Sue Lloyd

Sue Lloyd
Born Susan Margery Jeaffreson Lloyd
7 August 1939
Aldeburgh, Suffolk, England, UK
Died 20 October 2011(2011-10-20) (aged 72)
Occupation Actress
Years active 1963–2001
Spouse Ronald Allen
(m. 1991-1991; his death)

Sue Lloyd (7 August 1939 – 20 October 2011) was an English model turned actress with numerous film and television credits.

Contents

Biography

The daughter of a GP, Susan Margery Jeaffreson Lloyd was born in Aldeburgh, Suffolk. She attended Edgbaston High School in Birmingham and studied dance as a child, attending Sadler's Wells Ballet School.[1] As her height (5 feet 8 inches (1.73 m)) increased, her possibilities for a career as a dancer diminished, and she became a showgirl and model, and, briefly, a member of Lionel Blair's dance troupe.[2]

She was one of the last two debutantes to be presented to the Queen at Buckingham Palace in 1958; the final such ceremony.[3]

Films and television

She made her film debut in two espionage themed films in 1965. Lloyd was a glamorous foil to Michael Caine's Harry Palmer in the spy thriller The IPCRESS File, and she later appeared alongside Caine's Palmer in Bullet to Beijing (1995). In 1965 she had a role in The Return of Mr. Moto[4]

In the same year Lloyd played the regular role of secret agent Cordelia Winfield, alongside Steve Forrest in the 1965-66 British ITC television series The Baron. Originally Lloyd's character only appeared in the pilot episode with Steve Forrest's sidekick played by Paul Ferris. Pressure from the American television network who were to screen the show replaced Ferris with the glamourous Lloyd.[5]

In 1971, Lloyd starred in a stage version of the TV series The Avengers playing John Steed's sidekick, Mrs Hannah Wild. She also appeared with several other stars in the 1976 Lindsay Shonteff imitation James Bond film No. 1 of the Secret Service.

She made many guest appearances on several popular shows of the 1960s and 1970s including The Saint, Department S, Jason King, Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased), The Persuaders! and The Sweeney.

Other film credits include Corruption, Revenge of the Pink Panther, The Stud and The Bitch. On her twitter page Joan Collins said that she and Lloyd had to get drunk prior to their nude scenes[6]

She is probably best known, however, for her long-running role as Barbara Hunter, née Brady, in the soap opera Crossroads, beginning in 1975, and she remained in the role until 1985 when Sue and her on-screen and future real-life husband, Ronald Allen, were sacked from the series. To the surprise of many (he had lived with Brian Hankins for most of his life until Hankins's death from cancer),[7] she married Allen, six weeks before his death from cancer on 19 June 1991.[8]

Death

Sue Lloyd died on 20 October 2011, aged 72, from undisclosed causes.[9]

Filmography

References

  1. ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv-and-radio/2011/oct/23/sue-lloyd?newsfeed=true The Guardian Obituary. Retrieved 23 October 2011
  2. ^ http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/8846773/Sue-Lloyd.html
  3. ^ http://www.heraldscotland.com/mobile/comment/obituaries/sue-lloyd-1.1131680
  4. ^ p.189 Lisanti, Tom & Paul, Louis Film Fatales: Women in Espionage Films and Television, 1962-1973 McFarland, 2002
  5. ^ http://www.cherishedtelevision.co.uk/baron.html
  6. ^ http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2052355/Crossroads-Ipcress-File-actress-Sue-Lloyd-dies-aged-72.html
  7. ^ pp160-161TV Babylon" by Paul Donnelley (Vista, 1997)
  8. ^ Fade to Black A Book of Movie Obituaries by Paul Donnelley. Omnibus Press: 2010)
  9. ^ Ipcress File Star Sue Lloyd Dies at 72

External links