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Margaretta Scott
English actress

Margaretta Scott

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
English actress
Gender
Female
Place of birth
London
Place of death
London
Age
93 years
Family
Spouse:
John Wooldridge
Children:
Susan Wooldridge Hugh Wooldridge
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Margaretta Scott (13 February 1912 – 15 April 2005) was an English stage, screen and television actress whose career spanned over seventy years. She is best remembered for playing the eccentric widow Mrs. Pumphrey in the BBC television series All Creatures Great and Small (1978–1990).

Early life and education

Scott was born in London in 1912 to Bertha Eugene and Hugh Arthur Scott, a distinguished music critic. She trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art where she shared a scholarship with Celia Johnson and was awarded the Kendal Prize.

Acting career

After giving private performances of verse-speaking and dance drama as a child for her family and their friends, she made her first appearance on the London stage at the age of 14 as Mercutio's Page in a 1926, Fellowship of Players revival of Romeo and Juliet. Scott became a leading exponent of the work of William Shakespeare through a series of notable performances in the early and mid-1930s: Cast firstly as the Player Queen and then Ophelia in Hamlet, she followed this with Beatrice in Much Ado About Nothing for the Oxford University Dramatic Society.

She appeared as Viola at the New Theatre and as Ophelia and Juliet in a couple of BBC radio productions in 1932. In 1933 she played the first of four summer seasons at the Open Air Theatre in Regent's Park. She also played Lavinia in George Bernard Shaw's Androcles and the Lion with the rehearsals under the supervision of the author himself.

In 1936 Scott was cast as Rosaline in one of the great productions of Love's Labours Lost at The Old Vic and in the following year performed in more Shakespeare which included her last appearance at the Open Air Theatre until 1984 in Ring Round the Moon.

In addition to these classical roles, Scott's credits in contemporary drama have included the premieres of Emlyn Williams' A Murder Has Been Arranged (directed by the author in 1930), MacLeish's Panic (1936), Morna Stuart's Traitor's Gate (1938) and Sidney Howard's Alien Corn (1939). By 1939 Scott had become one of the United Kingdom's leading young stage actresses.

Trade union organiser

Scott was a signatory of the document that established Equity, the British actors' trade union, in 1934.

Film career

Scott's screen career began in 1934 when she made an uncredited appearance in Alexander Korda's The Private Life of Don Juan. Thereafter she reprised her stage role of Leonora Stafford in the film version of the Ben Travers' Aldwych farce Dirty Work with Robertson Hare and Ralph Lynn and appeared in Herbert Wilcox's Peg of Old Drury with Anna Neagle before again joining Alexander Korda in 1936. Engaged by Korda, Scott made three pictures for London Films:

  • Things to Come (1936) as Roxana/Rowana in H. G. Wells' adaptation of his novel with Ralph Richardson, Raymond Massey and Ann Todd.
  • Action for Slander (1937).
  • Return of the Scarlet Pimpernel (1937).

Second World War

Throughout the war Scott continued to perform in theatrical productions both at home and abroad, touring North Africa and Italy with ENSA in 1944. In addition to seasons at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford upon Avon in 1941 and 1942, her stage credits included Clare Boothe's Margin for Error (1940), the premiere of James Bridie's The Holy Isle (1942) and the first British productions of Lillian Hellman's play Watch on the Rhine (1943) and John Patrick's The Hasty Heart (1945).

Her screen roles meanwhile included Judith Bentley in The Girl in the News (1940), Marcia Royd in Anthony Asquith's comedy Quiet Wedding (1940), Atlantic Ferry (1941), Sabotage at Sea (1942) and Alicia in the Gainsborough Pictures melodrama, Fanny by Gaslight (1944).

Post-war career

In the late 1940s and throughout the 1950s Scott continued to play a wide range of roles on stage and screen. Her association with Shakespeare was maintained with performances in the first 1946 television productions of The Merchant of Venice and Othello and, on stage, in Macbeth and Hamlet, in addition to other productions at the Fortune, Saville, Cambridge and Her Majesty's theatres in London. At this time, she appeared in pictures such as The Man from Morocco (1945), Where's Charley? (1952), Town on Trial (1956), The Scamp (1957), Mayerling (1958) and Crescendo (1970).

Scott was active on the concert platform as a narrator/speaker under the batons of Sir Henry Wood, Sir Malcolm Sargent, Sir David Willcocks and Sir John Pritchard performing scores by Grieg, Honegger, Purcell, Elgar, Prokofiev and her late husband, the British composer, John Wooldridge.

Over the course of the next three decades Scott appeared on stage throughout the United Kingdom and toured in plays abroad including the Far East, Canada and North and South Africa. Apart from world premieres of contemporary plays such as Aunt Edwina (1958) with Henry Kendall directed by the author William Douglas Home; The Right Honourable Gentleman (1963) with Anthony Quayle and Angela Huth's The Understanding (1982) with Celia Johnson and Ralph Richardson, many of her theatre credits in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s were revivals of Oscar Wilde's comedies including Lord Arthur Savile's Crime (1968 Tour); A Woman of No Importance (1974 and 1978); The Importance of Being Earnest (1974 and The Old Vic Theatre 1980; also on television); An Ideal Husband (1976/1977 Tour) and Lady Windermere's Fan (Canada 1979). Her last West End role was with Leo McKern in the revival of Hobson's Choice (1984) directed by Frank Hauser.

Television career

Scott was one of the first women to perform Shakespeare on television, in the role of Beatrice in a stage production of Much Ado About Nothing broadcast by the BBC in 1937. In 1946, she portrayed Portia in a made for television production of The Merchant of Venice.

For twenty-five years, from the 1970s, Scott played a number of distinguished parts in popular television dramas. These included Lord Peter Wimsey, Elizabeth R, The Duchess of Duke Street, Upstairs, Downstairs, Lovejoy, and for several years as Mrs Pumphrey with her pekinese, Tricki Woo, in the BBC series All Creatures Great and Small. The character was based largely on Miss Marjory Warner of Sowerby and her pekinese Bambi.

Personal life

Scott was married to the English composer John Wooldridge, who was killed in a car accident in 1958. Their daughter, Susan Wooldridge, is also an actress and their son, Hugh Wooldridge is a theatre director and producer. Scott died in 2005, aged 93, from natural causes and is buried with her husband, John, at St Lawrence's Church, Cholesbury, Buckinghamshire. A devout Roman Catholic, she belonged to the British Catholic Stage Guild.

Filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1934Dirty WorkLeonora Stafford
The Private Life of Don JuanPepillauncredited
1935Peg of Old DruryKitty Clive
1936Things to ComeRoxana/Rowenaas Margueretta Scott
1937Much Ado About NothingBeatriceTV
Return of the Scarlet PimpernelTheresa Cobarrus
Action for SlanderJosie Bradford
1938Will ShakespeareAnneTV
The Constant NymphTV
ParnellKatherine O'SheaTV
1939The Taming of the ShrewKatherinaTV
Traitor's GateTV
Katharine and PetruchioKatharineTV
Shall We Join the Ladies?Lady WrathieTV
1940Girl in the NewsJudith Bentley
1941Quiet WeddingMarcia
Atlantic FerrySusan Donaldson
1942Sabotage at SeaJane Dighton
1944Fanny by GaslightAlicia
1945The Man from MoroccoManuela
1947Mrs. FitzherbertLady Jersey
The Merchant of VenicePortiaTV
1948CounterblastSister "Johnnie" Johnson
The Story of Shirley YorkeAlison Gwynne
Idol of ParisEmpress Euginie
The First GentlemanLady Hartford
Calling Paul TempleMrs. Trevellyan
1949LandfallMrs. Burnaby
1950OthelloEmiliaTV - BBC Sunday Night Theatre
1952Where's Charley?Dona Lucia
1956The White FalconCatherine of AragonTV - BBC Sunday Night Theatre
The Last Man to Hang?Mrs. Cranshaw
1957The ScampMrs. Blundell
Town on TrialHelen Dixon
1958A Woman PossessedKatherine Winthrop
1960An Honourable MurderClaudia Caesar
1970CrescendoDanielle Ryman
1971PercyRita's Mother

Notes and references

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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