dyslexia continued to hamper her in her search for a career. Young Susan Hampshire originally wanted to be a nurse but found it impossible, and she found the theatre in her teens.

Career

Susan Hampshire's first film appearance was in the movie The Woman in the Hall. She decided to become an actress as a child and worked in a theatre before moving on to film and television work.

Hampshire first became famous after playing the lead in a 1962 BBC adaptation of What Katy Did. Soon afterwards, she was taken up by Walt Disney, and starred in The Three Lives of Thomasina (opposite Patrick McGoohan) and The Fighting Prince of Donegal. She would later appear opposite McGoohan in two episodes of Danger Man. Later, she portrayed conservationist Joy Adamson in the 1972 film Living Free, sequel to the 1966 classic Born Free. She has also ventured into musicals, starring opposite Cliff Richard, in Wonderful Life, in Follow That Girl and more recently (1991) in The King and I.

Hampshire (left) with Douglas (center) and director Winters (right)

Susan Hampshire is best known for her work on television. She appeared in several popular television serials, notably in the BBC's blockbuster, The Forsyte Saga (1967), in which she played Fleur. The popularity of this series was a factor in the creation of the PBS program Masterpiece Theatre (in which the first series aired was The First Churchills in which she played Sarah Churchill). 1973 saw Hampshire on US television with Kirk Douglas in a musical version of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Her most recent TV role was as Molly Macdonald, in the highly popular Monarch of the Glen (2000–2006).

Miss Hampshire received Emmy Awards from the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences for her roles in The Forsyte Saga (1970), The First Churchills (1971), and Vanity Fair (1973). Other miniseries in which she appeared are The Pallisers, The Barchester Chronicles, and Coming Home.

Susan Hampshire has been active on the stage over the years, taking the lead roles in many leading plays, such as Relative Values, Lady in the Van, The Importance of Being Earnest and For no good Reason, a play written by Nathalie Sarraute in which she appears with Susannah York under the direction of French director Simone Benmussa. In 2007 she was in a ground breaking play The Bargain, based on a meeting between Robert Maxwell and Mother Teresa. She even ventured into the British pantomime tradition, playing the Fairy Godmother at the New Wimbledon Theatre in 2005–2006 and at the New Victoria Theatre in Woking in 2006–2007.

In 2008 she joined the relatively small band of actors who have played two generations in the same play on different occasions. Her appearance at Chichester Festival Theatre in Somerset Maugham's "The Circle" as Lady Catherine Champion-Cheney in Summer 2008 followed on from her appearance in the same play (and venue) as Elizabeth Champion-Cheney (Lady Catherine's daughter-in-law) somewhat earlier in her career.

Author

Until the publication of her autobiography, Susan's Story, few people were aware of her struggle with dyslexia. She was undiagnosed until she was an adult and since has become a prominent campaigner in the UK on dyslexia issues. Her book on Dyslexia, "Every Letter Counts", was highly acclaimed. In 1995, she was appointed an OBE (Officer of the Order of the British Empire) in connection with that work.

Susan Hampshire has also published a book called The Maternal Instinct, about women and fertility issues. She herself suffered a number of miscarriages over the years.

She has written children's books, including "Lucy Jane at the Ballet", "Lucy Jane and the Russian Ballet", "Lucy Jane and the Dancing Competition", "Lucy Jane on Television", "Bear's Christmas", "Rosie's First Ballet Lesson", and "Rosie's Ballet Slippers", and various books and videos about her lifelong hobby gardening, including "Easy Gardening", "My Secret Garden", and "Trouble Free Gardening".

Personal life

Hampshire was married to the French film producer Pierre Granier-Deferre from 1967 to 1974. From this first marriage she has a son, Christopher. Her prematurely born daughter, Victoria, died shortly after birth. She has been the wife of theater impresario Sir Eddie Kulukundis since 1981. She became a grandmother in September 2006 with the birth of Christopher's son, Raphael.[2] Hampshire is a patron of the Optimum Population Trust.

References

  1. ^ HAMPSHIRE, Susan International Who's Who. Accessed 2006-09-03.
  2. ^ The Lady Magazine, 29 July 2008

External links


 
 
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Vanity Fair (TV Episode) (1967 Drama TV Episode)
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