Angela Lansbury

Angela Lansbury
Angela Lansbury in The Picture of Dorian Gray trailer.jpg
from the trailer for The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945)
Born Angela Brigid Lansbury
October 16, 1925 (1925-10-16) (age 84)
London, England
Occupation Actress, singer
Years active 1944-present
Spouse(s) Richard Cromwell (1945-1946)
Peter Shaw (1949-2003)

Angela Brigid Lansbury, CBE (born October 16, 1925) is an English actress and singer whose career has spanned six decades. She made her first film appearance in Gaslight (1944), for which she received an Academy Award nomination, and expanded her repertoire to Broadway and television in the 1950s. Highly respected for her versatility, Lansbury has won four Tony Awards and six Golden Globes, and has been nominated for eighteen Emmys and three Academy Awards.

Her more popular films include The Manchurian Candidate (1962), Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971) and Beauty and the Beast (1991) and she was successful in such Broadway musicals as Gypsy, Mame and Sweeney Todd. Lansbury is more recently known for her role as mystery writer Jessica Fletcher on the American television series Murder, She Wrote, in which she starred from 1984 until 1996.

Contents

Early life

Born in Poplar, London, England,[1] Lansbury was the daughter of Belfast-born actress Moyna MacGill and Edgar Lansbury, a prominent businessman, and the granddaughter of the former Labour Party leader George Lansbury. She is a cousin of the English animator and puppeteer Oliver Postgate (another grandchild of George Lansbury). Her cousin, the academic Coral Lansbury, is the mother of the Australian federal Opposition Leader, Malcolm Turnbull. Her earliest theatrical influences were the teenaged coloratura Deanna Durbin, screen star Irene Dunne, and Lansbury's mother, who encouraged her daughter's ambition by taking her to plays at the Old Vic and removing her from South Hampstead High School for Girls in order to enrol her in the Ritman School of Dancing and later the Webber-Douglas School of Singing and Dramatic Art (later the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art).

Following her father's death from stomach cancer, her mother became involved with a Scotsman named Leckie Forbes, and the two merged their families under one roof in Hampstead. A former colonel with the British Army in India, Forbes proved to be a jealous and suspicious tyrant who ruled the household with an iron hand. Just prior to the German bombing campaign of London, Lansbury's mother was presented with the opportunity to take her children to North America, and under cover of dark of night they fled from their unhappy home and sailed for Montreal, from there they headed to New York City. When her mother settled in Hollywood following a fund-raising Canadian tour of a Noel Coward play, Lansbury (and later her brothers) joined her there.

Lansbury worked at the Bullocks Wilshire department store in Los Angeles. At one of the frequent parties her mother hosted for British émigré performers in their Laurel Canyon home, she met would-be actor Michael Dyne, who arranged for her to meet Mel Ballerino, the casting director for the upcoming film adaptation of Oscar Wilde's novel The Picture of Dorian Gray. Ballerino was casting Gaslight with Ingrid Bergman and Charles Boyer, as well, and he offered her the role of the impertinent and slightly malevolent maid Nancy. She was nominated for an Academy Award for her 1944 film debut, and the following year garnered another nomination for her portrayal of Sibyl Vane in The Picture of Dorian Gray.

Career

Theatre

Angela Lansbury in Deuce, New York City 2007

On Broadway, Lansbury received good reviews from her first musical outing, the short-lived 1964 Stephen Sondheim musical Anyone Can Whistle, which co-starred Lee Remick. Two years later, she was offered what proved to be the biggest triumph of her theatrical career, the title role in Mame, Jerry Herman's musical adaptation of the novel and subsequent film Auntie Mame, which had starred Rosalind Russell. Opening at the Winter Garden Theater on May 24, 1966, Mame ran for 1508 performances. Lansbury's portrayal, opposite Bea Arthur as Vera Charles, earned her the Tony Award for Best Leading Actress in a Musical. She and Arthur became life-long friends. In addition, Lansbury's version of one of the play's songs, "We Need A Little Christmas", became the definitive version and has received substantial radio air-play around Christmas time every year since its release.

Lansbury won additional Tony Awards for Dear World (1969), the first Broadway revival of Gypsy (1974), and her English music hall turn as affection-starved meat pie entrepreneur Mrs. Lovett in Stephen Sondheim's Sweeney Todd (1979). In a television interview with Robert Osborne on Turner Classic Movies aired in August 2006, Lansbury stated that, theatrically, she feels she would "most like to be remembered for this role."

She is a two-time winner of the Sarah Siddons Award (1975 and 1981) for dramatic achievement in Chicago theatre.

In 1971, Lansbury accepted the title role in the Jule Styne – Bob Merrill musical Prettybelle. After a difficult rehearsal period, the show opened to brutal reviews in Boston, where it closed within a week. In 1982 a recording of the show was released by Varese Sarabande which included most of the original cast and Lansbury's 11 o'clock number "When I'm Drunk, I'm Beautiful" along with "You Never Looked Better", a song that was cut early in the run.

She had been announced for the lead role in the Kander-Ebb musical The Visit, to open on Broadway in 2001, but withdrew from the show before it opened because of her husband's health.[2]

Lansbury returned to the Broadway stage for the first time in more than 25 years in Deuce, a play by Terrence McNally, co-starring with Marian Seldes. The play previewed at the Music Box Theatre in April 2007 and opened on May 6, 2007 in a limited run of 18 weeks. Lansbury received a Tony nomination in the category of Leading Actress in a Play for her role in this production.

She is announced to appear in the upcoming Broadway revival of Blithe Spirit in 2009, as the psychic Madame Arcati.[3]

Film and television

at the 1989 Emmy Awards

Lansbury has enjoyed a long and varied career, mainly as a film actress in roles generally older than her actual age, appearing in everything from Samson and Delilah (1949) to Disney's Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971). Her notable credits include The Manchurian Candidate (1962) in which she played Mrs. Iselin, the cold-blooded mother of a war veteran brainwashed into becoming a Communist assassin. She won much critical praise for her performance, and received her third Oscar nomination. (Lucille Ball had been considered for the role; a decade later, Ball coincidentally landed the title role in the film version of Mame, the role Lansbury had created on Broadway.) On CNN's Larry King Live, Lansbury said that her character in The Manchurian Candidate was her favorite of her many film roles.[4]

Lansbury's popularity from and association with Mame on Broadway in the '60s had her very much in demand everywhere in the media. Ever the humanitarian, she used her fame as an opportunity to benefit others wherever possible. For example, when appearing as a guest panelist on the popular Sunday night CBS-TV show, What's My Line?, she made an impassioned plea for viewers to contribute to the 1966 Muscular Dystrophy Association fundraising drive, chaired by Jerry Lewis.

After many years focused on the theatre, Lansbury returned to film, playing Salome Otterbourne in Death on the Nile (1978). She was somewhat less successful as Agatha Christie's Miss Marple in The Mirror Crack'd (1980).

Lansbury then turned to character voice work in animated films like The Last Unicorn (1982) and as the Dowager Empress in the animated film Anastasia in 1997. Her most famous voice work was the singing teapot Mrs. Potts in the Disney hit Beauty and the Beast (1991), who performed the Oscar-winning title song written by Alan Menken and Howard Ashman. She reprised the role in "Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas" (1997), and again in the Disney/Square-Enix video game Kingdom Hearts II in 2006. In the same year, she appeared in Nanny McPhee as great aunt Adelaide.

While Lansbury has won every Tony for which she's been nominated, with the exception of her nomination for Deuce in 2007, she was less successful with the Oscars and Emmys. The Oscar has always eluded her, and Lansbury holds the record for the most primetime Emmy nominations (twelve) as Best Actress without a single win. Yet, she is the recipient of several other prominent awards, including the People's Choice and Golden Globe.

Lansbury found her biggest success and a worldwide following as Jessica Fletcher in the long-running television series, Murder, She Wrote (1984 - 1996), which was one of the longest running detective drama series in US TV history and made her one of the highest paid actresses in the world. Lansbury also assumed ownership of the series in 1991 and acted as executive producer of the series from that season onwards.

In 1983 Lansbury starred opposite Sir Laurence Olivier in a BBC adaptation of the Broadway play A Talent for Murder. According to The Complete Films of Laurence Olivier (Author Jerry Vermilye, Publisher Citadel), Lansbury later stated that the production was "a rushed job", and her only reason for participating was the opportunity to work/team up with Sir Laurence Olivier.

Honors

In the early 1990s, Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom appointed her a Commander of the Order of the British Empire. She was named a Disney Legend in 1995. She received a Screen Actors Guild Lifetime Achievement Award in 1997, Kennedy Center Honors in 2000, and has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

She received the New Dramatists Lifetime Achievement Award on May 16, 2000.[5]

She received the Acting Comany's First Lifetime Achievement Award on Nov. 11, 2002.[6]

She received the Actor's Fund of America Lifetime Achievement on October 30, 2004.[7]

On May 9, 2008, Lansbury received the degree Doctor of Humane Letters honoris causa from the University of Miami. She was also the guest speaker at the commencement ceremony.

Personal life

In 1945, Lansbury married American actor Richard Cromwell when he was 35 and she was 19. Unbeknownst to her, Cromwell was bisexual, and the marriage dissolved after a year, but the two remained friends.

In 1949, Lansbury married British-born actor and businessman Peter Shaw, who had been a former boyfriend of Joan Crawford. Shaw was instrumental in guiding and managing Lansbury's career. Until his death in January 2003, they enjoyed one of the longest show-business marriages on record.

Lansbury is the mother of two, stepmother of one, and a grandmother several times over. In an interview with Barbara Walters, Lansbury revealed a firestorm that destroyed the family's Malibu home in September 1970 was a blessing in disguise, as it prompted a move to a rural area of County Cork in Ireland, where her children were separated from the hard drugs with which they had been experimenting. Her son Anthony Shaw, after a brief fling with acting, became producer/director of Murder, She Wrote and presently is a television executive and director. Her only daughter Deirdre and son-in-law, a chef, are restaurateurs in West Los Angeles.

Lansbury was related to the late Sir Peter Ustinov by her half-sister Isolde's marriage to the British actor (they divorced in 1946). The two former in-laws appeared together professionally just once, in 1978's Death on the Nile. Lansbury is related by marriage to actress Ally Sheedy, wife of her nephew David Lansbury. Both her brothers, twins Edgar and Bruce, are successful theater producers (Edgar Lansbury was instrumental in bringing Godspell to Broadway, and Bruce Lansbury was also a television producer, notably for shows like Mission: Impossible).

Lansbury is a long-time resident of Brentwood, California, and supports various philanthropic groups in Southern California.

Lansbury had knee replacement surgery on July 14, 2005.[8]

In 2006, Lansbury purchased a condominium in New York City at a reported cost of $2 million. The following year she returned to Broadway once more in Deuce.

Lansbury's papers are currently housed at the Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center at Boston University.[9]

Work

Filmography

Year Title
1944 Gaslight
1944 National Velvet
1945 The Picture of Dorian Gray
1946 The Harvey Girls
1946 The Hoodlum Saint
1946 Till the Clouds Roll By
1947 The Private Affairs of Bel Ami
1947 If Winter Comes
1948 State of the Union
1948 The Three Musketeers
1948 Tenth Avenue Angel
1949 The Red Danube
1949 Samson and Delilah
1951 Kind Lady
1952 Mutiny
1953 Remains to Be Seen
1954 A Life at Stake
1955 The Purple Mask
1955 A Lawless Street
1956 The Court Jester
1956 Please Murder Me
1958 The Long, Hot Summer
1958 The Reluctant Debutante
1959 Summer of the Seventeenth Doll
1960 The Dark at the Top of the Stairs
1960 A Breath of Scandal
Year Title
1961 Blue Hawaii
1962 Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse
1962 All Fall Down
1962 The Manchurian Candidate
1963 In the Cool of the Day
1964 The World of Henry Orient
1964 Dear Heart
1965 The Greatest Story Ever Told
1965 The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders
1965 Harlow
1966 Mister Buddwing
1970 Something for Everyone
1971 Bedknobs and Broomsticks
1978 Death on the Nile
1979 The Lady Vanishes
1980 The Mirror Crack'd
1982 The Last Unicorn
1983 The Pirates of Penzance
1984 Ingrid
1984 The Company of Wolves
1991 Beauty and the Beast
1997 Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas
1997 Anastasia
1999 Fantasia 2000
2003 Broadway: The Golden Age, by the Legends Who Were There
2005 Nanny McPhee

Theatre

Title Venue Duration in production
Hotel Paradiso Broadway April – July 1957
A Taste of Honey Broadway October 1960 – May 1961[10]
Anyone Can Whistle Broadway April 1964
Mame Broadway May 1966 – March 1968 (through August 1968 on tour)[11]
Dear World Broadway February 1969 – May 1969
Prettybelle Boston February 1971
All Over West End 1972
Gypsy West End;
Broadway
May 1973 – March 1974;
September 1974 – January 1975
The King and I Broadway April 1978
Sweeney Todd Broadway March 1979 – March 1980 (US tour commenced October 1980) [12]
A Little Family Business Broadway December 1982
Mame Broadway July – August 1983
Deuce Broadway April – August 2007

Television films

Year Title
1982 Little Gloria... Happy at Last
1983 The Gift of Love: A Christmas Story
1984 A Talent for Murder
1984 Lace
1986 Rage of Angels: The Story Continues
1989 The Shell Seekers
1990 The Love She Sought
1992 Mrs. 'Arris Goes to Paris
1996 Mrs. Santa Claus
1997 Murder, She Wrote: South by Southwest
1999 The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax
2000 Murder, She Wrote: A Story to Die For
2001 Murder, She Wrote: The Last Free Man
2003 Murder, She Wrote: The Celtic Riddle
2004 The Blackwater Lightship
2008 Heidi 4 Paws

Awards and nominations

Academy Awards

Nominations

CableACE Awards

Wins

BAFTA Awards

Wins

Nominations

Drama Desk Awards

Wins

Nominations

Emmy Awards

Nominations

Golden Globes

Wins

Nominations

Hasty Pudding Theatricals

Wins

National Board of Review

Wins

Screen Actors Guild Awards

Wins

Nominations

Television Critics Association Awards

Wins

Tony Awards

Wins

Nominations

See also

References

Balancing Act, the Authorized Biography of Angela Lansbury by Martin Gottfried, published by Little, Brown and Company, 1999

Notes

  1. Discover Tower Hamlets - Area guides - Poplar
  2. Jones, Kenneth."Angela Lansbury Withdraws From The Visit; Producers Seek Alternatives",playbill.com, July 20, 2000
  3. Gans, Andrew and Jones, Kenneth."Angela Lansbury to Return to Broadway in Blithe Spirit Revival", playbill.com, October 13, 2008
  4. Interview with Angela Lansbury at Irish Film Institute 9 July 2006
  5. Simonson, Robert."Cronkite,Bacall & Sondheim Pay Tribute To Lansbury at New Dramatists, May 16",playbill.com, May 16, 2000
  6. "Angela Lansbury to Receive Acting Company's Lifetime Achievement Award",playbill.com, October 28, 2002
  7. Allen, Morgan."PHOTO CALL: Depp and Lansbury Honored by Actor's Fund at Oct. 30 Gala",playbill.com, November 1, 2004
  8. Playbill News: Angela Lansbury to Have Knee Surgery
  9. archives list
  10. Calta, Lewis.New York Times, "Theatre: 3 Cast Changes Made in 'Taste of Honey'", May 17, 1961, p. 43
  11. Windeler, Robert.New York Times, "Angela Lansbury a Hit in Coast 'Mame'", June 29, 1968, p. 19 "She played it [Mame]...in SanFrancisco for seven weeks... The show is here also for a seven- week run...In September, Miss Lansbury will be involved with 'Dear World' "
  12. "Sweeney Todd" listing, Original Broadway production, cast notes; 1980 National Touring Productionsondheimguide.com

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Agnes Moorehead
for Mrs. Parkington
Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress - Motion Picture
1946
for The Picture of Dorian Gray
Succeeded by
Anne Baxter
for The Razor's Edge
Preceded by
Rita Moreno
for West Side Story
Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress - Motion Picture
1963
for The Manchurian Candidate
Succeeded by
Margaret Rutherford
for The V.I.P.s
Preceded by
Lauren Bacall
Hasty Pudding Woman of the Year
1968
Succeeded by
Carol Burnett
Preceded by
none
Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actress in a Musical
1974-1975
for Gypsy
Succeeded by
Donna McKechnie
for A Chorus Line
Preceded by
Nell Carter
in Ain't Misbehavin'
Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actress in a Musical
1978-1979
for Sweeney Todd
Succeeded by
Patti LuPone
in Evita
Preceded by
Jane Wyman
for Falcon Crest
Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actress In A Television Series - Drama
1985
for Murder, She Wrote
Succeeded by
Sharon Gless
for Cagney & Lacey
Preceded by
Sharon Gless
for Cagney & Lacey
Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actress In A Television Series - Drama
1987
for Murder, She Wrote
Succeeded by
Susan Dey
for L.A. Law
Preceded by
Jill Eikenberry
for L.A. Law
Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actress In A Television Series - Drama
1990
for Murder, She Wrote
Succeeded by
Sharon Gless
for The Trials of Rosie O'Neill
Preceded by
Patricia Wettig
for thirtysomething
Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actress In A Television Series - Drama
1992
for Murder, She Wrote
Succeeded by
Regina Taylor
for I'll Fly Away
Preceded by
Robert Redford
Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award
1996
Succeeded by
Elizabeth Taylor
Persondata
NAME Lansbury, Angela
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Lansbury, Angela Brigid
SHORT DESCRIPTION English actress
DATE OF BIRTH October 16, 1925
PLACE OF BIRTH London, England
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH