Mary Morris


Mary Lilian Agnes Morris was a British actress.

Life and career

Morris was the daughter of Herbert Stanley Morris, a botanist, and his wife Sylvia Ena de Creft-Harford. She trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.
Morris made her stage debut in Lysistrata at the Gate Theatre, London in 1935. She performed with Leslie Howard in "Pimpernel" Smith and Anna Petrovitch in the Ealing war movie Undercover as the wife of a Serbian guerrilla leader. On television, she played Professor Madeleine Dawnay in the science-fiction television drama A for Andromeda, Queen Margaret in the BBC's An Age of Kings, and Cleopatra in Antony and Cleopatra in 1963.
She played Number Two in The Prisoners episode "Dance of the Dead". After an absence of many years, she reappeared in diverse film roles such as Madame Fidolia the Russian ballerina and theatre school director in the BBC film Ballet Shoes, and the mother of the murdered boy in the 1977 horror film Full Circle. She also appeared on television in Doctor Who in the story Kinda, playing the pivotal role of the shaman Panna opposite Peter Davison.
Her other television appearances included the Countess Vronsky in the BBC's Anna Karenina, the macabre, ancient relative in the Walter de la Mare story Seaton's Aunt in Granada Television's Shades of Darkness series, Mrs Browning-Browning in Stephen Wyatt's Claws and the formidable matriarch in Police at the Funeral, an adaptation of one of Margery Allingham's Albert Campion stories for the BBC's Campion.
In addition to her film role, she played Elizabeth the First on a 'Makers of History' LP record, using the queen's spoken and written words and contemporary music, issued by EMI in 1964.

Death

She died from heart failure on 14 October 1988 in Aigle, Switzerland.

Complete filmography

Feature films

Television

Links