Thursday, June 15, 2023

Glenda Jackson - # 306

Glenda Jackson, Feisty Two-Time Oscar Winner, Dies at 87

The 'Women in Love' and 'Touch of Class' star spent 23 years as a member of the U.K. parliament before returning to win a Tony Award in 2018.

 

 She was number 306 on the list.


Glenda Jackson, the two-time Oscar winner who walked away from a hugely successful acting career to spend nearly a quarter-century in the U.K. parliament, only to make a comeback on the stage, has died. She was 87.

“Glenda Jackson, two-time Academy Award-winning actress and politician, died peacefully at her home in Blackheath, London this morning after a brief illness, with her family at her side,” her agent Lionel Larner said in a statement. “She recently completed filming The Great Escaper in which she co-starred with Michael Caine.” A cause of death wasn’t immediately provided. Larner added a personal comment: “Today we lost one of the world’s greatest actresses, and I have lost a best friend of over 50 years.”

The British actress collected a slew of honors that included best actress Academy Awards for Women in Love (1969) and A Touch of Class (1973); two Emmy Awards for her performance as Elizabeth I in the BBC miniseries Elizabeth R (a role she also played in the 1971 film Mary, Queen of Scots); and a Tony Award for her triumphant return to Broadway in a 2018 revival of Edward Albee’s Three Tall Women.

She also was known for her passionate leftist politics.

Jackson was born on May 9, 1936, to working-class parents and began performing in a drama troupe in her native Birkenhead when she was a teenager. She received a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in 1954 and while studying there made her professional debut in a production of Terrence Rattigan’s Separate Tables in 1957.

After an uncredited turn in Lindsay Anderson’s This Sporting Life (1963), she joined the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1964. It was during her four-year stint there that she truly made a name for herself, particularly with her work as Charlotte Corday in Peter Brooks’ groundbreaking production of The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade (generally shortened to Marat/Sade).

The production played in London’s West End and in New York, with Jackson receiving a Tony nomination in 1966 for her Broadway debut. Around that time, she also delivered a widely acclaimed performance as Ophelia in Peter Hall’s RSC production of Hamlet.

Her film career took off in earnest when she won the Oscar for director Ken Russell’s adaptation of D.H. Lawrence’s Women in Love, a film perhaps best remembered today for its nude wrestling scene between Alan Bates and Oliver Reed. Execs at United Artists was initially reluctant to approve her for the role of Gudrun, not only because she wasn’t a well-known cinematic name but also because they thought her unconventional looks not attractive enough.

She quickly won a second Oscar for A Touch of Class, an old-fashioned romantic comedy co-starring George Segal that showcased her sharp comedic chops.

Jackson would continue to alternate among theater, film and television throughout her career. She received two more Academy Award nominations for her work in Sunday Bloody Sunday (1972) and Hedda (1975), the latter an adaptation of Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler, a role she had played onstage the same year.

She also had a major box office hit with House Calls (1978), a romantic comedy in which she starred opposite Walter Matthau. The unlikely screen pairing proved so popular with audiences that they reunited for the comic thriller Hopscotch (1980). “Oh, God, did I enjoy working him!” enthused Jackson in a 2018 interview with THR.

Her other notable film credits included 1975’s The Romantic Englishwoman, 1976’s The Incredible Sarah (in which she played Sarah Bernhardt), 1978’s Stevie (as poet Stevie Smith) and 1985’s Turtle Diary. In addition to Women in Love, she worked with the iconoclastic Russell on the films The Music Lovers (1971), Salome’s Last Dance (1988) and The Rainbow (1989).

Jackson earned her first Olivier Award nomination in 1977 for her performance in Stevie. During the course of her career, she earned four more, for Antony and Cleopatra, Rose, Strange Interlude and King Lear.

She received Tony noms for each of her Broadway appearances (Marat/Sade, Rose, Strange Interlude and Macbeth) before finally winning for Three Tall Women.

Jackson also played Martha in a 1989 Los Angeles production of Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? opposite John Lithgow and directed by the playwright himself. It was not a happy experience for her. “We didn’t get on,” she later recalled. “He is a very, very good writer. Terrible director in my opinion.”

She periodically appeared on television, garnering an Emmy nom in 1982 for her performance in the title role in CBS’ The Patricia Neal Story.

In 1992, Jackson retired from acting and ran for election to the House of Commons, representing the Labour Party. She became a member of Parliament, representing Hampstead and Highgate, and served for two years as a Junior Transport Minister under Tony Blair.

“Anything I could have done that was legal to get Margaret Thatcher and her government out, I was prepared to have a go at,” she later told THR about her dramatic career change. “My country had been destroyed! Every single shop doorway was a bedroom, bathroom and sitting room for some homeless person. And in many cases, they were also mentally ill. Everything had just fractured before your eyes. What I had been taught were vices, she said were virtues, such as greed. She said there’s no such thing as a society. That so infuriated me I walked into my closed French windows and almost broke my nose!”

Jackson’s acting skills served her well during her political career. Perhaps one of her greatest performances was a speech she delivered to the House of Commons in 2013 after the death of Thatcher, in which she bitterly decried the late prime minister’s policies even as many of her fellow MPs shouted “Shame!” at her.

Not that she didn’t continue to receive acting offers during her years in politics. Among the roles she refused was “M” (eventually played by Judi Dench) in the James Bond series. Asked years later why she turned down such a potentially lucrative recurring gig, Jackson said merely, “Because it was boring.”

In 2011, Jackson announced that she would retire from politics by the time of the next election four year later, citing her age. “We are talking about when I will be nearly 80,” she commented, adding, “Get a grip!”

She returned to acting after a 23-year absence, appearing in a series of radio plays based on novels by Émile Zola. That gentle re-entry was quickly followed by the far more formidable challenge of playing the title role of King Lear in a stage production directed by Deborah Warner.

“What was interesting to me was that nobody ever raised the issue of a woman playing a man’s part, not at all,” she recalled. “One of the things that I found useful was that the older we get, the more gender barriers begin to fray.”

She received an Evening Standard Award for her performance, though in typical self-deprecating fashion she chided the crowd for their boisterous reaction to her victory. “Oh, come on, we don’t do standing ovations in England!” she exclaimed.

That was followed by her Broadway appearance in Three Tall Women, for which she finally won a Tony. The following year, she returned to the Great White Way in a different production of King Lear, which received mixed reviews.

And in 2023, she starred with Michael Caine in The Great Escaper.

Jackson prided herself on her work ethic. When once asked about the challenges of doing eight performances a week onstage in her eighties, she snorted, “Oh, for God’s sake, we’re not digging coal! That’s par for the course, you do it eight times a week. My worst day is my day off.”

Actress

 

The Great Escaper

 

    Irene Jordan

 

    Post-production

 

    Colin Firth, Olivia Colman, Odessa Young, Josh O'Connor, and Sope Dirisu in Mothering Sunday (2021)

    Mothering Sunday

        Jane (Older)

        2021

 

Glenda Jackson in Elizabeth Is Missing (2019)

Elizabeth Is Missing

 

    Maud

 

    TV Movie

 

    2019

 

Ken Russell and Glenda Jackson in The Secret Life of Arnold Bax (1992)

The Secret Life of Arnold Bax

 

    Harriet Cohen

 

    TV Movie

 

    1992

 

Glenda Jackson in The House of Bernarda Alba (1991)

The House of Bernarda Alba

 

    Bernarda

 

    TV Movie

 

    1991

 

A Murder of Quality (1991)

A Murder of Quality

 

    Ailsa Brimley

 

    TV Movie

 

    1991

 

Megan Kelly in T.Bag's Christmas Ding Dong (1990)

T.Bag's Christmas Ding Dong

 

    Vanity Bag

 

    TV Movie

 

    1990

 

The Real Story of Humpty Dumpty (1990)

The Real Story of Humpty Dumpty

 

    Glitch the Witch (voice)

 

    Video

 

    1990

 

Carol & Company (1990)

Carol & Company

 

    Dr. Doris Kruber

 

    TV Series

 

    1990

 

King of the Wind (1990)

King of the Wind

 

    Queen Caroline

 

    1990

 

Jeremy Coster and Glenda Jackson in Doombeach (1989)

Doombeach

 

    Miss

 

    1989

 

The Rainbow (1989)

The Rainbow

 

    Anna Brangwen

 

    1989

 

Stratford Johns and Imogen Millais-Scott in Salome's Last Dance (1988)

Salome's Last Dance

 

    HerodiasLady Alice

 

    1988

 

Business as Usual (1988)

Business as Usual

 

    Babs Flynn

 

    1988

 

American Playhouse

American Playhouse

 

    Nina Leeds

 

    TV Series

 

    1988

 

Beyond Therapy (1987)

Beyond Therapy

 

    Charlotte

 

    1987

 

Turtle Diary (1985)

Turtle Diary

 

    Neaera Duncan

 

    1985

 

Jason Robards in Sakharov (1984)

Sakharov

 

    Yelena Bonner (Sakharova)

 

    TV Movie

 

    1984

 

Giro City (1982)

Giro City

 

    Sophie

 

    1982

 

The Return of the Soldier (1982)

The Return of the Soldier

 

    Margaret

 

    1982

 

Dirk Bogarde and Glenda Jackson in The Patricia Neal Story (1981)

The Patricia Neal Story

 

    Patricia Neal

 

    TV Movie

 

    1981

 

Eric Morecambe and Ernie Wise in The Morecambe & Wise Show (1978)

The Morecambe & Wise Show

 

    Woman Kissed by Eric

 

    TV Series

 

    1980

 

Hopscotch (1980)

Hopscotch

 

    Isobel von Schönenberg

 

    1980

 

HealtH (1980)

HealtH

 

    Isabella Garnell

 

    1980

 

Lost and Found (1979)

Lost and Found

 

    Tricia

 

    1979

 

The Class of Miss MacMichael (1978)

The Class of Miss MacMichael

 

    Conor MacMichael

 

    1978

 

Glenda Jackson and Mona Washbourne in Stevie (1978)

Stevie

 

    Stevie

 

    1978

 

Walter Matthau and Glenda Jackson in House Calls (1978)

House Calls

 

    Ann Atkinson

 

    1978

 

Nasty Habits (1977)

Nasty Habits

 

    Alexandra

 

    1977

 

The Incredible Sarah (1976)

The Incredible Sarah

 

    Sarah Bernhardt

 

    1976

 

Glenda Jackson in Hedda (1975)

Hedda

 

    Hedda

 

    1975

 

The Romantic Englishwoman (1975)

The Romantic Englishwoman

 

    Elizabeth

 

    1975

 

The Maids (1975)

The Maids

 

    Solange

 

    1975

 

The Devil Is a Woman (1974)

The Devil Is a Woman

 

    Sister Geraldine

 

    1974

 

George Segal and Glenda Jackson in A Touch of Class (1973)

A Touch of Class

 

    Vickie Allessio

 

    1973

 

The Nelson Affair (1973)

The Nelson Affair

 

    Lady Hamilton

 

    1973

 

The Triple Echo (1972)

The Triple Echo

 

    Alice

 

    1972

 

Mary, Queen of Scots (1971)

Mary, Queen of Scots

 

    Queen Elizabeth

 

    1971

 

Twiggy in The Boy Friend (1971)

The Boy Friend

 

    Rita Monroe (uncredited)

 

    1971

 

Sunday Bloody Sunday (1971)

Sunday Bloody Sunday

 

    Alex Greville

 

    1971

 

Elizabeth R (1971)

Elizabeth R

 

    Queen Elizabeth I

 

    TV Mini Series

 

    1971

 

Richard Chamberlain in The Music Lovers (1971)

The Music Lovers

 

    Nina

 

    1971

 

BBC Play of the Month (1965)

BBC Play of the Month

 

    Margaret Schlegel

 

    TV Series

 

    1970

 

Women in Love (1969)

Women in Love

 

    Gudrun Brangwen

 

    1969

 

ITV Saturday Night Theatre (1969)

ITV Saturday Night Theatre

 

    Marina Palek

 

    TV Series

 

    1969

 

Diane Cilento, Glenda Jackson, and Peter McEnery in Negatives (1968)

Negatives

 

    Vivien

 

    1968

 

Armchair Theatre (1956)

Armchair Theatre

 

    TV Series

 

    1968

 

The Wednesday Play (1964)

The Wednesday Play

 

    JulieCathy

 

    TV Series

 

    1965–1968

 

Half Hour Story (1967)

Half Hour Story

 

    Claire Foley

 

    TV Series

 

    1967

 

Marat/Sade (1967)

Marat/Sade

 

    Charlotte Corday

 

    1967

 

Z Cars (1962)

Z Cars

 

    WPC FernleyHospital Nurse

 

    TV Series

 

    1963

 

This Sporting Life (1963)

This Sporting Life

 

    Partygoer (uncredited)

 

    1963

 

ITV Play of the Week (1955)

ITV Play of the Week

 

    JurywomanIris Jones

 

    TV Series

 

    1957–1961

 

The Extra Day (1956)

The Extra Day

 

    Extra (uncredited)

 

    1956

 

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