Cotton Mary

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cotton Mary
Directed by Ismail Merchant
Madhur Jaffrey (co-director)
Produced by Nayeem Hafizka
Richard Hawley
Paul Bradley (executive)
Gil Donaldson (associate)
Written by Alexandra Viets
Starring Greta Scacchi
Madhur Jaffrey
James Wilby
Sakina Jaffrey
Gemma Jones
Music by Richard Robbins
Cinematography Pierre Lhomme
Editing by John David Allen
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) 17 December 1999 (UK)
Running time 124 min
Country UK France
Language English
IMDb profile

Cotton Mary is 1999 film directed by Ismail Merchant, best known as the producer half of Merchant Ivory and Madhur Jaffrey, actress and author of cookery books. It was filmed in India, and is Jaffrey's only film as director to date (2006).

[edit] Cast

  • Greta Scacchi - Lily MacIntosh
  • Madhur Jaffrey - Cotton Mary
  • James Wilby - John MacIntosh
  • Sarah Badel - Mrs Evans
  • Riju Bajaj - Mugs
  • Gerson Da Cunha - Doctor Correa
  • Joanna David - Mrs Smythe
  • Neena Gupta - Blossom (Mary's sister)
  • Sakina Jaffrey - Rosie
  • Gemma Jones - Mrs Freda Davids
  • Firdausi Jussawalla - Mr. Panamal
  • Mahabanoo Mody-Kotwal - Matron
  • Nadira - Mattie
  • Prayag Raaj - Abraham
  • Captain Raju - Inspector Ramiji Raj
  • Shobha Vijay - Ayah 2
  • Virendra Saxena - Joseph
  • Surekha Sikri - Gwen
  • Laura Lumley - Theresa MacIntosh
  • Matteo Piero Mantegazza - Baba
  • Olivia Caesar - Baba
  • Cuckoo Parameswaran - Nurse 1
  • Beena Manoj - Nurse 2
  • Maggie Arthasery - Nurse 3
  • Arshia Rafique - Mira
  • Vinnie D'Souza - Guitar player
  • Chinappa - Tea Worker
  • Ashok Koshy - Tea Worker
  • Shirly Somasundaram - Ayah 1
  • Jaya George - Ayah 3
  • Philip Tabor - Henry Campbell-Jones
  • Luke Jones - Charlie
  • Susan Malick - Bunny Rogers
  • Hamza - Fisherman
  • Poornima Mohan - Receptionist
  • Caroline Charlety - Stylist
  • Ranjani Haridas - Stylist
  • Gayatri Krishnan - Stylist
  • Txuku Iriarte Solana - Sylvie D'Costa

[edit] External links

This article related to British cinema is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.