Margaret Rutherford was without a doubt one of
Britain's best-loved comic actresses. But behind the
kindly, serene front Rutherford presented to the world
lay a life of trauma and repeated nervous breakdown -
the legacy of the legacy of family tragedy that saw her
father murder her grandfather during a bout of mental
illness and her depressive mother later kill herself.
Andy Merriman's acclaimed biography intrigued and
shocked readers with these revelations when it was
published in hardback. Now out in paperback, it is also
a portrait of one of our most individual actresses.
Rutherford appeared in such thoroughly English classics
as Blithe Spirit, The importance of Being Earnest,
Passport to Pimlico and I'm All Right, Jack! But above
all she was Miss Marple, in four films - and entirely
created for the screen the role of Agatha Christie's
elderly and fearless private detective that subsequent
actresses like Joan Hickson and Geraldine McEwan have
continued. Rutherford first played Miss Marple at the
age of 70, and insisted on wearing her own clothes to
feel right in the part.Above all, this was a vulnerable
woman whom no-one failed to like and respect, notable
again and again for quiet acts of kindness, whose life
story has great appeal to everyone who appreciates both
classic English comedy and simple human decency. |
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