Maggie Smith
Date of Birth: 28 December 1934
Location: Ilford Borough, Essex, London, United Kingdom
Home : Theatre Biography : Maggie Smith
Date of Birth: 28 December 1934
Location: Ilford Borough, Essex, London, United Kingdom
Dame Margaret Natalie Smith, DBE (born 28 December 1934),
better known as Maggie Smith, is a British film, stage, and television actress
who made her stage debut in 1952 and is still performing after 56 years. She has
been acclaimed throughout her career and has won numerous awards for acting,
including five BAFTA Awards, two Oscars, two Golden Globes, an Emmy Award and a
Tony Award.
Early life
Smith was born in Ilford, then Essex, the daughter of Margaret (née Hutton), a
Glasgow-born secretary, and Nathaniel Smith, a Newcastle upon Tyne-born public
health pathologist who worked at Oxford University. She has older twin brothers,
Alistair and Ian. Smith studied at Oxford High School, although she has been
quoted as not having enjoyed her school experience.
Career
Smith has had an extensive career both on screen and in live theatre, and is
known as one of Britain's pre-eminent actresses. She began her career at the
Oxford Playhouse with Frank Shelley and made her first film in 1956. She became
a fixture at the Royal National Theatre in the 1960s, most notably for playing
Desdemona in Othello opposite Laurence Olivier and winning her first Oscar
nomination for her performance in the 1965 film version. In 1969 she won the
Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance as an unorthodox Scottish
schoolteacher in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, a role originally created on
stage by Vanessa Redgrave in 1966. She was also awarded the 1978 Academy Award
for Best Supporting Actress for her role as the brittle actress Diana Barrie in
California Suite, acting opposite Michael Caine. Afterwards, on hearing that
Michael Palin was about to embark on a film (The Missionary) with Smith, Caine
is supposed to have humorously telephoned Palin, warning him that she would
steal the film. She also starred with Palin in the dark but hilarious film A
Private Function in 1984.
Maggie Smith as Minerva McGonagall in Harry Potter and the Goblet of FireSmith
appeared in Sister Act in 1992 and had a major role in the 1999 film Tea With
Mussolini, where she appeared as the formidable Lady Hester. Indeed, many of her
more mature roles have centred on what Smith refers to as her "gallery of
grotesques", playing waspish, sarcastic or plain rude characters. Recent
examples of this would include the judgemental sister in Ladies in Lavender and
the cantankerous snob Constance Trentham in Gosford Park, for which she received
another Oscar nomination.
Other notable roles include the querulous Charlotte Bartlett in the
Merchant-Ivory production of A Room with a View, a vivid supporting turn as the
aged Duchess of York in Ian McKellen's film of Richard III, and a little known
but powerful performance as Lila Fisher in the 1973 film Love and Pain and the
Whole Damn Thing opposite Timothy Bottoms. Due to the international success of
the Harry Potter movies, she is now widely known for playing the role of
Professor Minerva McGonagall. She also plays an older Wendy in the Peter Pan
movie, Hook.
She appeared in numerous productions at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival in
Stratford, Ontario, to extraordinary acclaim from 1976 through 1980.
On stage, her many roles include the title character in the stage production of
Alan Bennett's The Lady in the Van and starring as Amanda in a revival of Noel
Coward's Private Lives. She won a Tony Award in 1990 for Best Actress in a Play
for Lettice and Lovage, in which she starred as an eccentric tour guide in an
English stately home. She was awarded Commander of the Order of the British
Empire (CBE) in 1970, and was raised to Dame Commander (DBE) in 1990.
Personal life
Smith has been married twice. She married Robert Stephens on 29 June 1967 at the
Greenwich Registry office and had two sons with him: actors Chris Larkin (born
in 1967) and Toby Stephens (born in 1969). They divorced on 6 May 1974. Smith is
a grandmother via both her sons.
She married playwright Beverley Cross on 23 August 1975 at the Guildford
Registry Office, and the marriage ended with his death on 20 March 1998.
(Sourced from
wikipedia.org)