Gladys Cooper

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Gladys Cooper

in the Now, Voyager trailer (1942)
Birth name Gladys Constance Cooper
Born 18 December 1888
Chiswick, England
Died 17 November 1971 aged 82
Henley-on-Thames, England

Dame Gladys Constance Cooper DBE (18 December 188817 November 1971) was an Oscar-nominated English actress.

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Cooper was born in Chiswick, and made her stage début in 1905 in Bluebell in Fairyland. It was not until 1922, however, that she found major success, in Arthur Wing Pinero's The Second Mrs. Tanqueray. She appeared in W. Somerset Maugham's Home and Beauty in London in 1919, and Maugham's The Letter in 1927. Her last major success on the stage was in the role of "Mrs. St. Maugham" in Enid Bagnold's The Chalk Garden, a role she created in London and on Broadway.

Early in her stage career, she was criticized for being stiff. Aldous Huxley dismissed her performance in Home and Beauty: "she is too impassive, too statuesque, playing all the time as if she were Galatea, newly unpetrified and still unused to the ways of the living world." [1] Yet Maugham praised her for "turning herself from an indifferent actress to an extremely competent one" through her common sense and industriousness.[2].

She also found success in Hollywood in a variety of character roles and was most frequently cast as a disapproving, aristocratic society woman. She appeared in Rebecca and was nominated three times for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performances: as Bette Davis's pathologically repressive mother in Now, Voyager; as a sceptical nun in The Song of Bernadette; and as "Mrs. Higgins" in My Fair Lady.

She was thrice married:

She herself eventually returned to the United Kingdom for her final years. She appeared with Wendy Hiller and Leo Genn in Somerset Maugham's The Sacred Flame in London in 1967. She died from pneumonia at the age of 82 in Henley-on-Thames, England.

An old theatre anecdote recalls that in 1928, she appeared in the play Excelsior in which her sister Doris, a small-part actress who often travelled with Gladys and appeared in some of the same plays, was given a speaking part. On opening night, Doris was reduced to tears backstage after her first appearance, which was greeted by a low hiss from the audience. "Oh no, dear," a friend reassured her. "They're just all whispering to each other, 'She's Doris Cooper. She's Gladys Cooper's sister. Gladys Cooper's sister'."

She was created a Dame Commander of the British Empire (DBE) in 1967.

Among many other appearances, she starred in the 1960s in The Rogues with David Niven, Gig Young, Robert Coote, John Williams and Larry Hagman. For this she won a Golden Globe Award in 1965. She also appeared in The Twilight Zone in 1962. The episode was titled "Nothing in the Dark" which featured an old lady (Gladys Cooper) trying to escape death and death (Robert Redford) tricking her to accept the truth about death.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

  1. ^ Alduous Huxley. "A Good Farce." Athenaeum September 26, 1919: 956.
  2. ^ W. Somerset Maugham. "Gladys Cooper." Plays and Players 1, 3 (December 1953): 4
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