Obituary: Maggie Smith was a performer of contrasts who wowed on stage and screen

admin admin | 09-28 00:15

Maggie Smith, who has died aged 89, was one of the most versatile, accomplished and meticulous actresses of her generation, her repertoire ranging from Shakespeare to character parts in the Harry Potter movies.

She was a performer of contrasts, with an astonishing capacity to switch imperceptibly from radiance to melancholy, from quiet to boisterous, from graciousness to mischief within seconds.

Although she was a tour de force in leading roles on the West End stage, she was equally happy - even during the years of her stardom - to accept supporting roles, particularly in films.

Maggie Smith and Pamela Franklin star in the film The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, 1969.

Truly professional and as near a perfectionist as she could be, she treated these roles with as much detailed and careful attention as she did her major parts.

Probably her greatest triumph was in 1969's The Prime Of Miss Jean Brodie, for which she won her first Oscar.

But she was self-deprecating about her abilities.

Her family background gave no indication that she would not only enter the acting profession but also become one of its leading exponents.

She said she had wanted, from childhood, to become an actress, but she did not see a play or a film until she was a teenager.

Maggie Smith and George Nader in the film Nowhere To Go, 1958

Nor did she receive much encouragement from her family, particularly one of her grandmothers, who remarked that she could not go into acting "with a face like that". But none of this deterred her from her ambition.

Margaret Natalie Smith was born in Ilford, Essex, on 28 December, 1934. She was educated at Oxford High School for Girls and later the Oxford Playhouse School, and first appeared on the stage as a girl of 18 in Twelfth Night.

She made an early mark in revues, as a singer and dancer. One fan who saw her on Broadway in New Faces of ’56, said he laughed so much he ended up banging his head on the seat in front of him.

She was spotted by Laurence Olivier, who saw her as much more than just a vaudeville performer and invited her to join the newly formed Royal National Theatre Company in London.

There, and at the Old Vic, she excelled in both tragedy and comedy, moving easily from Shakespeare to Noël Coward, to Restoration comedy to Ibsen.

Cary Grant and actress Maggie Smith attend the 24th Annual Tony Awards in 1970 at the Mark Hellinger Theater in New York City

As a "rep" actress, she was able to develop her incredible range, skill and talent among some of Britain’s best actors, including Robert Stephens, who was to become her first husband. They married in 1967 but divorced in 1974.

The film industry began to recognise her abilities and she was given several supporting roles.

But she first emerged as an international star with her virtuoso performance as the fanatical teacher Jean Brodie in The Prime Of Miss Jean Brodie, which won her a best actress Oscar in 1970.

Other film roles include her portrayal of a drunken Oscar loser in California Suite, the dying older lover in Love, Pain And The Whole Damn Thing, the tragic lodger in The Lonely Passion Of Judith Hearne, and the so-called "funny old bat" in Gosford Park, which brought her a sixth Oscar nomination.

Maggie Smith is startled in a scene from the film Travels With My Aunt, 1972. (Photo by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/Getty Images)

Even in smaller roles she could upstage the film "giants". In one film, Richard Burton described her scene-stealing as "grand larceny".

Smith won over a whole new generation of fans when she played Professor McGonagall in the Harry Potter films.

In 2010 she was central to the success of ITV series Downton Abbey, in her Emmy-award winning role as the acerbic Violet Crawley, Dowager Countess of Grantham.

But she later told the Evening Standard Magazine: "I am deeply grateful for the work in (Harry) Potter and indeed Downton (Abbey) but it wasn’t what you’d call satisfying.

"I didn’t really feel I was acting in those things."

Her numerous awards also covered her performances in Tea With Mussolini, A Room With A View, A Private Function and The Lonely Passion Of Judith Hearne.

She starred alongside Judi Dench in the 2004 film Ladies In Lavender, and on stage in the David Hare play The Breath Of Life.

Maggie Smith and French actor Lambert Wilson in Simon Callow's production of The Infernal Machine, by Jean Cocteau, at the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith, London on November 4, 1986. (Photo by Georges De Keerle/Getty Images)

One of her most famous later roles was as a bag lady in The Lady In The Van, the 2015 adaptation of Alan Bennett’s memoirs.

She recently starred in the 2022’s Downton Abbey: A New Era, where Violet’s health deteriorates and she dies in an emotional end to her character.

The next year, she appeared in The Miracle Club, which follows a group of women from Dublin who go on a pilgrimage to the French town of Lourdes.

Dame Maggie’s second husband, the playwright Beverley Cross who she married in 1975, died in 1998.

She had two sons from her first marriage, Toby Stephens and Chris Larkin, who are both actors.

Source: Press Association

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