Virginia Maskell
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Virginia Elizabeth Maskell[1] (born 27 February 1936 in Shepherd's Bush; died of failed suicide bid 25 January 1968 at Stoke Mandeville Hospital), was an English actress.
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[edit] Biography
After the outbreak of World War Two, Maskell's family were evacuated to South Africa. Post the war she returned to London and entered a convent school where she developed an interest in acting.
After attending drama school, she starred in TV parts mainly playing demure young lasses in action series such as "The Buccaneers" and "The Adventures of Robin Hood."
She made a minor film debut for director Roy Boulting with "Happy Is the Bride" in 1957, and then began hopscotching between the theatre and the screen in 1958, her next major film was Director Pat Jackson's comedy "Virgin Island". She resultantly won a British Lion contract and went on to appear in "The Man Upstairs" with Richard Attenborough, and as the air-hostess in "Jet Stream."
She also made an impact on the stage - in "The Catalyst" - and in live TV drama. She later starred in "Doctor in Love", and as Peter Sellers' tiresome wife in "Only Two Can Play", which the actor tried to get her fired from when cast, unconvinced she could manage a credible Welsh accent and asked for her dismissal - though it was suspected that his ulterior motive was part of a campaign to replace Maskell with Welsh born actress Siân Phillips[2].
She took a break from acting from 1962 to concentrate on her family, other than occasional TV appearances in such popular series as "Danger Man" and "The Prisoner", but returned after the birth of her second son to shoot "Interlude" in summer 1967.
Maskell died of a drug overdose at the age of 31 in Stoke Mandeville Hospital. "Interlude" was released posthumously, and she won a posthumous National Board of Review award and a BAFTA nomination for her work in the film.
[edit] Poetry
Maskell was also a poet and an artist
[edit] Sunday
The day beats in limbo Too slow my hand lies across the page And your burnt form hides its grave talent in the sand
The afternoon breaks promise Too slow my limbs stretch blind And your dark words teach other lips to love
[edit] In Your Hands.....
Beloved in your hands and in your hands my own; And in your fingers longing and in my fingers stone; And in your sleep and dreaming and in my own your tears; And in my nights your waking and in my dreams your fears; And in your days your smiling and in your love my shame Your hands beloved taking My life in all but name
[edit] Personal life
Maskell married Sir Geoffrey Adam Shakerley, 6th Baronet Shakerley on 3 July 1962. The couple had two sons, the first Nicholas born in December 1963.
After the birth of her second son in February 1966, she showed signs of post-natal depression. Following the shooting of "Interlude" in the summer of 1967 she suffered a severe nervous breakdown and was hospitalised at Stoke Mandeville Hospital for six weeks. She was released three weeks before Christmas 1967 for the holiday period[3]
On 24 January 1968 she took an overdose of antidepressants and barbiturates which she had obtained from her doctor the previous day, and drove from her home at Princes Risborough. She was found by police collapsed in a nearby wooded area on the Chiltern Hills the next day suffering from acute hypothermia from the severly cold night. Although revived briefly, she died shortly after at Stoke Mandeville Hospital.
Her funeral was held on Thursday 1 February 1968. The coroner Dr Pim excluded a note which "consisted of a hasty message of love and despair" written on a scrap of paper torn from a sheet , and the writing was such that he believed she was under the influence of the tablets when she wrote it. Dr Pim concluded "I cannot concede it was her intention she should be found alive", and recorded a verdict that she took her own life[4]
[edit] Quotations
- ""I love acting, but I also want to be alive. Publicity is like a prison. If you're not careful, you begin to live according to everyone's idea of how you ought to live. Ambition? To be a big, big star...on the stage."
[edit] References
- ^ http://www.thepeerage.com/p6927.htm
- ^ http://screenandsound.llgc.org.uk/news_022.htm
- ^ Times Obituary
- ^ http://www.britmovie.co.uk/forums/actors-actresses/1031-virginia-maskell-2.html