Phyllis Calvert

Acting

Phyllis Calvert

Overview

Known for
Acting
Gender
Other
Birthday
Feb 18, 1915 (110 years old)
Death date
Oct 08, 2002

Phyllis Calvert

Known For

Bed
50min
DOLBY
Movie 1995

Bed

Surreal drama about seven old people living in the same...

The Woman He Loved
1h 40m
DOLBY
Movie 1988

The Woman He Loved

In 1936, Edward VIII abdicated in order to marry the...

The Death of the Heart
1h 49m
DOLBY
Movie 1987

The Death of the Heart

A young orphan girl, Portia, goes to live with her...

All Passion Spent
3 Episodes
DOLBY
TV Show 1986

All Passion Spent

With the death of her husband, elderly Lady Slane deals...

All Passion Spent
2h 38m
DOLBY
Movie 1986

All Passion Spent

his three-part miniseries begins with elderly Lady Slane (Wendy Hiller)...

Biography

Phyllis Calvert (18 February 1915 – 8 October 2002) was an English film, stage and television actress. Born Phyllis Hannah Bickle in Chelsea, she trained at the Margaret Morris School of Dancing and performed from the age of ten, gaining her first film role at the age of 12, in The Arcadians (1927), also known as The Land of Heart's Desire. Calvert performed in repertory theatre and in several films, before making her London stage debut in A Woman's Privilege in 1939. During the following decade, she starred in many romances, including Fanny by Gaslight, with James Mason and Stewart Granger, and My Own True Love, becoming one of Britain's highest paid stars. However, three Hollywood studios failed to pay her what she asked. She first found success in the film adaptation of H. G. Wells' Kipps (1941), but it was The Man in Grey (1943) that confirmed her status. She acted in over 40 films, her later films include Oh! What a Lovely War and The Walking Stick. Calvert had already appeared on television, playing Mrs. March in the 1958 serials Little Women and Good Wives (both adapted from Louisa May Alcott's novel Little Women), as well as individual episodes of several other programmes, when, in 1970, she landed the part of an agony aunt with problems of her own in Kate. She made TV appearances in programmes such as Crown Court, Ladykillers, Tales of the Unexpected, Boon, After Henry and The Line Grove Story. She was married to the actor and antiquarian bookseller Peter Murray Hill, with whom she had two children, Ann Auriol (born 1943) and Piers Auriol (born 1954). She died in London in 2002, from natural causes, aged 87.