Sunday Tribune

Angela Lansbury: a storied career sure to touch people for years

- STEPHEN LANGSTON Langston is the programme leader for performanc­e at the University of the West of Scotland.

I NEVER met Angela Lansbury, but she was one of those icons that felt like a trusted friend and family member. Every Sunday evening, I devoured Jessica Fletcher’s activities in Murder, She Wrote – catching the bad guys and saving another poor victim from eternal damnation.

The younger generation discovered her as Mrs Potts in Disney’s Beauty and the Beast and, more recently, as the balloon seller in Mary Poppins Returns (a role created as a cameo appearance for Julie Andrews, who turned it down so attention was not taken away from Emily Blunt).

Disney considered Lansbury for the original casting of Mary Poppins, so it is fitting that one of her last film appearance­s return full circle to her earlier Hollywood career.

Lansbury, who died on October 11, 2022, was a constant presence in film, stage and TV for nearly 70 years.

She was one of the original Hollywood greats from the silver screen, but she did not fade into obscurity; she worked far longer and harder than many of the starlets of her age, who said no to unbecoming roles.

Dame Angela Lansbury was an icon

of the stage and screen, but beneath the strong and lovable figure is a story filled with highs and lows that fuelled her talent and perseveran­ce.

A star of the silver screen Born in 1925 in London to Irish actress Moyna Macgill and politician Edgar Lansbury, the first experience to shape her life came at the age of nine when her father died of stomach cancer, leaving a gaping hole in Lansbury’s life.

Finding refuge in the cinema as her interest in school waned, she fell in love with the movies and was able to pursue acting when the family moved to the US in 1940 to escape the Blitz.

Lansbury gained employment at the movie studio MGM, taking on minor roles in many major films, but more importantl­y, socialised in the world of acting.

In 1944, she befriended John Van Druten, the scriptwrit­er for Gaslight, a tale of psychologi­cal manipulati­on (from where the term “gaslightin­g” comes), and was cast in the role of maid Nancy alongside Ingrid Bergman and Charles Boyer. The film led to her first Oscar nomination.

Her socialisin­g continued and, in 1945, she met and married her hero, actor Richard Cromwell. The marriage

lasted all but a year; she was one of the last people to know he was gay. In 1946, she met British actor Peter Shaw, whom she famously told after a screentest: “Darling, I love you very much, but an actor you aren’t.”

He subsequent­ly left the profession, eventually turning to casting and production. The couple were married in 1949, until his death 54 years later.

Lansbury continued her film career, playing, as she described, villainous parts much older than her age and appearing in more than 40 films.

It was not until the ’60s that she was recognised as a leading lady and, at the age of 41, took on the title role of Mame, winning her first Broadway Tony award. Despite her effort at creating the role, she was rejected by the film studios to play the same part in the Hollywood adaptation, losing out to Lucille Ball.

Leading roles

During the ’70s, the family retreated to County Cork, Ireland after their Malibu home was burnt to the ground and daughter Deidre had a close encounter with murderer Charles Manson. She limited her work to focus on her family until Disney’s Bedknobs and Broomstick­s delivered her long-awaited Hollywood leading lady

role in 1971.

Developed at the same time as Mary Poppins but put on hold due to technical complicati­ons, Bedknobs and Broomstick­s was originally planned for Julie Andrews. However, by the time Andrews went to accept the part, Lansbury had been cast.

She continued to pioneer new stage roles, notably for Stephen Sondheim as Rose in Gypsy (1973, London premier) and the original Mrs Lovett in Sweeney Todd (1979 Broadway premiere) leading to a further four Tony awards.

In 1980, she met Andrew Lloyd Webber, who pitched to her the role of Norma Desmond for his new musical version of the Billy Wilder classic film, Sunset Boulevard.

The song he used to try to entice Lansbury was later rewritten and became Memory, finally appearing in Cats sung by Elaine Paige. Although Lansbury desperatel­y wanted to play the role, she was not considered when it was finally produced in 1993.

In 1991, Disney’s Beauty and the Beast introduced Lansbury to a new audience as the motherly figure Mrs Potts. Ironically, this was as close as she was going to get to winning an Oscar when the title tune, for which she is now famed for singing, won best

original song.

In her massively varied career, it was the TV series Murder, She Wrote (1984 to 1996) that establishe­d Lansbury as a worldwide household name as the amateur detective Jessica Fletcher, running for 12 seasons.

Lansbury holds the record for the most Emmy nomination­s for outstandin­g lead actress in a drama series, receiving 12 for Murder, She Wrote, one for each season.

Lansbury kept working to the end. Her final screen appearance will be aired in December, in the Netflix murder mystery Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery. While details of her exact role in the film have not been made public, it will probably have some connection to Jessica Fletcher in Murder, She Wrote.

Through her iconic roles, Lansbury has left a legacy that will touch the lives of people for years to come – whether that’s as Mrs Potts weaving a “tale as old as time” or as the sleuth Jessica Fletcher.

Goodbye, Dame Angela Lansbury. |

 ?? ?? BRITISH actress Angela Lansbury is overcome with emotion after accepting an Honorary Award at the 5th Annual Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Governors Awards at The Ray Dolby Ballroom in Hollywood, California November 16, 2013. | Reuters
BRITISH actress Angela Lansbury is overcome with emotion after accepting an Honorary Award at the 5th Annual Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Governors Awards at The Ray Dolby Ballroom in Hollywood, California November 16, 2013. | Reuters
 ?? Murder She Wrote. ?? ANGELA Lansbury in
Murder She Wrote. ANGELA Lansbury in

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