Gulf Today

‘Harry Potter’ actor Helen Mccrory was ‘so funny, so passionate, so smart’

Her husband, Damian Lewis, said Mccrory died ‘peacefully at home’ ater a ‘heroic batle with cancer’

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British actor Helen Mccrory, who starred in the television show “Peaky Blinders” and the “Harry Poter” movies, has died, her husband said on Friday. She was 52 and had been suffering from cancer.

Her husband, fellow actor Damian Lewis, said Mccrory died “peacefully at home” ater a “heroic batle with cancer.”

“She died as she lived. Fearlessly,” Lewis wrote on Twiter. “God we love her and know how lucky we are to have had her in our lives. She blazed so brightly. Go now, Litle One, into the air, and thank you.”

Mccrory was one of Britain’s most respected actors, making her mark by playing a succession of formidable and sometimes fearsome women.

She played the matriarch of a crime family on “Peaky Blinders” and the scheming Voldemort ally Narcissa Malfoy in the “Harry Poter” movies.

Mccrory also starred as a human rights lawyer dragged into internatio­nal intrigue in the TV thriller “Fearless,” played lawyer Cherie Blair, wife of British Prime Minister Tony Blair, in the 2006 movie “The Queen,” and had roles in Martin Scorsese’s film “Hugo” and the James Bond thriller “Skyfall.”

Actor Michael Sheen, who played Tony Blair in “The Queen,” said Mccrory was “so funny, so passionate, so smart and one of the greatest actors of our time.”

“Harry Poter” author JK Rowling tweeted that she was “devastated to learn of the death of Helen Mccrory, an extraordin­ary actress and a wonderful woman who’s let us far too soon.”

Onstage, Mccrory’s roles included the vengeful

Greek heroine “Medea” at the National Theatre in 2014. At the same theater, she excelled as a woman caught between a dull husband and a feckless lover in Terence Ratigan’s “The Deep Blue Sea” in 2016.

While many performers struggle to find meaty female roles in film and television, Mccrory played a string of them.

“Having said that, there are a lot of things I turn down,” she told The Associated Press in 2016, describing the sort of roles where “all your lines are ‘But what did you do at work?’ ‘That’s so clever, darling.’ ‘ How did you do that?’ ‘ And then what did you do?’”

“Of course, there’s so much sexism within the profession,” Mccrory said. “But I think you approach it in different ways, and my approach is just to forge forward.”

Others remembered Mccrory for her charity work, including on FEEDNHS, a campaign to provide meals for frontline health care workers during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Helen Mccrory will be remembered not just for her remarkable stage and screen performanc­es, but also for her selflessne­ss and generosity,” comedian Mat Lucas tweeted. “She and Damian were the motor driving FEEDNHS, working tirelessly during the pandemic to raise millions for others. What a tremendous loss.”

Mccrory and Lewis, star of the TV series “Homeland” and “Billions,” married in 2007 and had two children.

 ?? File/associated Press ?? Helen Mccrory arrives at the British Academy Television Awards in London.
File/associated Press Helen Mccrory arrives at the British Academy Television Awards in London.

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