Susan Hampshire


Susan, Lady Kulukundis, , known professionally by her maiden name Susan Hampshire, is an English actress, known for her many television and film roles. A three-time Emmy Award winner, she won for The Forsyte Saga in 1970, The First Churchills in 1971, and for Vanity Fair in 1973. Her other television credits include The Pallisers, The Grand, and Monarch of the Glen.

Early life

Susan Hampshire was born in Kensington, London, to George Kenneth Hampshire and his wife, June and is of Irish descent. The youngest of five children, she had three sisters and one brother. Her mother was a teacher and her father was a director of ICI who was rarely at home, her parents having unofficially separated. As a child, she had some developmental difficulties, unable to spell her name until she was nine and unable to read well until she was 12. Her determined mother June founded a small London school in 1928, The Hampshire, where Susan was taught.
Her childhood ambition was to be a nurse, but she did not have the O level in Latin it required, so she decided to become an actress. She was diagnosed as dyslexic at the age of 30.

Career

Hampshire's first film appearance was in The Woman in the Hall. She decided to become an actress as a child and worked in a theatre before moving on to film and television work. During this period she took the title role in a dramatised version of Little Black Sambo recorded by HMV Junior Record Club. and sang on The Midday Show when ITV Anglia began broadcasting in 1959. Her first starring role was in the film During One Night in 1960. She then took the leading role in a 1962 BBC adaptation of What Katy Did. Soon afterwards, she was taken up by Walt Disney, and starred in The Three Lives of Thomasina and The Fighting Prince of Donegal. She would later appear opposite McGoohan again, in two episodes of Danger Man. She co-starred with Cliff Richard in Sidney J. Furie's 1964 musical Wonderful Life.
In 1966, she was introduced to American TV viewers in the pilot episode of The Time Tunnel as a young passenger on the Titanic who befriends Dr. Tony Newman. She later portrayed conservationist Joy Adamson in Living Free, the sequel to Born Free. In 1972, she played three different characters in Malpertuis, directed by Harry Kumel. She is well known for her work on television. She appeared in several popular television serials, including The Andromeda Breakthrough in which she replaced Julie Christie, who was not available for the show but had played the part of Andromeda in the first season A for Andromeda. Her most notable television role in the 1960s came in the BBC's 1967 adaptation of The Forsyte Saga, in which she played Fleur.
Hampshire received Emmy Awards from the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences for her roles in The Forsyte Saga, The First Churchills and Vanity Fair. 1973 saw her again on U.S. television with Kirk Douglas in a musical version of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Other miniseries in which she appeared are The Pallisers, The Barchester Chronicles and Coming Home. She was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1992 when she was surprised by Michael Aspel at the Ritz Hotel. In 1997 she appeared in the ITV television series The Grand. She played a madame residing in the hotel. More recent TV roles include Molly MacDonald, Lady of Glenbogle in Monarch of the Glen, and an appearance in Casualty as Caitlin Northwick.
Hampshire has been active on the stage, taking the lead roles in many leading plays. In 2007, she was in a ground-breaking play, The Bargain, based on a meeting between Robert Maxwell and Mother Teresa. She played the Fairy Godmother in pantomime at the New Wimbledon Theatre in 2005–06 and at the New Victoria Theatre in Woking in 2006–07. In 2008, she joined the relatively small band of actors who have played two generations in the same play on different occasions. Her appearance at Chichester Festival Theatre in Somerset Maugham's The Circle as Lady Catherine Champion-Cheney in summer 2008 followed on from her appearance in the same play as Elizabeth Champion-Cheney in 1976.

Author and charity work

Until the publication in 1981 of her autobiography, Susan's Story, few people were aware of her struggle with dyslexia. Since then she has become a prominent campaigner in the UK on dyslexia issues and was President of the Dyslexia Institute from 1995-1998.
Her second book, The Maternal Instinct, discussed women and fertility issues and she published a collection of interviews Every Letter Counts: Winning in Life Despite Dyslexia in 1990. She has written children's books, including Lucy Jane at the Ballet, Lucy Jane and the Russian Ballet, Lucy Jane and the Dancing Competition, Lucy Jane on Television, Bear's Christmas, Rosie's First Ballet Lesson and Rosie's Ballet Slippers, and various books and videos about her lifelong hobby of gardening, including Easy Gardening, My Secret Garden and Trouble Free Gardening.
She is a patron of the British Homeopathic Association, HIV charity Body Positive Dorset, The National Osteoporosis Society, Dignity in Dying and population concern charity Population Matters. She is also patron of Mousetrap Theatre Projects in London which supports disadvantaged and disabled children to enjoy theatre. Susan holds the position of Vice President at Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation Ltd, UK

Personal life

Hampshire was married to the French film producer Pierre Granier-Deferre from 1967 until 1974; the couple have a son, Christopher, and had a daughter, Victoria, who died within 24 hours of birth. She has been married to theatre impresario Sir Eddie Kulukundis since 1981.
Hampshire retired from acting in 2009 to care for her husband, who had developed dementia and type 2 diabetes.
Hampshire was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire in the 1995 Birthday Honours for services to dyslexic people. In the 2018 New Year Honours, she was made Commander of the Order of the British Empire for services to drama and charity.

Filmography