Angela Lansbury Biography

Summary

"Angela Brigid Lansbury", CBE (born October 16, 1925) is a four-time Tony-winning, six-time Golden Globe-winning, three-time Academy Award-nominated, and eighteen-time Emmy-nominated English actress and singer. Her multi-faceted career has spanned seven decades, and she is well known for her roles on both stage and screen.

Early life

Born in London, 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 related to the British animator and puppeteer Oliver Postgate, as George Lansbury is also his grandfather. Her earliest theatrical influences were teen-aged coloratura Deanna Durbin, screen star Irene Dunne, and her own 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 enroll her in the Ritman School of Dancing and later the Webber-Douglas School of Singing and Dramatic Art.

After her father's death of 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 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, she (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 emigré 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 for her portrayal of Sibyl Vane in "Dorian Gray".

Career

Theatre

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.

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 ballad opera "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 also stated that this production was also a triumph and a comeback of sorts for Sondheim, whom she admires.

She also 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.

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 on April 11, 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, but did not win the Tony that year.

Film and television

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.

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 less well-received 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.

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.

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.

Personal life

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

In 1949, Lansbury married Irish-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 2003, Lansbury 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 rural County Cork, Ireland, where her children were separated from the hard drugs with which they had been experimenting. Her son Anthony, after a brief fling with acting, became producer/director of "Murder, She Wrote" and presently is a television executive and director. Her 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 twin brothers, Edgar and Bruce, are successful theater producers (Edgar Lansbury was instumental 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 .

In 2006, Lansbury purchased a condominium in New York City at a reported cost of $2 million with her sights set on a return to Broadway.

Filmography

Features:

"Gaslight" (1944)

"National Velvet" (1944)

"The Picture of Dorian Gray" (1945)

"The Harvey Girls" (1946)

"The Hoodlum Saint" (1946)

"Till the Clouds Roll By" (1946)

"The Private Affairs of Bel Ami" (1947)

"If Winter Comes" (1947)

"State of the Union" (1948)

"The Three Musketeers" (1948)

"Tenth Avenue Angel" (1948)

"The Red Danube" (1949)

"Samson and Delilah" (1949)

"Kind Lady" (1951)

"Mutiny" (1952)

"Remains to Be Seen" (1953)

"A Life at Stake" (1954)

"The Purple Mask" (1955)

"A Lawless Street" (1955)

"The Court Jester" (1956)

"Please Murder Me" (1956)

"The Long, Hot Summer" (1958)

"The Reluctant Debutante" (1958)

"Summer of the Seventeenth Doll" (1959)

"The Dark at the Top of the Stairs" (1960)

"A Breath of Scandal" (1960)

"Blue Hawaii" (1961)

"The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse" (1962) (dubbed speaking voice of Ingrid Thulin)

"All Fall Down" (1962)

"The Manchurian Candidate" (1962)

"In the Cool of the Day" (1963)

"The World of Henry Orient" (1964)

"Dear Heart" (1964)

"The Greatest Story Ever Told" (1965)

"The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders" (1965)

"Harlow" (1965)

"Mister Buddwing" (1966)

"Something for Everyone" (1970)

"Bedknobs and Broomsticks" (1971)

"Death on the Nile" (1978)

"The Lady Vanishes" (1979)

"The Mirror Crack'd" (1980)

"The Last Unicorn" (1982) (voice)

"The Pirates of Penzance" (1983)

"Ingrid" (1984) (documentary)

"The Company of Wolves" (1984)

"Beauty and the Beast" (1991) (voice)

"Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas" (1997) (direct-to-video) (voice)

"Anastasia" (1997) (voice)

"Fantasia 2000" (1999)

"Broadway: The Golden Age, by the Legends Who Were There" (2003) (documentary)

"Nanny McPhee" (2005)

Upcoming:

"Broadway: Beyond the Golden Age" (2008) (documentary)

Short Subjects:

"Some of the Best" (1949)

"Your Studio and You" (1995)

Television credits

"Grannytram" (1956)

"The Man From U.N.C.L.E. (1965 episode 38 : The Deadly Toys Affair)

"The 22nd Tony Awards" (1968)

"The 25th Tony Awards" (1971)

"The Story of the First Christmas Snow" (1975)

"Sweeney Todd" (1982)

"Little Gloria... Happy at Last" (1982)

"The Gift of Love: A Christmas Story" (1983)

"A Talent for Murder" (1984)

"Lace" (1984)

"The First Olympics: Athens 1896" (1984)

"The Murder of Sherlock Holmes" (1984) (pilot for "Murder, She Wrote")

"Murder, She Wrote" (1984-1996)

"Magnum, P.I." - 'Novel Connection' (1986) (appeared as character Jessica Fletcher)

"Rage of Angels: The Story Continues" (1986)

"The 41st Tony Awards" (1987)

"Shootdown" (1988)

"The 42nd Tony Awards" (1988)

"The Shell Seekers" (1989)

"The 43rd Tony Awards" (1989)

"The Love She Sought" (1990)

"Mrs. 'Arris Goes to Paris" (1992)

"Mrs. Santa Claus" (1996)

"Murder, She Wrote: South by Southwest" (1997)

"The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax" (1999)

"Murder, She Wrote: A Story to Die For" (2000)

"Murder, She Wrote: The Last Free Man" (2001)

"Murder, She Wrote: The Celtic Riddle" (2003)

"The Blackwater Lightship" (2004)

"Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" (2005) (guest appearance)

"Law & Order: Trial by Jury" (2005) (guest appearance)

"The 61st Tony Awards" (2007)

"Agatha Christie's Poirot" - 'Appointment with Death' (2008)

Broadway productions

"Hotel Paradiso" (Apr. - Jul. 1957)

"A Taste of Honey" (Oct. 1960 - Sep. 1961)

"Anyone Can Whistle" (Apr. 1964)

"Mame" (May 1966 - Jan. 1969)

"Dear World" (Feb. - May 1969)

"Gypsy" (Sep. 1974 - Jan. 1975)

"The King and I" (Substitute for several weeks, April 1978)

"Sweeney Todd: the Demon Barber of Fleet Street" (Mar. 1979 - Jun. 1980)

"A Little Family Business" (Dec. 1982)

"Mame" (Jul. - Aug. 1983)

"Deuce" (April - Aug. 2007)

Other Theatre

"Prettybelle" (February 1971, Shubert Theatre, Boston)

"All Over" (1972, Royal Shakespeare Company, London)

"Gypsy" (May 29, 1973-March 2, 1974 - Piccadilly Theatre, London)

"Anyone Can Whistle" (April 8, 1995, Benefit Concert)

"Short Talks on the Universe" (Nov. 2002, Benefit)

"Oscar and the Pink Lady" (Mar. 2006, Geffen Playhouse)

Awards and nominations

Academy Awards

"Nominations"

Best Supporting Actress ("Gaslight", 1945)

Best Supporting Actress ("The Picture of Dorian Gray", 1946)

Best Supporting Actress ("The Manchurian Candidate", 1963)

BAFTA Awards

"Wins"

Britannia Award (Lifetime Achievement, 2003)

"Nominations"

Best Supporting Actress ("Death on the Nile", 1978)

Drama Desk Awards

"Wins"

Outstanding Actress in a Musical, "Sweeney Todd", (1979)

Outstanding Actress in a Musical, "Gypsy", (1975)

"Nominations"

Outstanding Actress in a Musical, The King and I, (1978)

Emmy Awards

"Nominations"

Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series (for playing Eleanor Duvall in 'Law & Order: Trial by Jury', 2005)

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or Movie ("The Blackwater Lightship", 2004)

Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series ('Murder, She Wrote', 1985-1996 "**12 Consecutive Nominations**")

Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program ('The 43rd Annual Tony Awards', 1990)

Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program ('The 41st Annual Tony Awards', 1987)

Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program ("Sweeney Todd", 1985)

Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or Movie ("Little Gloria... Happy at Last", 1983)

Golden Globes

"Wins"

Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series - Drama ('Murder, She Wrote', 1992)

Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series - Drama ('Murder, She Wrote', 1990)

Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series - Drama ('Murder, She Wrote', 1987)

Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series - Drama ('Murder, She Wrote', 1985)

Best Supporting Actress ("The Manchurian Candidate", 1963)

Best Supporting Actress ("The Picture of Dorian Gray", 1946)

"Nominations"

Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series - Drama ('Murder, She Wrote', 1995)

Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series - Drama ('Murder, She Wrote', 1993)

Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series - Drama ('Murder, She Wrote', 1991)

Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series - Drama ('Murder, She Wrote', 1989)

Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series - Drama ('Murder, She Wrote', 1988)

Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series - Drama ('Murder, She Wrote', 1986)

Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Miniseries or TV-Movie ("A Gift of Love: A Christmas Story", 1983)

Best Motion Picture Actress - Musical/Comedy ("Bedknobs and Broomsticks", 1972)

Best Motion Picture Actress - Musical/Comedy ("Something for Everyone", 1970)

Hasty Pudding Theatricals

"Wins"

Hasty Pudding Woman of the Year (1968)

National Board of Review

"Wins"

Best Supporting Actress ("Death on the Nile", 1978)

Best Supporting Actress ("All Fall Down" and "The Manchurian Candidate", 1962)

Screen Actors Guild Awards

"Wins"

Life Achievement Award (1996)

"Nominations"

Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series - Drama ('Murder, She Wrote', 1995)

Tony Awards

"Wins"

Best Actress in a Musical, "Sweeney Todd", (1979)

Best Actress in a Musical, "Gypsy", (1975)

Best Actress in a Musical, "Dear World", (1969)

Best Actress in a Musical, "Mame", (1966)

"Nominations"

Best Actress in a Play, "Deuce" (2007)

References

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

External links

(Archive of American Television Interview with Angela Lansbury in Sep 15,1998 on Google Video)

(Angela Lansbury on American Theatre Wing's Downstage Center)

Credit

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article about Angela Lansbury.