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Sybil Thorndike

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Years active
  
1904-1970

Role
  
Actress

Name
  
Sybil Thorndike

Sybil Thorndike NPG x19089 Dame Sybil Thorndike Large Image National
Full Name
  
Agnes Sybil Thorndike

Born
  
24 October 1882 (
1882-10-24
)
Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, England

Died
  
June 9, 1976, Chelsea, London, United Kingdom

Spouse
  
Lewis Casson (m. 1908–1969)

Children
  
Ann Casson, Christopher Casson, John Casson, Mary Casson

Books
  
Favourites: A Personal Selection

Movies
  
The Prince and the Showgirl, Stage Fright, Gone to Earth, Smiley Gets a Gun, The Forbidden Street

Similar People
  

Dame sybil thorndike defending marilyn monroe


Dame Agnes Sybil Thorndike CH, DBE (24 October 1882 – 9 June 1976) was an English actress who toured internationally in Shakespearean productions, often appearing with her husband Lewis Casson. Bernard Shaw wrote Saint Joan specially for her, and she starred in it with great success. She was made Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1931, and Companion of Honour in 1970.

Contents

Sybil Thorndike Quotes by Sybil Thorndike Like Success

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Early life

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Thorndike was born in Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, to Arthur Thorndike and Agnes Macdonald. Her father was a Canon of Rochester Cathedral. She was educated at Rochester Grammar School for Girls, and first trained as a classical pianist, making weekly visits to London for music lessons at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama.

Her childhood home in Rochester has been renamed after her.

She gave her first public performance as a pianist at the age of 11, but in 1899 was forced to give up playing owing to piano cramp. At the instigation of her brother, the author Russell Thorndike, she then trained as an actress.

Career

At the age of 21 she was offered her first professional contract: a tour of the United States with the actor-manager Ben Greet's company. She made her first stage appearance in Greet's 1904 production of Shakespeare's The Merry Wives of Windsor. She went on to tour the U.S. in Shakespearean repertory for four years, playing some 112 roles. In 1908, she was spotted by the playwright George Bernard Shaw when she understudied the leading role of Candida in a tour directed by Shaw himself. There she also met her future husband, Lewis Casson. They were married in December 1908, and had four children: John (1909–1999), Christopher (1912–1996), Mary (1914–2009), and Ann (1915–1990). She was survived by four children and a number of grandchildren and great-grandchildren when she died.

She joined Annie Horniman's company in Manchester (1908–09 and 1911–13), went to Broadway in 1910, and then joined the Old Vic Company in London (1914–18), playing leading roles in Shakespeare and in other classic plays. After the war, she played Hecuba in Euripides The Trojan Women (1919–20), then from 1920–22 Thorndike and her husband starred in a British version of France's Grand Guignol directed by Jose Levy.

She returned to the stage in the title role of George Bernard Shaw's Saint Joan in 1924, which had been written with her specifically in mind. The production was a huge success, and was revived repeatedly until her final performance in the role in 1941. In 1927, Thorndike appeared in a short film of the cathedral scene from Saint Joan made in the DeForest Phonofilm sound-on-film process. Both Thorndike and Casson were active members of the Labour Party, and held strong left-wing views. Even when the 1926 General Strike stopped the first run of Saint Joan, they both still supported the strikers. She was made a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1931. As a pacifist, Thorndike was a member of the Peace Pledge Union and gave readings for its benefit. During World War II, Thorndike and her husband toured in Shakespearean productions on behalf of the Council For the Encouragement of the Arts, before joining Laurence Olivier and Ralph Richardson in the Old Vic season at the New Theatre in 1944.

At the end of World War Two, it was discovered that Thorndike was on "The Black Book" or Sonderfahndungsliste G.B. list of Britons who were to be arrested in the event of a Nazi invasion of Britain.

She continued to have success in such plays as N. C. Hunter's Waters of the Moon at the Haymarket in 1951–52. She also undertook tours of Australia and South Africa, before playing again with Olivier in Uncle Vanya at Chichester in 1962. She made her farewell appearance with her husband in a London revival of Arsenic and Old Lace at the Vaudeville Theatre in 1966. Her last stage performance was at the Thorndike Theatre in Leatherhead, Surrey, in There Was an Old Woman in 1969, the year Lewis Casson died.

Her final acting appearance was in a TV drama The Great Inimitable Mr. Dickens, with Anthony Hopkins in 1970.

The same year she was made a Companion of Honour. She and her husband (who was knighted in 1945) were one of the few couples who both held titles in their own right. She had also been awarded an honorary degree from Manchester University in 1922, and an honorary D.Litt from Oxford University in 1966.

Dame Sybil's ashes are buried in Westminster Abbey.

Films

She made her film debut in Moth and Rust (1921), and appeared in a large number of silent films the next year, including versions of Bleak House, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Macbeth, The Merchant of Venice and The Scarlet Letter.

She also appeared in a 1927 short film, made in the DeForest Phonofilm process, of her performing as Saint Joan in an excerpt of the play by George Bernard Shaw. Among her notable film roles were as Nurse Edith Cavell in Dawn (1928), General Baines in Major Barbara (1941), Mrs. Squeers in Nicholas Nickleby (1948), Queen Victoria in Melba (1952) and the Queen Dowager in The Prince and the Showgirl (1957) with Marilyn Monroe and Laurence Olivier, for which she was awarded the National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actress. She made her last film appearance – in a version of Uncle Vanya – in 1963.


In fiction

She appears in Tony Harrison's play Fram, played in the premiere by Sian Thomas. Here she is resurrected from the dead to play herself in one of Gilbert Murray's plays.

Her name is also used in Muriel Spark's novel The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, citing her as "a woman of noble mien."

In the film My Week with Marilyn, she is played by Judi Dench.

She is one of the principal characters in Nicholas de Jongh's play Plague Over England, about John Gielgud's arrest for homosexual acts in 1953. She was played in the premiere by Nichola McAuliffe. In the London production she was played by Celia Imrie.

Famous quotes

When asked if she ever considered leaving her husband, she answered: "Divorce, never! Murder, often!"

Filmography

Actress
1970
The Great Inimitable Mr. Dickens (TV Movie) as
Elizabeth Ball Dickens
1968
ITV Playhouse (TV Series) as
The Nurse
- The Father (1968) - The Nurse
1967
NET Playhouse (TV Series) as
Marina
- Uncle Vanya (1967) - Marina
1966
Armchair Theatre (TV Series) as
Florence Pringle
- Don't Utter a Note (1966) - Florence Pringle
1965
BBC Play of the Month (TV Series) as
Mrs. Moore
- Passage to India (1965) - Mrs. Moore
1965
Armchair Mystery Theatre (TV Series) as
Mrs. Isabel Manners
- Man and Mirror (1965) - Mrs. Isabel Manners
1964
The Reluctant Peer (TV Movie) as
Molly, the Dowager Countess of Lister
1963
Uncle Vanya as
Marina, the nurse
1961
The Big Gamble as
'Aunt Cathleen' / Aunt Cathleen (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
1961
Hand in Hand as
Lady Caroline
1960
Saturday Playhouse (TV Series) as
Sara Champline
- A Matter of Age (1960) - Sara Champline
1960
Riders to the Sea (TV Movie) as
Maurya
1959
BBC Sunday-Night Theatre (TV Series) as
Mrs. Whyte
- Waters of the Moon (1959) - Mrs. Whyte
1959
Jet Storm as
Emma Morgan (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
1959
Shake Hands with the Devil as
Lady Fitzhugh
1959
Theatre Night (TV Series) as
Dame Sophia Carrell
- Eighty in the Shade (1959) - Dame Sophia Carrell
1958
Alive and Kicking as
Dora
1958
ITV Television Playhouse (TV Series) as
Blanche Skinner
- Before the Party (1958) - Blanche Skinner
1958
Smiley Gets a Gun as
Granny McKinley
1957
The Prince and the Showgirl as
The Queen Dowager
1956
ITV Play of the Week (TV Series) as
Mrs. Whyte
- Waters of the Moon (1956) - Mrs. Whyte
1954
Rheingold Theatre (TV Series) as
Catherine / Miss Cicely
- Mr. Sampson (1954) - Catherine (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
- The Heirloom (1954) - Miss Cicely (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
1954
Young and Willing as
Mabel Wicks, Millie's friend
1953
Melba as
Queen Victoria
1951
The Lady with a Lamp as
Miss Bosanquet
1951
The Magic Box as
Sitter in Bath Studio
1950
Gone to Earth as
Mrs. Marston
1950
Stage Fright as
Mrs. Gill
1949
The Forbidden Street as
Mrs. 'The Sow' Mounsey (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
1947
The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby as
Mrs. Squeers
1941
Major Barbara as
The General
1939
Sun Up (TV Movie) as
Widow Cagle
1936
Nine Days a Queen as
Ellen
1931
A Gentleman of Paris as
Lola Duval
1931
Hindle Wakes as
Mrs. Hawthorne
1930
To What Red Hell as
Mrs. Fairfield
1928
Dawn as
Nurse Edith Cavell
1927
Saint Joan (Short) as
Joan of Arc
1922
Tense Moments from Great Plays as
Lady Macbeth / Lady Dedlock / Jane Shore / ...
1922
Tense Moments with Great Authors as
Nancy (segment "Nancy")
1922
Bleak House (Short) as
Lady Dedlock
1922
Esmeralda (Short) as
Esmeralda
1922
Jane Shore (Short) as
Jane Shore
1922
Macbeth (Short) as
Lady Macbeth
1922
The Lady of the Camellias (Short) as
Marguerite Gautier
1922
The Merchant of Venice (Short) as
Portia
1922
The Scarlet Letter (Short) as
Hester Prynne
1922
Nancy (Short) as
Nancy
1921
Moth and Rust as
Mrs Brand
Soundtrack
1958
Alive and Kicking (performer: "What Shall We Do With A Drunken Sailor"" - uncredited)
1936
Nine Days a Queen (performer: "Aftime with Goode Companie" - uncredited)
Self
1991
This Is Your Life (Highlights from the 1950's and 1960's) (TV Movie) as
Self
1973
Aquarius (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- Jacob Epstein: Private Parts In Public Places (1973) - Self (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
1972
Greenwich Village (TV Series) as
Self
1971
Omnibus (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- Hail and Farewell-George Moore (1971) - Self (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
1971
The Dick Cavett Show (TV Series)
- Richard Harris/Romy Schneider/Dame Sybil Thorndyke/Luis Miguel Dominguez (1971)
1970
An Evening with... (TV Series) as
Self
- Dame Sybil Thorndike and Sir Hugh Casson (1970) - Self (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
1969
Dee Time (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #4.57 (1969) - Self (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
1969
Join Jim Dale (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #1.5 (1969) - Self (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
1969
Frost on Sunday (TV Series) as
Self
- Frost on the Moon (1969) - Self
1968
Tempo (TV Series documentary) as
Medea
- The Actor and the Role: Sybil Thorndike (1968) - Medea
1967
Now and Then (TV Series documentary short) as
Self (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
1965
Call My Bluff (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #1.6 (1965) - Self (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
1963
That Was the Week That Was (TV Series) as
Self
- A Tribute to John Fitzgerald Kennedy (1963) - Self
1963
Farewell to the Vic (TV Movie documentary) as
Self
1960
This Is Your Life (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- Robert Macintosh (1962) - Self (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
- Dame Sybil Thorndike (1960) - Self (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
1961
Film Profile (TV Series) as
Self
- Sybil Thorndike (1962) - Self
- Michael Balcon (1961) - Self (voice)
1961
The Tonight Show Starring Jack Paar (TV Series) as
Self / Dame Sybil Thorndike
- Episode #4.103 (1961) - Self / Dame Sybil Thorndike
1958
The Curtain Goes Up (TV Movie documentary) as
Self
1957
Probe and Night Beat (TV Series documentary) as
Self - actress
- Steve Allen, Dame Sybil Thorndike (1957) - Self - actress
1953
This Is Show Business (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #2.1 (1953) - Self (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
Archive Footage
2011
My Week with Marilyn: The Untold Story of an American Icon (Video documentary short) as
Self
2010
Time to Remember (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- Stage and Screen (2010) - Self
2004
Hitchcock and 'Stage Fright' (Video documentary short) as
Self / Mrs. Gill
2004
The Prince, the Showgirl and Me (TV Movie documentary) as
Self
2001
The Scottish Play (Documentary) as
Lady Macbeth
1985
The Rock 'n' Roll Years (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- 1962 (1985) - Self (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
1983
Omnibus (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- The Old Vic (1983) - Self
1982
Van Kerslig tot Kollig (TV Series documentary) as
Self(1982) (uncredited)
1942
C.E.M.A. (Short) as
Self

References

Sybil Thorndike Wikipedia