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Glynis Johns

Glynis Margaret Payne Johns (5 October 1923 – 4 January 2024) was a British[4] actress. In a career spanning seven decades on stage and screen, Johns appeared in more than 60 films and 30 plays. She received various accolades throughout her career, including a Tony Award and a Drama Desk Award as well as nominations for an Academy Award, a Golden Globe Award, and a Laurence Olivier Award. She was one of the last surviving stars from the Golden Age of Hollywood and classical years of British cinema.[5]

Glynis Johns
Publicity photo of Johns
Born
Glynis Margaret Payne Johns

(1923-10-05)5 October 1923
Pretoria, Union of South Africa
Died4 January 2024(2024-01-04) (aged 100)
Los Angeles, California, US
Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park, Los Angeles, California, US
Citizenship
Education
Occupations
  • Actress
  • dancer
  • singer
Years active1923–1999
WorksFull list
Spouses
(m. 1942; div. 1948)
(m. 1952; div. 1956)
Cecil Henderson
(m. 1960; div. 1962)
(m. 1964; div. 1973)
ChildrenGareth Forwood
Parent
Relatives
Signature

Johns was born in Pretoria, South Africa, the daughter of Welsh actor Mervyn Johns. She appeared on stage from a young age and was typecast as a stage dancer from early adolescence, making her screen debut in South Riding (1938). She rose to prominence in the 1940s following her role as Anna in the war drama film 49th Parallel (1941), for which she won a National Board of Review Award for Best Acting, and starring roles in Miranda (1948) and Third Time Lucky (1949). Following No Highway in the Sky (1951), a joint British-American production, Johns took on increasingly more roles in the United States and elsewhere. She made her television and Broadway debuts in 1952 and took on starring roles in such films as The Sword and the Rose (1953), The Weak and the Wicked (1954), Mad About Men (1954), The Court Jester (1955), The Sundowners (1960), The Cabinet of Caligari (1962), The Chapman Report (1962), and Under Milk Wood (1972). On television, she starred in her own sitcom Glynis (1963).

Renowned for the breathy quality of her husky voice,[6] Johns sang songs written specifically for her both on screen and stage, most notably "Sister Suffragette", written by the Sherman Brothers for Disney's Mary Poppins (1964), in which she played Winifred Banks and for which she received a Laurel Award, and "Send In the Clowns", composed by Stephen Sondheim for Broadway's A Little Night Music (1973), in which she originated the role of Desiree Armfeldt and for which she received a Tony Award and Drama Desk Award.

Early life and education edit

There were situations that were hard for parents to turn down. It's difficult to turn down a chance to star with Laurence Olivier, to say, 'No, she has to go to school'. They had a big decision to make ... I was interested in everything. I wanted to be a scientist. I would've loved to go on and on at university. But you can't do everything in life.

— Glynis Johns[7]
Los Angeles Times, 17 April 1991

Johns was born into a theatrical family. Her mother was Alyce Steele-Wareham, an Australian-born concert pianist who had studied in London and Vienna.[8] Originally of English descent, Alyce's family found fame as performing actors, singers and musicians, touring Australia, New Zealand and South Africa with their musical programmes;[9] her grandmother, Elizabeth Steele-Payne, was one of the first accomplished women violinists of her time.[6] Johns' father was Welsh actor Mervyn Johns, who became a star of British films during the Second World War and worked regularly at Ealing Studios.[10] Through him, she was a cousin of British judge John Geoffrey Jones.[11] Alyce and Mervyn met while studying in London, he at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and she at the Royal Academy of Music. They married on 17 November 1922 in St Giles, London, and began touring with her family's theatre company.[12] Glynis Margaret Payne Johns was born on 5 October 1923, while her parents were touring Pretoria, capital of the then Union of South Africa (a dominion of the British Empire and later the British Commonwealth of Nations).[13] She was named "Margaret" "Payne" after her grandmothers Margaret Anne Samuel and Elizabeth Steele-Payne.[14]

The family returned to England just a few months after she was born.[5] Aged five, she joined the London Ballet School; by six, she was hailed in Britain as a dancing wonder;[8] by ten, she was working as a Ballet instructor; and by eleven, she had earned a degree to teach. Hoping to study with the Sadler's Wells Ballet at age twelve, she was enrolled instead at Clifton High School in Bristol, balancing academia with the two hours a day she spent at the Cone School of Dancing (which later merged with the Ripman School to form Tring Park School for the Performing Arts).[15] As a dance student, Johns amassed some 25 gold medals.[16][1] Aside from her Clifton education, she also attended South Hampstead High School in London,[17] where she was a contemporary of Dame Angela Lansbury.[5]

Career edit

1923–1939: Career beginnings edit

 
A fight breaks out at school between Midge Carne (Glynis Johns, left) and Lydia Holly (Joan Ellum) in the 1938 film South Riding, produced by Alexander Korda and directed by Victor Saville

Johns made her theatrical debut in October 1923 at just three weeks old, carried onto the London stage by her grandmother, Elizabeth Steele-Payne, a violinist-impresario[6] who had inherited the production's company from her father.[18] She thus became the fourth generation in her mother's family to appear on stage.[14]

In 1931 at the age of 8, Johns was cast as Sonia Kuman in Elmer Rice's Judgement Day at the Phoenix Theatre in London. She played alongside theatre actors Sir Lewis Casson, Ronald Adam, and George Woodbridge, who played Judge Vlora, Judge Tsankov and Judge Sturdza respectively.[19] As a child ballerina in 1935, Johns played Ursula in Buckie's Bears;[11] this production lasted from 27 December 1935 to 11 January 1936 at the Garrick Theatre.[20] Her proficiency in dance led her to be cast in several children's plays throughout the 1930s, notably during the Christmas holidays. She was spotted by a manager and subsequently cast in her first major stage production, as Napoleon's daughter in the 1936 short play St Helena at The Old Vic; she was in productions of The Children's Hour and The Melody That Got Lost the same year. Following this, she was recast as Sonia Kuman in Elmer Rice's 1937 production of Judgement Day (this time at London's Strand Theatre), J. M. Barrie's 1937 play A Kiss for Cinderella,[14] and Esther McCracken's 1938 play Quiet Wedding, in which she played the bridesmaid Miranda Bute at Wyndham's Theatre, London.[21]

Johns made her screen debut in 1938 at the age of 15 with Victor Saville's film adaptation of the Winifred Holtby novel South Riding, in which she played Midge Carne, the daughter of aspiring politician Robert Carne (played by Ralph Richardson).[22] She had small roles in David Evans' 1938 crime film Murder in the Family[23] and two Brian Desmond Hurst films: his 1938 black-and-white crime film Prison Without Bars[24] and 1939 thriller On the Night of the Fire (in which she was again cast alongside Ralph Richardson).[25]

1940–1949: British film and theatre edit

 
Publicity photo for 49th Parallel (1941)

Johns averaged one and a half films a year throughout the 1940s, starting in 1940 with Under Your Hat, in which she played Winnie, a supporting character to Jack Hulbert's Jack Millett and Cicely Courtneidge's Kay Millett in this musical comedy spy film.[26] Johns's scene in the 1941 British historical drama The Prime Minister as Miss Sheridan did not make the final cut,[26] though her role in the 1941 British and Canadian World War II drama film 49th Parallel, in which she replaced Elisabeth Bergner as Anna, earned her a National Board of Review Award for Best Acting and international acclaim. She continued with supporting roles as Romanian resistance fighter Paula Palacek in the 1943 British spy film The Adventures of Tartu, supernatural innkeeper Gwyneth (alongside her father Mervyn Johns' Rhys) in the 1944 British drama film The Halfway House, and the fun-loving cousin of Deborah Kerr's Dizzy Clayton in the 1945 British drama film Perfect Strangers, in which she was part of a very talented cast including Deborah Kerr and Roger Moore and for which Radio Times' Robyn Karney said she was "excellent."[27] In a starring role, Johns played Millie in the 1946 British comedy film This Man Is Mine and war widow Judy in the 1947 British drama film Frieda.[28] David Parkinson notes that Johns "seemed to epitomise modern British womanhood."[1] Conversely, she was cast as Mabel Chiltern in An Ideal Husband (1947), Alexander Korda's adaptation of the 1895 play by Oscar Wilde, in which Johns helps Lord Arthur Goring (Michael Wilding) prevent Laura Cheveley (Paulette Goddard) from destroying the reputation of her politician brother, Sir Robert Chilton (Hugh Williams).[1]

 
Publicity photo of Johns in 1951

For her role as playful Cornish mermaid Miranda Trewella in Ken Annakin's eponymous 1948 black and white comedy film,[29] in which she causes havoc in a London household, David L. Vineyard on MysteryFile writes that "Johns is a revelation: long platinum hair, Khirghiz eyes, and that breathless voice, perfect for this sexy romp,"[30] with ScreenOnline's Matthew Coniam relating that "Miranda ... is played ideally by Glynis Johns ... a strikingly unusual actress facially reminiscent of Gloria Grahame, with a melodic, purring voice."[31] As Miranda, Johns wore a tail made specially by The Dunlop Rubber Company and commissioned by producer Betty Box. The cast also included Griffith Jones, Googie Withers, and David Tomlinson, with whom Johns was later reunited in The Magic Box (1951) and Mary Poppins (1964). Given the weight of her tail, Tomlinson recalled his alarm at having to carry her around.[32] The following year, she had a brief cameo in Helter Skelter, a gleefully scattershot comedy in which she again played the flirtatious mermaid Miranda.[1]

Johns starred in two more films that year. She was cast in Thornton Freeland's comedy Dear Mr. Prohack, a modern version of Arnold Bennett's 1922 novel, Mr Prohack, as adapted in the play by Edward Knoblock.[33] In it, Johns plays Mimi Warburton, the private secretary and love interest of Charles Prohack, played by Sir Dirk Bogarde.[34][35] That same year, Bogarde began a relationship with Johns's ex-husband Anthony Forwood.[36] The cast included "a winning gallery of femmes fatales." Playing a character very unlike herself, Author John Reid wrote that "Glynis Johns ... is so much better at playing a scheming minx than an honest woman."[37] In Third Time Lucky (1949), she played Joan Burns, a "capable femme fatale."[1] Of this role, Fint on Letterboxd wrote that "Glynis is as winningly winsome as ever, her husky tones approximating a British Jean Arthur."[38]

On stage, Johns reprised her role as Miranda Bute in Richard Bird's play Quiet Weekend, which ran from 22 July 1941 to 29 January 1944 at Wyndham's Theatre in London.[14] During The Blitz, she was recast in Judgement Day, which she played at the Phoenix Theatre in London despite the dangers posed by German bombers. Following this, she appeared in Peter Pan at the Cambridge Theatre in 1943, I'll See You Again in 1944, and Fools Rush In in 1946.[39][14]

1950–1959: Established actor edit

 
Johns with Danny Kaye and Cecil Parker in 1955

In the 1950s, Johns enjoyed more film roles than any earlier decade. Her successes in Miranda (1948), Third Time Lucky (1949) and in others movies made her a household name, both in Britain and the United States; director Ken Annakin was an early admirer of her work.[40]

Johns remained in "noir territory" with Sidney Gilliat's 1950 drama thriller film State Secret,[1] appearing alongside Douglas Fairbanks Jr. and Jack Hawkins; as Lisa Robinson, she was Fairbanks's love interest; the two cause havoc in a fictitious East-European country and ultimately flee to the US to start their new life together.[41] Johns supported Richard Todd in Flesh and Blood the following year[42] and having previously declined parts in Hollywood productions, because of her loving devotion to British cinema, appeared in the Hollywood-financed No Highway in the Sky, in which an expert's misgivings about a plane's air-worthiness are ignored.[43] As unflappable stewardess Marjorie Corder, Johns appeared alongside James Stewart and Marlene Dietrich in this Henry Koster adaptation of the Nevil Shute novel No Highway.[1] Following this, she co-starred with David Niven in Appointment with Venus (1951) for director Ralph Thomas, which recreates a wartime mission to rescue a pedigree cow from the Nazi-occupied island of Amorel and in which Johns plays Channel-Islander Nicola Fallaize.[44] She was one of several names in the 1951 anthology film Encore, appearing as gambler Stella Cotman, who visits Monte Carlo alongside Terence Morgan's Syd Cotman in the segment "Gigolo and Gigolette". Now very much in demand, Johns guest starred as May Jones in John Boulting's Technicolour biographical drama film The Magic Box of the same year.[45] As May, Johns is introduced to cinema pioneer Robert Donat's William Friese-Greene by Richard Attenborough's Jack Carter.[1] In The Card (1952), a "droll" adaptation of Arnold Bennett's eponymous novel,[1] she was Alec Guinness' main love interest, dance teacher Ruth Earp, about which The New York Times' Bosley Crowther wrote that "Miss Johns' self-propelling young lady is a bundle of feminine guile."[46]

Johns made her television debut in 1952 with Fletcher Markle's Emmy Award-winning series Little Women. She appeared in just one episode: season 4's "Lilly, the Queen of the Movies" as Lily Snape.[47] Her television credits of the 1950s include brief appearances in the Hollywood anthology series Lux Video Theatre (in the 1953 episode "Two For Tea"), Errol Flynn's anthology series The Errol Flynn Theatre (in the 1956 episodes "The Sealed Room" as Lou McNamara and "The Girl in Blue Jeans" as The Girl Susan Tracey),[48] CBS's anthology series Schlitz Playhouse of Stars (in the 1957 episode "The Dead Are Silent"),[49] and ABC's variety and drama series The Frank Sinatra Show (in the 1958 episode "Face of Fear" as Christine Nolan).[50]

Johns was reunited with Richard Todd for two swashbucklers made for Walt Disney: The Sword and the Rose (1953), directed by Ken Annakin, and Rob Roy, the Highland Rogue (1953).[51] At the same time, she made Personal Affair,[52] a British drama film starring Gene Tierney and directed by Anthony Pelissier, in which Johns plays teenager Barbara Vining who pursues her Latin teacher, Leo Genn's Kay Barlow. The following year, Johns had the starring role in J. Lee Thompson's drama film The Weak and the Wicked alongside Diana Dors and Rachel Roberts, playing an upper-class prisoner, Jean Raymond, who was framed by her friend and for which Johns was widely praised.[53] Johns did another for Annakin, The Seekers (1954),[54] then co-starred with Robert Newton in The Beachcomber (1954). She played the Christian missionary in both films, appearing respectively as Marion Southey, the fiancé to Jack Hawkins' Philip Wayne who seeks to establish Christianity in 19th century New Zealand, and Martha Jones, who seeks to introduce it to the Welcome Islands.[1] For both, she was paid £12,500 a picture.[55]

In 1954, Johns was one of five judges to oversee the final of the National Bathing Beauty Contest in Morecambe, England, where Pat Butler was declared the winner. Sitting beside newspaper editor Charles Eade, Johns was the youngest and only woman judge.[56]

 
Johns with baby in The Court Jester (1955)

Ralph Thomas's 1954 Technicolor comedy film Mad About Men starred Johns alongside actors Donald Sinden and Anne Crawford in this sequel to Miranda.[57] Johns starred as Jo Luton in Roy Boulting's 1955 comedy Josephine and Men, a romantic comedy film in which Jack Buchanan's Uncle Charles Luton examines his niece's relationships,[58] and supported Danny Kaye in the musical-comedy medieval romance costume drama film The Court Jester of the same year, playing Jean with "cunning precision".[59] Despite having the highest budget of any comedy made at the time, The Court Jester was badly received at the box-office. When the episode "Doctor's Orders" of Star Trek: Enterprise aired in 2004, Johns made a surprise guest appearance when a clip of The Court Jester was shown on screen.[1]

Annakin used Johns again in Loser Takes All (1956), in which she plays a newlywed who loses patience with her gambling husband played by Rossano Brazzi,[60][61] She was one of the many actors who made cameos in Around the World in 80 Days (1956), appearing alongside Hermione Gingold in the closing scenes.[62] Alongside Cameron Mitchell, Johns starred in the 1957 Technicolor melodrama film All Mine to Give, based on the novel by Dale Eunson and his wife Katherine Albert.[63] Johns returned to Britain to make Another Time, Another Place (1958) with Lana Turner[64] and starred as Kitty Brady in Shake Hands with the Devil (1959).

In the West End, Johns starred in two 1950 productions: Fools Rush In at the Fortune Theatre and The Way Things Go at the Phoenix Theatre.[21] She made her Broadway debut in 1952 when given the title role in five productions of the Enid Bagnold comedy Gertie.[65] Johns returned to the United States in 1956 to again play the title role, this time in a Broadway revival production of George Bernard Shaw's Major Barbara.[66]

1960–1969: Mary Poppins and other roles edit

 
Johns in 1952

In 1960, Johns starred as Clarissa Hailsham-Brown in Godfrey Grayson's mystery film The Spider's Web, a screen adaptation of the eponymous 1954 play by Agatha Christie, and for which American author Matthew Bunson writes that "Despite its very modest budget, The Spider's Web was able to attract the considerable talents of Glynis Johns."[67] Johns had a supporting role in The Sundowners (1960), for which Variety wrote that "Glynis Johns is a vivacious delight",[68] with The New York Times' Bosley Crowther adding that her role as the Australian landlady Mrs. Firth (which earned her an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress) was "played richly" and with effervescence.[69] Johns starred in the remake of The Cabinet of Caligari (1962) as the easily offended and oft-frightened Jane Lindstrom,[70] and she was one of four stars in the 1962 Technicolor drama film The Chapman Report.[71] While filming her first scene in the Chapman Report with director George Cukor, he kicked her in the shin. Though a "subtle kick", it was described as an "unprovoked attack" and by Johns as "so unexpected that I did a terrible sort of double take." On the set, tensions were high, though she and Cukor later laughed about it and he noted she was "wonderful in the picture."[72] The following year, Johns supported Jackie Gleason in George Marshall's adaptation of the eponymous Corinne Griffith memoir Papa's Delicate Condition, a role described by Jeffrey Kauffman as "neatly understated".[73]

Mary Poppins (1964) is considered Walt Disney's crowning live-action achievement, and is the only one of his films which earned a Best Picture nomination during his lifetime.[74] In the film, Johns plays Winifred Banks, the wife of George Banks, mother of Jane and Michael, and member of Emmeline Pankhurst's "Votes for Women" suffrage movement, to which she is completely dedicated.[75] When first approached by Walt Disney, Johns thought it was to play the title role of Mary Poppins (played by Dame Julie Andrews), not Mrs. Banks. To ensure she accepted, he explained the mishap over lunch and arranged for the Sherman Brothers to write her a musical number: the song "Sister Suffragette", a pro-suffrage protest song pastiche, was written in 1964 with her in mind.[76] "Johns is endearing as the mother," wrote The Hollywood Reporter's James Powers in 1964, "happy as a lark at getting chained to a lamp post for the cause ... she comes in strongly as a singing actor."[77] The role earned her the Laurel Award for Best Female Supporting Performance.

The following year, Johns was cast in Henry Koster's DeLuxe Color family-comedy Dear Brigitte[78] as the aesthete Vina, wife of James Stewart,[79] whom she had first acted with 14 years earlier in No Highway in the Sky. She appeared in various character roles in the 1968 American comedy film Don't Just Stand There!,[80] written by Charles Williams, and the 1969 British comedy film Lock Up Your Daughters, directed by Peter Coe.[81][82]

 
Johns as Winifred Banks in the trailer of Mary Poppins (1964)

Johns was cast in 1961 in the ABC/Warner Bros. crime drama The Roaring 20s. She portrayed Kitty O'Moyne, an Irish immigrant who falls overboard into the harbour as she arrives in the United States.[83] Johns guest-starred in the CBS anthology series The Lloyd Bridges Show in the episode "A Game for Alternate Mondays" of the 1962–63 television season, playing widow Leah Marquand, with Leslye Hunter as her daughter Isabella.[84] On 5 August 1963, Vacation Playhouse premiered the episode "Hide and Seek" as the pilot of her eponymous CBS television series Glynis. The original working title for the series was The Glynis Johns Show; in it, Johns played the neophyte mystery writer and amateur sleuth Glynis Granvile.[85] In the autumn of that year, Glynis officially premiered, starring Johns and Keith Andes as her husband, Keith Granville, a criminal defence attorney. Due to pressure from NBC's The Virginian and Bill Cullen's The Price Is Right game show on ABC, the programme was cancelled after thirteen episodes.[86] In 1965, when CBS reran the series as a summer replacement for The Lucy Show, Glynis ranked #6 in the Nielsen ratings.[87] Johns remained busy on screen, appearing as Steffi Bernard in the episode "Who Killed Marty Kelso?" of ABC's detective series Burke's Law opposite Gene Barry.[1] In 1967, she appeared in four episodes of the Batman television series as villainess Lady Penelope Peasoup, one half of the evil duo with Rudy Vallée as her brother Lord Marmaduke Ffogg.[88]

On stage, Johns played the invalided gentlewoman in Broadway's Too True to Be Good in 1963.[89] She returned to London's West End in 1966 to star alongside Keith Michell in The King's Mare at the Garrick Theatre, in which she played Anne of Cleves and Michell King Henry VIII. Commenting on the production, S. Stanley Gordon writes that "The heavens must have blessed us, for we received the wonderful news that... London theatre's favourite daughter, Glynis Johns, had agreed to come to London to star in our play." The play was written by screenwriter novelists Jean Canolle and Anita Loos.[90] From 1969 and into the 1970s, Johns turned increasingly to stage work, appearing first in A Talent to Amuse (1969).[21]

1970–1979: A Little Night Music and acclaim edit

In the 1970s, Johns's career focus was on the stage. Following her appearance in earlier Cowardian productions, Johns starred in two more Coward plays in the early 1970s: from 27 January 1970 to September 1970, she was in Come As You Are at London's New Theatre and Strand Theatre, and from 6 March 1972 to 12 March 1972, she was in Marquise at the Bristol Hippodrome in England.[21]

Between 1972 and 1973, Johns narrated several fairy tales and other children's classics for Caedmon Records, the record label imprints of HarperCollins Publishers. These included Peter Pan and Snow White.[91] Some were released years later.[92]

In 1973, Johns was in the original cast of A Little Night Music, written by Stephen Sondheim, which premiered at 18:30 on 25 February at the Shubert Theatre in New York. The song "Send In the Clowns" was written with her in mind.[93] Commenting on director Harold Prince in a 1973 interview, she says he "has eyes in the back of his head and a real driving force, a life force. And with it goes a great deal of loge. He calls us 'crew' and himself 'captain,"'and he's heartbroken when opening night is over, simply because he doesn't want to be away from us. I think he falls in love with his company."[94] For her role as Desiree Armfeldt, she won a Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical and Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actress in a Musical.[95] Sondheim referred to her vocal qualities as a "rumpled bed";[6] as Anthony Tommasini put it in The New York Times: "Stephen Sondheim composed his most famous song, 'Send In the Clowns,' for an actress with virtually no voice, Glynis Johns, and few genuine singers have performed it as effectively."[96]

Following this, Johns starred in Joseph Hardy's production of Ring Round the Moon at the Center Theatre Group,[97][98] Los Angeles, from 1 April 1975 to 10 May 1975, with Michael York. From 17 March 1976, she starred in Peter Dews' production of 13 Rue de l'Amour at the Phoenix Theatre in London with film and stage actor Louis Jourdan. This production was held at the Theatre Royal in Norwich; it closed on 8 May 1976. From 1977 to March 1978, Johns starred as Alma Rattenbury in Cause Célèbre, touring Her Majesty's Theatre in London and Leicester Haymarket Theatre among other locations.[21] She was nominated for a Laurence Olivier Award for Actress of the Year in a New Play and won a Variety Club Award for Best Actress in recognition; it was described as a "riveting play", due in part to its cast: "Glynis Johns was superb as Alma Rattenbury, and Lee Montague and Bernard Archard were fantastic as the opposing barristers."[99]

Johns's film roles of the 1970s included playing Myfanwy Price in Andrew Sinclair's 1972 drama film Under Milk Wood opposite Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor,[100] Eleanor Critchit in Roy Ward Baker's 1973 anthology horror film The Vault of Horror (in the segment The Neat Job, a tale of marital discord), Swallow in the 1974 short film adaptation of Oscar Wilde's The Happy Prince[26] and Mrs. Amworth in the 1977 British-Canadian horror anthology film Three Dangerous Ladies, a reprisal of the role.[101] Of her original performance as Mrs. Amworth in the eponymous 1975 short film, Ian Holloway on Wyrd Britain writes that "the titular lady" is "played with flamboyant aplomb by the fabulous Glynis Johns."[102]

1980–1999: Final roles edit

 
Playwright Noël Coward, in whose plays Johns frequently starred

In classical theatre in Europe, everybody plays all kinds of parts. Juliets go on to play the Nurses; they don't want to play Juliet again. I think we've got to remember to grab onto our perks, whatever is the good thing about each age. Each stage of life should be a progression.

— Glynis Johns[7]
Los Angeles Times, 17 April 1991

Johns appeared in Noël Coward's comic play Hay Fever as Judith Bliss from 4 August 1981 to 10 October 1981 at the Yvonne Arnaud Theatre in Guildford and the Theatre Royal in Nottingham. This was her fourth role in a Noël Coward production.[21] From 20 November 1989 to 20 May 1990, she starred as Lady Catherine Champion-Cheney in W Somerset Maugham's Broadway romance The Circle at the Ambassador Theatre in New York.[21]

Johns's screen work of the 1980s took second place to her work on stage.[1] In 1982, she was cast as Laura Fitzpatrick Morgan in the American-British biographical television film Little Gloria... Happy at Last with Lucy Gutteridge in the leading role of Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt.[103] Johns had a starring role in Nukie (1987), a South African science-fiction film in which she played the decisive Sister Anne alongside actors Anthony Morrison, Steve Railsback, and Ronald France.[104][105] In 1988, Johns provided the voice for Miss Grimwood, proprietor of Miss Grimwood's Finishing School for Girls, in Scooby-Doo and the Ghoul School. The plot follows the characters as Miss Grimwood hires them as her gym teachers; once there, however, they find it is actually a school for the daughters of paranormal beings.[106][107] The same year, Johns starred in Zelly and Me, an American drama film written, directed and produced by Tina Rathborne. In it, Johns plays Co-Co, the wealthy grandmother of protagonist Phoebe (played by Alexandra Johnes) and an egoist with a deeply competitive streak.[108]

During the first season of NBC's hit sitcom Cheers, Johns guest-starred as Diane Chambers' mother, Helen Chambers, an eccentric dowager who, due to a stipulation in Diane's late father's will, will lose all her money unless Diane is married by the next day.[109] In 1985, Johns played Bridget O'Hara in the episode "Sing a Song of Murder" of CBS's crime drama television series Murder, She Wrote, working again with Angela Lansbury.[1] From 1988 to 1989, she played Trudie Pepper, a senior citizen living in an Arizona retirement community, in the television sitcom Coming of Age, also on CBS.[110]

Following earlier work in the 1970s, Johns narrated two more albums for Caedmon Records: The Light Princess in 1981 and Bargain for Frances and Other Frances Stories in 1984.[91][111]

In 1991, Johns returned to A Little Night Music aged 68, this time playing Madame Armfeldt, the mother of her original character Desiree, with Gordon Davidson directing at the Ricardo Montalbán Theatre in Los Angeles. Following this, she starred as Myrtle Bledsoe in the premiere of Horton Foote's A Coffin in Egypt from June to July 1998 at the Bay Street Theatre in New York.[112]

On screen, Johns had the main part of Darjeeling alongside Honor Blackman and Derek Jacobi on the American children's television anthology series ABC Weekend Specials (in the short The Secret Garden, which aired on 5 November 1994).[113][114]

Johns appeared in just three films in the 1990s, as the grandmother in each. She played the camera-toting grandmother in the 1995 Sandra Bullock hit While You Were Sleeping[26] and the waspish Grandma Rose in Ted Demme's 1994 black comedy film The Ref. Of this role, Caution Spoilers' Sarah notes that "Glynis Johns as the awful Rose is terrific"; her character was often at odds with her son Lloyd Chasseur, played by Kevin Spacey.[115] In 1998, Johns was named a Disney legend in the film category.[116] Her last film appearance was as the grandmother of Molly Shannon's Mary Gallagher in the 1999 film Superstar.[117]

Public image edit

In September 1946, when she was still fairly new to the profession, Powell and Pressburger hailed Johns "one of the most sought-after of all young British stars".[118] She was voted by British exhibitors as the 10th most popular box-office star in 1951 and 1952.[119][120] By the time of Loser Takes All (1956), Johns was a top box-office draw.[1]

The UK and US edit

 
Studio publicity photo of Johns in 1959

A devotee of British cinema, Johns said in 1946, "I would sooner play in a good British picture than in the majority of American pictures I have seen,"[121] though she still made some American films. She found her stardom in 1940s Britain (wherein her "glistening blue eyes and perfect comic timing made her British cinema's most sought-after female lead") and was already a star by the time she was in No Highway in the Sky, a joint British and American production produced in 1951, and her first role in American cinema.[3]

Johns became an indelible part of the cinema histories of both Britain and America, maintaining her British and American careers simultaneously. Following No Highway in the Sky (1951), she took on increasingly more roles in America and elsewhere: the majority of her television credits were American, including her eponymous 1963 sitcom Glynis, though her film and theatre credits (with several notable exceptions) were British.[3]

Personal life edit

Glynis has light brown hair, blue eyes, and is five feet four inches [163 cm] in height. Dancing is still of great interest to her and is her favourite recreation, coupled with the collecting of good syncopated numbers: Glenn Miller's In the Mood is her favourite. Her favourite classical composers are Grieg, Mozart and Debussy. Riding, tennis and ice skating are her sports, and her ideal holiday is one spent in a mountain resort where there is plenty of night-life. Her favourite reading is autobiographies, preferably those of celebrities she knows personally.

The Voice[14]
Saturday, 20 September 1952

Relationships edit

Johns was married four times. She met her first husband, Anthony Forwood, while rehearsing for Quiet Wedding (1941). A year after they met, Forwood asked her on a date and they were married within a month on 29 August 1942 in Westminster, London. The couple's only child, actor Gareth Forwood, was born on 14 October 1945.[122] Following a lengthy court proceeding, she was granted a divorce on 25 June 1948 "because of adultery by her husband."[123]

Johns began dating producer Antony Darnborough after working together on Encore (1951).[124] He proposed to her at Windsor's Sunningdale Golf Club in June 1951.[125] The Daily Telegraph later said that "theirs was to have been one of the most glittering show business weddings," but it never took place. Gertie (1951) took her to Broadway and their wedding was postponed; in December 1951, it was called off. The former couple remained "good friends" and she appeared in his 1953 television drama Personal Affair.[124][126]

On 1 February 1952 in Manhattan, New York, Johns married David Foster, a Royal Navy officer and later president of Colgate-Palmolive.[127] They divorced on 17 May 1956 on the ground of his adultery with an unnamed woman.[128] He did not contest the charge.[129]

Johns married Cecil Henderson, a businessman, on 10 October 1960 in Westminster, London.[130] They divorced on 21 June 1962. He cited adultery and she did not contest the charge.[131]

Johns's fourth and last husband was the writer and United States Air Force captain Elliott Arnold.[132] They announced their engagement on 25 June 1964 and were married on 1 October in Los Angeles, California.[133][134] They divorced on 4 January 1973.[94][135]

In a 1973 interview with Robert Berkvist, Johns described – in her experience – the compatibility of theatre and marriage: "Acting is my highest form of intelligence, the time when I use the best part of my brain. I was always told, by my married friends, for example, that I could apply that intelligence to something else, some other aspect of living, but I can't. I don't have the same flair in other things." On the subject of a fifth marriage, she reflected that "I'd tread very softly in that area. Very softly. I certainly wouldn't rush into anything again, and I'd have to have an awful lot in common with anyone I'd consider marrying next time. Why so many marriages? It was absolute conservatism on my part. I was brought up to feel that if you wanted to have an affair with a man, well, you married him. I have friends who, if they'd followed that rule, would have collected an awful lot of pieces of paper by now."[94]

Following the death of her mother, Alyce Steele-Wareham, on 1 September 1971 in Westminster, Johns's father Mervyn Johns married actress Diana Churchill on 4 December 1976 in Hillingdon, London.[136] Johns' grandson, Thomas Forwood, is a French writer and film director.[5][130]

Health and voice edit

Following her marriage to David Foster in 1952, she became fourteen pounds (6.5 kg) overweight. Talking to Lydia Lane, she describes this ordeal: "I was relaxed, happy, with little to do and I suppose I simply didn't burn up as much energy as usual. My appetite stayed the same and I gained a few pounds at a time until one day I discovered I was fourteen pounds overweight." Her solution was simple: "I'm convinced that weight is a mental problem," she said. "I counted calories for a while but nothing happened until I became really disturbed about it. From that moment on, I began to lose weight and in three weeks I was back to normal. The point I am trying to make is that dieting alone is not enough. It must be accompanied by a strong will and determination to lose [weight]."[137]

Johns previously had severe migraines. In a 1955 interview she admitted that "Only recently have I learned how to relax. And since I have, the migraine headaches which have plagued me for years have disappeared. I've finally learned to be still inside. Someone told me once, 'When you let God in on your problems, you can let go and relax,' and I've found that it works."[137]

A few days before Johns was due to play Desiree Armfeldt at the opening night of A Little Night Music in 1973, she was rushed to hospital for emergency treatment of an intestinal infection. The debut was postponed by a week and Tammy Grimes was thought to be a likely successor. Though her doctor was "aghast", Johns rejoined the show after just two days: "I was not going to have anybody else sing my songs," she said.[94]

Johns suffered from stage fright throughout most of her career. In a 2023 interview, her grandson Thomas said "Of course, she came across as supremely confident, but in private she suffered quite crippling stage fright that she never really got over – only managed – so that makes her career even more remarkable."[5]

Johns's voice has been described by a press agent as "like the sound of a brook burbling over a pebbled bed."[138]

Longevity and death edit

Johns was predeceased by all four of her husbands. The first to die was her third husband, Cecil Henderson, in 1978, followed by her fourth husband, Elliott Arnold, in 1980, her first husband, Anthony Forwood, in 1988, and her second husband, David Foster, in 2010. Her son, Gareth Forwood, died in 2007 from a heart attack during cancer treatment.[139]

With the death of Olivia de Havilland in 2020, Johns became the oldest living Academy Award nominee in any acting category.[1] In 2021, with the death of Betty White, she became the oldest living Disney Legend.[140]

Johns retired to the US,[141] where she later resided at the Belmont Village Hollywood Heights, a senior living community, located near the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles, California.[141][142]

Johns died in Los Angeles at an assisted living home, on 4 January 2024, at age 100 from natural causes.[143][4][130] She was interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood, California.

Advocacy edit

Sir Chris Bryant, Labour MP for Rhondda, described Johns as "a lifetime ambassador for the creative arts in the UK and particularly Wales."[5] In 1971, Johns told BBC Cymru Wales that a national theatre in Wales would be a positive addition to the country, because "Welsh people ... have a love for their art and are not mercenary about it."[144]

Filmography and discography edit

Honours and awards edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Johns was a British subject of the Crown via the legal doctrine of jus sanguinis and also of South Africa via the doctrine of jus soli.[1] She became a naturalised US citizen after emigrating to the US in the mid-1950s and giving up her British and South African papers.[2][3]

References edit

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External links edit

glynis, johns, confused, with, glyn, johns, glynis, margaret, payne, johns, october, 1923, january, 2024, british, actress, career, spanning, seven, decades, stage, screen, johns, appeared, more, than, films, plays, received, various, accolades, throughout, ca. Not to be confused with Glyn Johns Glynis Margaret Payne Johns 5 October 1923 4 January 2024 was a British 4 actress In a career spanning seven decades on stage and screen Johns appeared in more than 60 films and 30 plays She received various accolades throughout her career including a Tony Award and a Drama Desk Award as well as nominations for an Academy Award a Golden Globe Award and a Laurence Olivier Award She was one of the last surviving stars from the Golden Age of Hollywood and classical years of British cinema 5 Glynis JohnsPublicity photo of JohnsBornGlynis Margaret Payne Johns 1923 10 05 5 October 1923Pretoria Union of South AfricaDied4 January 2024 2024 01 04 aged 100 Los Angeles California USResting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park Los Angeles California USCitizenshipUnited Kingdom Union of South Africa United States a EducationClifton High School Cone School of Dancing South Hampstead High SchoolOccupationsActressdancersingerYears active1923 1999WorksFull listSpousesAnthony Forwood m 1942 div 1948 wbr David Foster m 1952 div 1956 wbr Cecil Henderson m 1960 div 1962 wbr Elliott Arnold m 1964 div 1973 wbr ChildrenGareth ForwoodParentMervyn Johns father RelativesDiana Churchill stepmother John Geoffrey Jones cousin Signature Johns was born in Pretoria South Africa the daughter of Welsh actor Mervyn Johns She appeared on stage from a young age and was typecast as a stage dancer from early adolescence making her screen debut in South Riding 1938 She rose to prominence in the 1940s following her role as Anna in the war drama film 49th Parallel 1941 for which she won a National Board of Review Award for Best Acting and starring roles in Miranda 1948 and Third Time Lucky 1949 Following No Highway in the Sky 1951 a joint British American production Johns took on increasingly more roles in the United States and elsewhere She made her television and Broadway debuts in 1952 and took on starring roles in such films as The Sword and the Rose 1953 The Weak and the Wicked 1954 Mad About Men 1954 The Court Jester 1955 The Sundowners 1960 The Cabinet of Caligari 1962 The Chapman Report 1962 and Under Milk Wood 1972 On television she starred in her own sitcom Glynis 1963 Renowned for the breathy quality of her husky voice 6 Johns sang songs written specifically for her both on screen and stage most notably Sister Suffragette written by the Sherman Brothers for Disney s Mary Poppins 1964 in which she played Winifred Banks and for which she received a Laurel Award and Send In the Clowns composed by Stephen Sondheim for Broadway s A Little Night Music 1973 in which she originated the role of Desiree Armfeldt and for which she received a Tony Award and Drama Desk Award Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 1923 1939 Career beginnings 2 2 1940 1949 British film and theatre 2 3 1950 1959 Established actor 2 4 1960 1969 Mary Poppins and other roles 2 5 1970 1979 A Little Night Music and acclaim 2 6 1980 1999 Final roles 3 Public image 3 1 The UK and US 4 Personal life 4 1 Relationships 4 2 Health and voice 4 3 Longevity and death 5 Advocacy 6 Filmography and discography 7 Honours and awards 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksEarly life and education editThere were situations that were hard for parents to turn down It s difficult to turn down a chance to star with Laurence Olivier to say No she has to go to school They had a big decision to make I was interested in everything I wanted to be a scientist I would ve loved to go on and on at university But you can t do everything in life Glynis Johns 7 Los Angeles Times 17 April 1991 Johns was born into a theatrical family Her mother was Alyce Steele Wareham an Australian born concert pianist who had studied in London and Vienna 8 Originally of English descent Alyce s family found fame as performing actors singers and musicians touring Australia New Zealand and South Africa with their musical programmes 9 her grandmother Elizabeth Steele Payne was one of the first accomplished women violinists of her time 6 Johns father was Welsh actor Mervyn Johns who became a star of British films during the Second World War and worked regularly at Ealing Studios 10 Through him she was a cousin of British judge John Geoffrey Jones 11 Alyce and Mervyn met while studying in London he at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and she at the Royal Academy of Music They married on 17 November 1922 in St Giles London and began touring with her family s theatre company 12 Glynis Margaret Payne Johns was born on 5 October 1923 while her parents were touring Pretoria capital of the then Union of South Africa a dominion of the British Empire and later the British Commonwealth of Nations 13 She was named Margaret Payne after her grandmothers Margaret Anne Samuel and Elizabeth Steele Payne 14 The family returned to England just a few months after she was born 5 Aged five she joined the London Ballet School by six she was hailed in Britain as a dancing wonder 8 by ten she was working as a Ballet instructor and by eleven she had earned a degree to teach Hoping to study with the Sadler s Wells Ballet at age twelve she was enrolled instead at Clifton High School in Bristol balancing academia with the two hours a day she spent at the Cone School of Dancing which later merged with the Ripman School to form Tring Park School for the Performing Arts 15 As a dance student Johns amassed some 25 gold medals 16 1 Aside from her Clifton education she also attended South Hampstead High School in London 17 where she was a contemporary of Dame Angela Lansbury 5 Career edit1923 1939 Career beginnings edit nbsp A fight breaks out at school between Midge Carne Glynis Johns left and Lydia Holly Joan Ellum in the 1938 film South Riding produced by Alexander Korda and directed by Victor Saville Johns made her theatrical debut in October 1923 at just three weeks old carried onto the London stage by her grandmother Elizabeth Steele Payne a violinist impresario 6 who had inherited the production s company from her father 18 She thus became the fourth generation in her mother s family to appear on stage 14 In 1931 at the age of 8 Johns was cast as Sonia Kuman in Elmer Rice s Judgement Day at the Phoenix Theatre in London She played alongside theatre actors Sir Lewis Casson Ronald Adam and George Woodbridge who played Judge Vlora Judge Tsankov and Judge Sturdza respectively 19 As a child ballerina in 1935 Johns played Ursula in Buckie s Bears 11 this production lasted from 27 December 1935 to 11 January 1936 at the Garrick Theatre 20 Her proficiency in dance led her to be cast in several children s plays throughout the 1930s notably during the Christmas holidays She was spotted by a manager and subsequently cast in her first major stage production as Napoleon s daughter in the 1936 short play St Helena at The Old Vic she was in productions of The Children s Hour and The Melody That Got Lost the same year Following this she was recast as Sonia Kuman in Elmer Rice s 1937 production of Judgement Day this time at London s Strand Theatre J M Barrie s 1937 play A Kiss for Cinderella 14 and Esther McCracken s 1938 play Quiet Wedding in which she played the bridesmaid Miranda Bute at Wyndham s Theatre London 21 Johns made her screen debut in 1938 at the age of 15 with Victor Saville s film adaptation of the Winifred Holtby novel South Riding in which she played Midge Carne the daughter of aspiring politician Robert Carne played by Ralph Richardson 22 She had small roles in David Evans 1938 crime film Murder in the Family 23 and two Brian Desmond Hurst films his 1938 black and white crime film Prison Without Bars 24 and 1939 thriller On the Night of the Fire in which she was again cast alongside Ralph Richardson 25 1940 1949 British film and theatre edit nbsp Publicity photo for 49th Parallel 1941 Johns averaged one and a half films a year throughout the 1940s starting in 1940 with Under Your Hat in which she played Winnie a supporting character to Jack Hulbert s Jack Millett and Cicely Courtneidge s Kay Millett in this musical comedy spy film 26 Johns s scene in the 1941 British historical drama The Prime Minister as Miss Sheridan did not make the final cut 26 though her role in the 1941 British and Canadian World War II drama film 49th Parallel in which she replaced Elisabeth Bergner as Anna earned her a National Board of Review Award for Best Acting and international acclaim She continued with supporting roles as Romanian resistance fighter Paula Palacek in the 1943 British spy film The Adventures of Tartu supernatural innkeeper Gwyneth alongside her father Mervyn Johns Rhys in the 1944 British drama film The Halfway House and the fun loving cousin of Deborah Kerr s Dizzy Clayton in the 1945 British drama film Perfect Strangers in which she was part of a very talented cast including Deborah Kerr and Roger Moore and for which Radio Times Robyn Karney said she was excellent 27 In a starring role Johns played Millie in the 1946 British comedy film This Man Is Mine and war widow Judy in the 1947 British drama film Frieda 28 David Parkinson notes that Johns seemed to epitomise modern British womanhood 1 Conversely she was cast as Mabel Chiltern in An Ideal Husband 1947 Alexander Korda s adaptation of the 1895 play by Oscar Wilde in which Johns helps Lord Arthur Goring Michael Wilding prevent Laura Cheveley Paulette Goddard from destroying the reputation of her politician brother Sir Robert Chilton Hugh Williams 1 nbsp Publicity photo of Johns in 1951 For her role as playful Cornish mermaid Miranda Trewella in Ken Annakin s eponymous 1948 black and white comedy film 29 in which she causes havoc in a London household David L Vineyard on MysteryFile writes that Johns is a revelation long platinum hair Khirghiz eyes and that breathless voice perfect for this sexy romp 30 with ScreenOnline s Matthew Coniam relating that Miranda is played ideally by Glynis Johns a strikingly unusual actress facially reminiscent of Gloria Grahame with a melodic purring voice 31 As Miranda Johns wore a tail made specially by The Dunlop Rubber Company and commissioned by producer Betty Box The cast also included Griffith Jones Googie Withers and David Tomlinson with whom Johns was later reunited in The Magic Box 1951 and Mary Poppins 1964 Given the weight of her tail Tomlinson recalled his alarm at having to carry her around 32 The following year she had a brief cameo in Helter Skelter a gleefully scattershot comedy in which she again played the flirtatious mermaid Miranda 1 Johns starred in two more films that year She was cast in Thornton Freeland s comedy Dear Mr Prohack a modern version of Arnold Bennett s 1922 novel Mr Prohack as adapted in the play by Edward Knoblock 33 In it Johns plays Mimi Warburton the private secretary and love interest of Charles Prohack played by Sir Dirk Bogarde 34 35 That same year Bogarde began a relationship with Johns s ex husband Anthony Forwood 36 The cast included a winning gallery of femmes fatales Playing a character very unlike herself Author John Reid wrote that Glynis Johns is so much better at playing a scheming minx than an honest woman 37 In Third Time Lucky 1949 she played Joan Burns a capable femme fatale 1 Of this role Fint on Letterboxd wrote that Glynis is as winningly winsome as ever her husky tones approximating a British Jean Arthur 38 On stage Johns reprised her role as Miranda Bute in Richard Bird s play Quiet Weekend which ran from 22 July 1941 to 29 January 1944 at Wyndham s Theatre in London 14 During The Blitz she was recast in Judgement Day which she played at the Phoenix Theatre in London despite the dangers posed by German bombers Following this she appeared in Peter Pan at the Cambridge Theatre in 1943 I ll See You Again in 1944 and Fools Rush In in 1946 39 14 1950 1959 Established actor edit nbsp Johns with Danny Kaye and Cecil Parker in 1955 In the 1950s Johns enjoyed more film roles than any earlier decade Her successes in Miranda 1948 Third Time Lucky 1949 and in others movies made her a household name both in Britain and the United States director Ken Annakin was an early admirer of her work 40 Johns remained in noir territory with Sidney Gilliat s 1950 drama thriller film State Secret 1 appearing alongside Douglas Fairbanks Jr and Jack Hawkins as Lisa Robinson she was Fairbanks s love interest the two cause havoc in a fictitious East European country and ultimately flee to the US to start their new life together 41 Johns supported Richard Todd in Flesh and Blood the following year 42 and having previously declined parts in Hollywood productions because of her loving devotion to British cinema appeared in the Hollywood financed No Highway in the Sky in which an expert s misgivings about a plane s air worthiness are ignored 43 As unflappable stewardess Marjorie Corder Johns appeared alongside James Stewart and Marlene Dietrich in this Henry Koster adaptation of the Nevil Shute novel No Highway 1 Following this she co starred with David Niven in Appointment with Venus 1951 for director Ralph Thomas which recreates a wartime mission to rescue a pedigree cow from the Nazi occupied island of Amorel and in which Johns plays Channel Islander Nicola Fallaize 44 She was one of several names in the 1951 anthology film Encore appearing as gambler Stella Cotman who visits Monte Carlo alongside Terence Morgan s Syd Cotman in the segment Gigolo and Gigolette Now very much in demand Johns guest starred as May Jones in John Boulting s Technicolour biographical drama film The Magic Box of the same year 45 As May Johns is introduced to cinema pioneer Robert Donat s William Friese Greene by Richard Attenborough s Jack Carter 1 In The Card 1952 a droll adaptation of Arnold Bennett s eponymous novel 1 she was Alec Guinness main love interest dance teacher Ruth Earp about which The New York Times Bosley Crowther wrote that Miss Johns self propelling young lady is a bundle of feminine guile 46 Johns made her television debut in 1952 with Fletcher Markle s Emmy Award winning series Little Women She appeared in just one episode season 4 s Lilly the Queen of the Movies as Lily Snape 47 Her television credits of the 1950s include brief appearances in the Hollywood anthology series Lux Video Theatre in the 1953 episode Two For Tea Errol Flynn s anthology series The Errol Flynn Theatre in the 1956 episodes The Sealed Room as Lou McNamara and The Girl in Blue Jeans as The Girl Susan Tracey 48 CBS s anthology series Schlitz Playhouse of Stars in the 1957 episode The Dead Are Silent 49 and ABC s variety and drama series The Frank Sinatra Show in the 1958 episode Face of Fear as Christine Nolan 50 Johns was reunited with Richard Todd for two swashbucklers made for Walt Disney The Sword and the Rose 1953 directed by Ken Annakin and Rob Roy the Highland Rogue 1953 51 At the same time she made Personal Affair 52 a British drama film starring Gene Tierney and directed by Anthony Pelissier in which Johns plays teenager Barbara Vining who pursues her Latin teacher Leo Genn s Kay Barlow The following year Johns had the starring role in J Lee Thompson s drama film The Weak and the Wicked alongside Diana Dors and Rachel Roberts playing an upper class prisoner Jean Raymond who was framed by her friend and for which Johns was widely praised 53 Johns did another for Annakin The Seekers 1954 54 then co starred with Robert Newton in The Beachcomber 1954 She played the Christian missionary in both films appearing respectively as Marion Southey the fiance to Jack Hawkins Philip Wayne who seeks to establish Christianity in 19th century New Zealand and Martha Jones who seeks to introduce it to the Welcome Islands 1 For both she was paid 12 500 a picture 55 In 1954 Johns was one of five judges to oversee the final of the National Bathing Beauty Contest in Morecambe England where Pat Butler was declared the winner Sitting beside newspaper editor Charles Eade Johns was the youngest and only woman judge 56 nbsp Johns with baby in The Court Jester 1955 Ralph Thomas s 1954 Technicolor comedy film Mad About Men starred Johns alongside actors Donald Sinden and Anne Crawford in this sequel to Miranda 57 Johns starred as Jo Luton in Roy Boulting s 1955 comedy Josephine and Men a romantic comedy film in which Jack Buchanan s Uncle Charles Luton examines his niece s relationships 58 and supported Danny Kaye in the musical comedy medieval romance costume drama film The Court Jester of the same year playing Jean with cunning precision 59 Despite having the highest budget of any comedy made at the time The Court Jester was badly received at the box office When the episode Doctor s Orders of Star Trek Enterprise aired in 2004 Johns made a surprise guest appearance when a clip of The Court Jester was shown on screen 1 Annakin used Johns again in Loser Takes All 1956 in which she plays a newlywed who loses patience with her gambling husband played by Rossano Brazzi 60 61 She was one of the many actors who made cameos in Around the World in 80 Days 1956 appearing alongside Hermione Gingold in the closing scenes 62 Alongside Cameron Mitchell Johns starred in the 1957 Technicolor melodrama film All Mine to Give based on the novel by Dale Eunson and his wife Katherine Albert 63 Johns returned to Britain to make Another Time Another Place 1958 with Lana Turner 64 and starred as Kitty Brady in Shake Hands with the Devil 1959 In the West End Johns starred in two 1950 productions Fools Rush In at the Fortune Theatre and The Way Things Go at the Phoenix Theatre 21 She made her Broadway debut in 1952 when given the title role in five productions of the Enid Bagnold comedy Gertie 65 Johns returned to the United States in 1956 to again play the title role this time in a Broadway revival production of George Bernard Shaw s Major Barbara 66 1960 1969 Mary Poppins and other roles edit nbsp Johns in 1952 In 1960 Johns starred as Clarissa Hailsham Brown in Godfrey Grayson s mystery film The Spider s Web a screen adaptation of the eponymous 1954 play by Agatha Christie and for which American author Matthew Bunson writes that Despite its very modest budget The Spider s Web was able to attract the considerable talents of Glynis Johns 67 Johns had a supporting role in The Sundowners 1960 for which Variety wrote that Glynis Johns is a vivacious delight 68 with The New York Times Bosley Crowther adding that her role as the Australian landlady Mrs Firth which earned her an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress was played richly and with effervescence 69 Johns starred in the remake of The Cabinet of Caligari 1962 as the easily offended and oft frightened Jane Lindstrom 70 and she was one of four stars in the 1962 Technicolor drama film The Chapman Report 71 While filming her first scene in the Chapman Report with director George Cukor he kicked her in the shin Though a subtle kick it was described as an unprovoked attack and by Johns as so unexpected that I did a terrible sort of double take On the set tensions were high though she and Cukor later laughed about it and he noted she was wonderful in the picture 72 The following year Johns supported Jackie Gleason in George Marshall s adaptation of the eponymous Corinne Griffith memoir Papa s Delicate Condition a role described by Jeffrey Kauffman as neatly understated 73 Mary Poppins 1964 is considered Walt Disney s crowning live action achievement and is the only one of his films which earned a Best Picture nomination during his lifetime 74 In the film Johns plays Winifred Banks the wife of George Banks mother of Jane and Michael and member of Emmeline Pankhurst s Votes for Women suffrage movement to which she is completely dedicated 75 When first approached by Walt Disney Johns thought it was to play the title role of Mary Poppins played by Dame Julie Andrews not Mrs Banks To ensure she accepted he explained the mishap over lunch and arranged for the Sherman Brothers to write her a musical number the song Sister Suffragette a pro suffrage protest song pastiche was written in 1964 with her in mind 76 Johns is endearing as the mother wrote The Hollywood Reporter s James Powers in 1964 happy as a lark at getting chained to a lamp post for the cause she comes in strongly as a singing actor 77 The role earned her the Laurel Award for Best Female Supporting Performance The following year Johns was cast in Henry Koster s DeLuxe Color family comedy Dear Brigitte 78 as the aesthete Vina wife of James Stewart 79 whom she had first acted with 14 years earlier in No Highway in the Sky She appeared in various character roles in the 1968 American comedy film Don t Just Stand There 80 written by Charles Williams and the 1969 British comedy film Lock Up Your Daughters directed by Peter Coe 81 82 nbsp Johns as Winifred Banks in the trailer of Mary Poppins 1964 Johns was cast in 1961 in the ABC Warner Bros crime drama The Roaring 20s She portrayed Kitty O Moyne an Irish immigrant who falls overboard into the harbour as she arrives in the United States 83 Johns guest starred in the CBS anthology series The Lloyd Bridges Show in the episode A Game for Alternate Mondays of the 1962 63 television season playing widow Leah Marquand with Leslye Hunter as her daughter Isabella 84 On 5 August 1963 Vacation Playhouse premiered the episode Hide and Seek as the pilot of her eponymous CBS television series Glynis The original working title for the series was The Glynis Johns Show in it Johns played the neophyte mystery writer and amateur sleuth Glynis Granvile 85 In the autumn of that year Glynis officially premiered starring Johns and Keith Andes as her husband Keith Granville a criminal defence attorney Due to pressure from NBC s The Virginian and Bill Cullen s The Price Is Right game show on ABC the programme was cancelled after thirteen episodes 86 In 1965 when CBS reran the series as a summer replacement for The Lucy Show Glynis ranked 6 in the Nielsen ratings 87 Johns remained busy on screen appearing as Steffi Bernard in the episode Who Killed Marty Kelso of ABC s detective series Burke s Law opposite Gene Barry 1 In 1967 she appeared in four episodes of the Batman television series as villainess Lady Penelope Peasoup one half of the evil duo with Rudy Vallee as her brother Lord Marmaduke Ffogg 88 On stage Johns played the invalided gentlewoman in Broadway s Too True to Be Good in 1963 89 She returned to London s West End in 1966 to star alongside Keith Michell in The King s Mare at the Garrick Theatre in which she played Anne of Cleves and Michell King Henry VIII Commenting on the production S Stanley Gordon writes that The heavens must have blessed us for we received the wonderful news that London theatre s favourite daughter Glynis Johns had agreed to come to London to star in our play The play was written by screenwriter novelists Jean Canolle and Anita Loos 90 From 1969 and into the 1970s Johns turned increasingly to stage work appearing first in A Talent to Amuse 1969 21 1970 1979 A Little Night Music and acclaim edit In the 1970s Johns s career focus was on the stage Following her appearance in earlier Cowardian productions Johns starred in two more Coward plays in the early 1970s from 27 January 1970 to September 1970 she was in Come As You Are at London s New Theatre and Strand Theatre and from 6 March 1972 to 12 March 1972 she was in Marquise at the Bristol Hippodrome in England 21 Between 1972 and 1973 Johns narrated several fairy tales and other children s classics for Caedmon Records the record label imprints of HarperCollins Publishers These included Peter Pan and Snow White 91 Some were released years later 92 In 1973 Johns was in the original cast of A Little Night Music written by Stephen Sondheim which premiered at 18 30 on 25 February at the Shubert Theatre in New York The song Send In the Clowns was written with her in mind 93 Commenting on director Harold Prince in a 1973 interview she says he has eyes in the back of his head and a real driving force a life force And with it goes a great deal of loge He calls us crew and himself captain and he s heartbroken when opening night is over simply because he doesn t want to be away from us I think he falls in love with his company 94 For her role as Desiree Armfeldt she won a Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical and Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actress in a Musical 95 Sondheim referred to her vocal qualities as a rumpled bed 6 as Anthony Tommasini put it in The New York Times Stephen Sondheim composed his most famous song Send In the Clowns for an actress with virtually no voice Glynis Johns and few genuine singers have performed it as effectively 96 Following this Johns starred in Joseph Hardy s production of Ring Round the Moon at the Center Theatre Group 97 98 Los Angeles from 1 April 1975 to 10 May 1975 with Michael York From 17 March 1976 she starred in Peter Dews production of 13 Rue de l Amour at the Phoenix Theatre in London with film and stage actor Louis Jourdan This production was held at the Theatre Royal in Norwich it closed on 8 May 1976 From 1977 to March 1978 Johns starred as Alma Rattenbury in Cause Celebre touring Her Majesty s Theatre in London and Leicester Haymarket Theatre among other locations 21 She was nominated for a Laurence Olivier Award for Actress of the Year in a New Play and won a Variety Club Award for Best Actress in recognition it was described as a riveting play due in part to its cast Glynis Johns was superb as Alma Rattenbury and Lee Montague and Bernard Archard were fantastic as the opposing barristers 99 Johns s film roles of the 1970s included playing Myfanwy Price in Andrew Sinclair s 1972 drama film Under Milk Wood opposite Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor 100 Eleanor Critchit in Roy Ward Baker s 1973 anthology horror film The Vault of Horror in the segment The Neat Job a tale of marital discord Swallow in the 1974 short film adaptation of Oscar Wilde s The Happy Prince 26 and Mrs Amworth in the 1977 British Canadian horror anthology film Three Dangerous Ladies a reprisal of the role 101 Of her original performance as Mrs Amworth in the eponymous 1975 short film Ian Holloway on Wyrd Britain writes that the titular lady is played with flamboyant aplomb by the fabulous Glynis Johns 102 1980 1999 Final roles edit nbsp Playwright Noel Coward in whose plays Johns frequently starred In classical theatre in Europe everybody plays all kinds of parts Juliets go on to play the Nurses they don t want to play Juliet again I think we ve got to remember to grab onto our perks whatever is the good thing about each age Each stage of life should be a progression Glynis Johns 7 Los Angeles Times 17 April 1991 Johns appeared in Noel Coward s comic play Hay Fever as Judith Bliss from 4 August 1981 to 10 October 1981 at the Yvonne Arnaud Theatre in Guildford and the Theatre Royal in Nottingham This was her fourth role in a Noel Coward production 21 From 20 November 1989 to 20 May 1990 she starred as Lady Catherine Champion Cheney in W Somerset Maugham s Broadway romance The Circle at the Ambassador Theatre in New York 21 Johns s screen work of the 1980s took second place to her work on stage 1 In 1982 she was cast as Laura Fitzpatrick Morgan in the American British biographical television film Little Gloria Happy at Last with Lucy Gutteridge in the leading role of Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt 103 Johns had a starring role in Nukie 1987 a South African science fiction film in which she played the decisive Sister Anne alongside actors Anthony Morrison Steve Railsback and Ronald France 104 105 In 1988 Johns provided the voice for Miss Grimwood proprietor of Miss Grimwood s Finishing School for Girls in Scooby Doo and the Ghoul School The plot follows the characters as Miss Grimwood hires them as her gym teachers once there however they find it is actually a school for the daughters of paranormal beings 106 107 The same year Johns starred in Zelly and Me an American drama film written directed and produced by Tina Rathborne In it Johns plays Co Co the wealthy grandmother of protagonist Phoebe played by Alexandra Johnes and an egoist with a deeply competitive streak 108 During the first season of NBC s hit sitcom Cheers Johns guest starred as Diane Chambers mother Helen Chambers an eccentric dowager who due to a stipulation in Diane s late father s will will lose all her money unless Diane is married by the next day 109 In 1985 Johns played Bridget O Hara in the episode Sing a Song of Murder of CBS s crime drama television series Murder She Wrote working again with Angela Lansbury 1 From 1988 to 1989 she played Trudie Pepper a senior citizen living in an Arizona retirement community in the television sitcom Coming of Age also on CBS 110 Following earlier work in the 1970s Johns narrated two more albums for Caedmon Records The Light Princess in 1981 and Bargain for Frances and Other Frances Stories in 1984 91 111 In 1991 Johns returned to A Little Night Music aged 68 this time playing Madame Armfeldt the mother of her original character Desiree with Gordon Davidson directing at the Ricardo Montalban Theatre in Los Angeles Following this she starred as Myrtle Bledsoe in the premiere of Horton Foote s A Coffin in Egypt from June to July 1998 at the Bay Street Theatre in New York 112 On screen Johns had the main part of Darjeeling alongside Honor Blackman and Derek Jacobi on the American children s television anthology series ABC Weekend Specials in the short The Secret Garden which aired on 5 November 1994 113 114 Johns appeared in just three films in the 1990s as the grandmother in each She played the camera toting grandmother in the 1995 Sandra Bullock hit While You Were Sleeping 26 and the waspish Grandma Rose in Ted Demme s 1994 black comedy film The Ref Of this role Caution Spoilers Sarah notes that Glynis Johns as the awful Rose is terrific her character was often at odds with her son Lloyd Chasseur played by Kevin Spacey 115 In 1998 Johns was named a Disney legend in the film category 116 Her last film appearance was as the grandmother of Molly Shannon s Mary Gallagher in the 1999 film Superstar 117 Public image editIn September 1946 when she was still fairly new to the profession Powell and Pressburger hailed Johns one of the most sought after of all young British stars 118 She was voted by British exhibitors as the 10th most popular box office star in 1951 and 1952 119 120 By the time of Loser Takes All 1956 Johns was a top box office draw 1 The UK and US edit nbsp Studio publicity photo of Johns in 1959 A devotee of British cinema Johns said in 1946 I would sooner play in a good British picture than in the majority of American pictures I have seen 121 though she still made some American films She found her stardom in 1940s Britain wherein her glistening blue eyes and perfect comic timing made her British cinema s most sought after female lead and was already a star by the time she was in No Highway in the Sky a joint British and American production produced in 1951 and her first role in American cinema 3 Johns became an indelible part of the cinema histories of both Britain and America maintaining her British and American careers simultaneously Following No Highway in the Sky 1951 she took on increasingly more roles in America and elsewhere the majority of her television credits were American including her eponymous 1963 sitcom Glynis though her film and theatre credits with several notable exceptions were British 3 Personal life editGlynis has light brown hair blue eyes and is five feet four inches 163 cm in height Dancing is still of great interest to her and is her favourite recreation coupled with the collecting of good syncopated numbers Glenn Miller s In the Mood is her favourite Her favourite classical composers are Grieg Mozart and Debussy Riding tennis and ice skating are her sports and her ideal holiday is one spent in a mountain resort where there is plenty of night life Her favourite reading is autobiographies preferably those of celebrities she knows personally The Voice 14 Saturday 20 September 1952 Relationships edit Johns was married four times She met her first husband Anthony Forwood while rehearsing for Quiet Wedding 1941 A year after they met Forwood asked her on a date and they were married within a month on 29 August 1942 in Westminster London The couple s only child actor Gareth Forwood was born on 14 October 1945 122 Following a lengthy court proceeding she was granted a divorce on 25 June 1948 because of adultery by her husband 123 Johns began dating producer Antony Darnborough after working together on Encore 1951 124 He proposed to her at Windsor s Sunningdale Golf Club in June 1951 125 The Daily Telegraph later said that theirs was to have been one of the most glittering show business weddings but it never took place Gertie 1951 took her to Broadway and their wedding was postponed in December 1951 it was called off The former couple remained good friends and she appeared in his 1953 television drama Personal Affair 124 126 On 1 February 1952 in Manhattan New York Johns married David Foster a Royal Navy officer and later president of Colgate Palmolive 127 They divorced on 17 May 1956 on the ground of his adultery with an unnamed woman 128 He did not contest the charge 129 Johns married Cecil Henderson a businessman on 10 October 1960 in Westminster London 130 They divorced on 21 June 1962 He cited adultery and she did not contest the charge 131 Johns s fourth and last husband was the writer and United States Air Force captain Elliott Arnold 132 They announced their engagement on 25 June 1964 and were married on 1 October in Los Angeles California 133 134 They divorced on 4 January 1973 94 135 In a 1973 interview with Robert Berkvist Johns described in her experience the compatibility of theatre and marriage Acting is my highest form of intelligence the time when I use the best part of my brain I was always told by my married friends for example that I could apply that intelligence to something else some other aspect of living but I can t I don t have the same flair in other things On the subject of a fifth marriage she reflected that I d tread very softly in that area Very softly I certainly wouldn t rush into anything again and I d have to have an awful lot in common with anyone I d consider marrying next time Why so many marriages It was absolute conservatism on my part I was brought up to feel that if you wanted to have an affair with a man well you married him I have friends who if they d followed that rule would have collected an awful lot of pieces of paper by now 94 Following the death of her mother Alyce Steele Wareham on 1 September 1971 in Westminster Johns s father Mervyn Johns married actress Diana Churchill on 4 December 1976 in Hillingdon London 136 Johns grandson Thomas Forwood is a French writer and film director 5 130 Health and voice edit Following her marriage to David Foster in 1952 she became fourteen pounds 6 5 kg overweight Talking to Lydia Lane she describes this ordeal I was relaxed happy with little to do and I suppose I simply didn t burn up as much energy as usual My appetite stayed the same and I gained a few pounds at a time until one day I discovered I was fourteen pounds overweight Her solution was simple I m convinced that weight is a mental problem she said I counted calories for a while but nothing happened until I became really disturbed about it From that moment on I began to lose weight and in three weeks I was back to normal The point I am trying to make is that dieting alone is not enough It must be accompanied by a strong will and determination to lose weight 137 Johns previously had severe migraines In a 1955 interview she admitted that Only recently have I learned how to relax And since I have the migraine headaches which have plagued me for years have disappeared I ve finally learned to be still inside Someone told me once When you let God in on your problems you can let go and relax and I ve found that it works 137 A few days before Johns was due to play Desiree Armfeldt at the opening night of A Little Night Music in 1973 she was rushed to hospital for emergency treatment of an intestinal infection The debut was postponed by a week and Tammy Grimes was thought to be a likely successor Though her doctor was aghast Johns rejoined the show after just two days I was not going to have anybody else sing my songs she said 94 Johns suffered from stage fright throughout most of her career In a 2023 interview her grandson Thomas said Of course she came across as supremely confident but in private she suffered quite crippling stage fright that she never really got over only managed so that makes her career even more remarkable 5 Johns s voice has been described by a press agent as like the sound of a brook burbling over a pebbled bed 138 Longevity and death edit Johns was predeceased by all four of her husbands The first to die was her third husband Cecil Henderson in 1978 followed by her fourth husband Elliott Arnold in 1980 her first husband Anthony Forwood in 1988 and her second husband David Foster in 2010 Her son Gareth Forwood died in 2007 from a heart attack during cancer treatment 139 With the death of Olivia de Havilland in 2020 Johns became the oldest living Academy Award nominee in any acting category 1 In 2021 with the death of Betty White she became the oldest living Disney Legend 140 Johns retired to the US 141 where she later resided at the Belmont Village Hollywood Heights a senior living community located near the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles California 141 142 Johns died in Los Angeles at an assisted living home on 4 January 2024 at age 100 from natural causes 143 4 130 She was interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park Hollywood California Advocacy editSir Chris Bryant Labour MP for Rhondda described Johns as a lifetime ambassador for the creative arts in the UK and particularly Wales 5 In 1971 Johns told BBC Cymru Wales that a national theatre in Wales would be a positive addition to the country because Welsh people have a love for their art and are not mercenary about it 144 Filmography and discography editMain article Glynis Johns filmography and discography South Riding 1938 Murder in the Family 1938 Prison Without Bars 1938 On the Night of the Fire 1939 Under Your Hat 1940 The Briggs Family 1940 The Thief of Bagdad 1940 The Prime Minister 1940 49th Parallel 1941 The Adventures of Tartu 1943 The Halfway House 1944 Perfect Strangers 1945 This Man Is Mine 1946 Frieda 1947 An Ideal Husband 1947 Miranda 1948 Third Time Lucky 1949 Helter Skelter 1949 Dear Mr Prohack 1949 State Secret 1950 The Blue Lamp 1950 Flesh and Blood 1951 No Highway in the Sky 1951 Appointment with Venus 1951 Encore 1951 The Magic Box 1951 The Card 1952 The Sword and the Rose 1953 Personal Affair 1953 Rob Roy the Highland Rogue 1953 The Weak and the Wicked 1954 The Seekers 1954 The Beachcomber 1954 Mad About Men 1954 Josephine and Men 1955 The Court Jester 1955 Loser Takes All 1956 Around the World in 80 Days 1956 All Mine to Give 1957 Another Time Another Place 1958 Shake Hands with the Devil 1959 Last of the Few 1960 The Spider s Web 1960 The Sundowners 1960 The Cabinet of Caligari 1962 The Chapman Report 1962 Papa s Delicate Condition 1963 Mary Poppins 1964 Dear Brigitte 1965 Don t Just Stand There 1968 Lock Up Your Daughters 1969 Under Milk Wood 1972 The Vault of Horror 1973 Nukie 1987 Zelly and Me 1988 The Ref 1994 While You Were Sleeping 1995 Superstar 1999 Honours and awards editAward Year Category Title of work Result Ref s National Board of Review 1942 Best Acting 49th Parallel Won 145 Academy Award 1961 Best Supporting Actress The Sundowners Nominated 145 Golden Globe Awards 1963 Best Actress in a Motion Picture Drama The Chapman Report Nominated 146 Laurel Awards 1965 Female Supporting Performance Mary Poppins Won 147 Tony Award 1973 Best Actress in a Musical A Little Night Music Won 145 Drama Desk Award Outstanding Actress in a Musical Won 148 Laurence Olivier Awards 1977 Actress of the Year in a New Play Cause celebre Nominated 149 Variety Club 1978 Best Actress Won 150 Disney Legends 1998 Honoured 151 See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Film portal nbsp Theatre portal nbsp United Kingdom portal List of British actors List of South African actors List of Welsh women List of Batman cast members List of British Academy Award nominees and winners List of actors with Academy Award nominations List of Broadway musicals stars List of Disney Legends List of centenarians actors filmmakers and entertainers Cinema of the United Kingdom Theatre of the United KingdomNotes edit Johns was a British subject of the Crown via the legal doctrine of jus sanguinis and also of South Africa via the doctrine of jus soli 1 She became a naturalised US citizen after emigrating to the US in the mid 1950s and giving up her British and South African papers 2 3 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Parkinson David 9 April 2022 Glynis amp Angela Ninetysomething Marvels Cinema Paradiso Cinema Paradiso Retrieved 15 December 2022 Glynis Johns at ElCinema com a b c Film Star Favourite Glynis Johns Best of British Magazine Best of British 2 November 2010 Retrieved 8 March 2023 a b Mary Poppins actress Glynis Johns dies aged 100 BBC News 4 January 2024 Retrieved 4 January 2024 a b c d e f Sturgis John 14 May 2023 Glynis Johns Britain s oldest living star of stage and screen is still shining Daily Express Retrieved 30 July 2023 a b c d Glynis Johns TCM com Retrieved 3 November 2017 a b Arkatov Janice 17 April 1991 A New Role in an Old Favorite Stage Glynis Johns returns to A Little Night Music At 67 she is relinquishing her signature song and part to another actress happily she says Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Retrieved 15 November 2022 a b Glynis Johns Desert Sun Volume 36 Number 226 26 April 1963 National Library of New Zealand Steele Payne New Company Glynis Johns leninimports Retrieved 17 October 2022 a b Anon 2021 Johns Glynis Who s Who A amp C Black doi 10 1093 ww 9780199540884 013 U22077 Subscription or UK public library membership required Benedick Adam 12 September 1992 Obituary Mervyn Johns The Independent Archived from the original on 12 May 2022 Retrieved 23 December 2017 Variety February 1952 Internet Archive 6 February 1952 Retrieved 17 October 2022 Glynis Margaret Payne Forwood to David Foster New York Feb 2 a b c d e f The Life Story of Glynis Johns The Voice Tasmania 20 September 1952 Retrieved 19 October 2022 Glynis Johns The Powell amp Pressburger Pages Picturegoer 28 September 1946 Retrieved 26 September 2022 she came to this country when she was still a child and attended Clifton High School Then she attended the Cone School of Dancing For two hours each day she put in intensive training at the rail in the ballet class Glynis Johns Disney Legend The Times 1992 UK English The Times London 1 April 1992 Retrieved 19 October 2022 Plomley Roy 24 April 1976 Desert Island Discs Glynis Johns Desert Island Discs BBC BBC Radio 4 Retrieved 3 November 2022 three weeks old Judgement Day programme The London Stage 1930 1939 A Calendar of Productions Performers and Personnel Rowman amp Littlefield 15 May 2014 p 491 ISBN 9780810893030 via Google Books a b c d e f g Glynis Johns Past Productions Theatricalia Matthew Somerville 20 May 1990 Retrieved 19 October 2022 Alma Rattenbury Cause Celebre 1977 March 1978 Her Majesty s Theatre London and Haymarket Theatre Leicester Leontine 13 Rue de L Amour Forum Theatre Billingham Paul Elliott Entertainments Ltd Starchoice Season Ltd and Triumph Theatre Productions Ltd January 8th May 1976 Phoenix Theatre London Theatre Royal Norwich and other locations Monush Barry April 2003 The Encyclopedia of Hollywood Film Actors From the Silent Era to 1965 Applause p 367 ISBN 9781480329980 via Google Books Gordon Roger L 7 September 2018 Supporting Actors in Motion Pictures Volume II Dorrance Publishing Company p 30 ISBN 9781480958418 via Google Books Weaver John T 1970 Forty Years of Screen Credits 1929 1969 Scarecrow Press p 738 ISBN 9780810802995 via Google Books Reid John Howard 2009 Film Noir Detective and Mystery Movies on DVD A Guide to the Best in Suspense Lulu com p 172 ISBN 9781435730106 via Google Books a b c d Glynis Johns on TV Guide Perfect Strangers Review By Robyn Karney Radio Times London 1945 Retrieved 19 October 2022 Movie of the Week Frieda Life 8 September 1947 p 67 via Google Books Glynis Johns has a mermaid tail in Miranda The Australian Women s Weekly Vol 15 no 6 19 July 1947 p 36 Retrieved 31 August 2017 via National Library of Australia A Movie Review by David L Vineyard Mad About Men 1954 MysteryFile Vanillamist 24 March 2010 Retrieved 19 October 2022 Johns is a revelation long platinum hair Khirghiz eyes and that breathless voice perfect for this sexy romp Miranda 1948 ScreenOnline BFI Screenonline 2014 Retrieved 19 October 2022 strikingly unusual actress facially reminiscent of Gloria Grahame Morley Nathan 30 April 2021 Disney s British Gentleman The Life and Career of David Tomlinson The History Press ISBN 9780750997577 via Google Books Dear Mr Prohack 1949 Ftvdb bfi org uk 16 April 2009 Archived from the original on 11 September 2017 Retrieved 12 March 2014 Dear Mr Prohack 1949 Britmovie Home of British Films Britmovie Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 12 March 2014 Crowther Bosley 15 July 1950 Movie Review Dear Mr Prohack THE SCREEN Austerity Is Dull The New York Times Retrieved 12 March 2014 Ezard John 2 October 2004 Sexy self image that revved up Dirk Bogarde The Guardian Reid John 6 November 2005 These Movies Won No Hollywood Awards Lulu com p 34 ISBN 9781411658462 via Google Books Third Time Lucky 1949 Directed by Gordon Parry Letterboxd Letterboxd Limited 13 July 2018 Retrieved 19 October 2022 Glynis is as winningly winsome as ever her husky tones approximating a British Jean Arthur Davis Amy M 31 January 2014 Handsome Heroes amp Vile Villains Men in Disney s Feature Animation Indiana University Press p 52 ISBN 9780861969074 via Google Books Miranda 1947 Radio Times Immediate Media Company 24 May 1948 Retrieved 19 October 2022 Blottner Gene 19 March 2015 Columbia Noir A Complete Filmography 1940 1962 McFarland amp Company p 213 ISBN 9781476617619 via Google Books Reid John Howard March 2006 America s Best Britain s Finest A Survey of Mixed Movies Lulu com p 99 ISBN 9781411678774 via Google Books Fetrow Alan G 1999 Feature Films 1950 1959 A United States Filmography McFarland p 298 ISBN 9780786404278 via Google Books Fowler Karin J 1995 David Niven A Bio bibliography Greenwood Press p 116 ISBN 9780313280443 via Google Books Slide Anthony 18 January 2013 Fifty Classic British Films 1932 1982 A Pictorial Record Dover Publications p 79 ISBN 9780486148519 via Google Books Alec Guinness and Glynis Johns Play a Crafty Pair in The Promoter at Fine Arts The New York Times New York 29 October 1952 Retrieved 19 October 2022 Studio One 1948 Full Cast and Crew Glynis Johns on Plex Cue The Weekly Magazine of New York Life Cue Publishing Company 1958 p 38 via Google Books Glynis Johns at IMDb Lloyd Jones Robin 15 August 2013 The Sunlit Summit The Life of W H Murray Sandstone Press Limited p Contents ISBN 9781908737397 via Google Books Scheuer Steven H 1990 Movies on TV and Videocassette 1991 1992 Random House Publishing Group ISBN 9780553288018 via Google Books Films and Filming Volume 19 Issue 3 Hansom Books 1973 p 26 via Google Books Brookes Geoff 15 September 2015 Swansea in the 1950s Ten Years that Changed a City Amberley Publishing p Contents ISBN 9781445639581 via Google Books Croaky voiced actress in big roles Brisbane Telegraph Queensland Australia 29 October 1953 p 23 LATE CITY Retrieved 7 July 2020 via National Library of Australia Hoylake Girl Is National Bathing Beauty Glynis Johns Is Among Judges In Final Of National Bathing Beauty Contest 1954 on British Pathe Drew Bernard A 4 December 2013 Motion Picture Series and Sequels A Reference Guide Taylor amp Francis p 223 ISBN 9781317928942 via Google Books Therson Cofie M 4 May 1957 Daily Graphic Issue 2057 May 6 1957 Graphic Communications p 6 via Google Books The Court Jester 1955 Letterboxd Retrieved 19 October 2022 played with cunning precision by the wonderful Glynis Johns Hume Alan Owen Alan 5 May 2004 A Life Through the Lens Memoirs of a Film Cameraman McFarland Incorporated Publishers p 196 ISBN 9780786418039 via Google Books New York Magazine New York Media LLC 25 August 1980 p 106 via Google Books Schiltz Francoise 4 May 2012 The Future Revisited Jules Verne on Screen in 1950s America Andrews UK Limited p Contents ISBN 9780957112858 via Google Books Mitchell Myrtle Tews Mitchell Bette Lind Marjorie Scoville Rogene 2004 Roots and Rushes Town of Nepeuskun and Extras EP DIRECT p 291 via Google Books Juroe Charles 19 July 2018 Bond the Beatles and My Year with Marilyn 50 Years as a Movie Marketing Man McFarland Incorporated Publishers p 81 ISBN 9781476675107 via Google Books Glynis Johns on Masterworks Broadway Glynis Johns in the 1956 Broadway revival of G B Shaw s Major Barbara on New York Public Library Digital Collections Bunson Matthew September 2000 The Complete Christie An Agatha Christie Encyclopedia Gallery Books p 309 ISBN 9780671028312 via Google Books The Sundowners Variety Variety Media LLC 31 December 1959 ISBN 9780671028312 Retrieved 3 December 2022 Film on Australians Opens at Music Hall The New York Times New York 9 December 1960 Retrieved 19 October 2022 Gabbard Glen O Gabbard Krin 1999 Psychiatry and the Cinema American Psychiatric Press p 90 ISBN 9780880489645 via Google Books Vollmar James 28 January 2015 Juke Box Karma Troubador Publishing Limited p 31 ISBN 9781784621100 via Google Books Glynis Johns George Cukor 1972 TV Interview A Little Night Music on YouTube Papa s Delicate Condition DVD Talk DVDTalk 1 July 2008 Retrieved 19 October 2022 as well as a neatly understated turn by Johns Walt Disney American Experience Season 27 Episode 4 5 PBS September 2015 Archived from the original on 21 April 2016 Retrieved 4 September 2017 Saving Mr Banks True Story History vs Hollywood Archived from the original on 19 September 2020 Retrieved 9 September 2020 Koenig David 1997 Mouse Under Glass Secrets of Disney Animation amp Theme Parks Bonaventure Press p 128 ISBN 9780964060500 via Google Books Powers James 27 August 1974 Mary Poppins THR s 1964 Review The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 3 December 2022 Rowan Terry 30 August 2015 Motion Pictures From the Fabulous 1960 s Lulu com p 44 ISBN 9781329436985 via Google Books Rowan Terry 27 March 2017 The Kings amp Queens of Hollywood Comedy Lulu com p 81 ISBN 9781365853647 via Google Books Willis John 1969 Screen World 1969 Volume 20 Crown Publishers p 95 ISBN 9780819603104 via Google Books Gifford Denis April 2016 British Film Catalogue Two Volume Set The Fiction Film The Non Fiction Film Volume 1 Taylor amp Francis p 498 ISBN 9781317740636 via Google Books Sherman Robert B 1998 Walt s Time from before to beyond Santa Clarita Camphor Tree Publishers p 50 Down Beat Volume 30 Maher Publications 1963 p 45 via Google Books Terrace Vincent 2009 Encyclopedia of Television Shows 1925 Through 2007 A E McFarland p 302 ISBN 9780786433056 via Google Books Leszczak Bob 2 November 2012 Single Season Sitcoms 1948 1979 A Complete Guide McFarland Incorporated Publishers p 58 ISBN 9780786468126 via Google Books Leszczak Bob 2012 Single Season Sitcoms 1948 1979 A Complete Guide McFarland p 58 ISBN 9780786493050 Retrieved 12 August 2017 Brooks Tim Marsh Earle F 17 October 2007 The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946 Present 9 ed Ballantine Books p 543 ISBN 978 0 345 49773 4 Bickford Swarthout Doris 2008 Rudy Vallee BearManor Media via Google Books page needed Gertie Broadway Original Cast at BroadwayWorld Gordon S Stanley 25 February 2011 My Two Wives and Three Husbands Savant Books and Publications p 144 ISBN 9780982998786 via Google Books a b Glynis Johns Discography on Discogs Frances Stories by Russell Hoban read by Glynis Johns on SoundCloud Gussow Mel 11 March 2008 Send In the Sondheim City Opera Revives Night Music as Composer Dotes The New York Times Retrieved 10 June 2008 a b c d Berkvist Robert 11 March 1973 Miss Johns Hits a High Note The New York Times New York Retrieved 19 October 2022 Laufe Abe 1977 Broadway s Greatest Musicals Funk amp Wagnalls p 417 ISBN 9780308103177 via Google Books How to Succeed in Show Business by Really Singing The New York Times New York 24 September 1995 Retrieved 19 October 2022 Willis John A 1974 John Willis Theatre World Volume 31 Crown Publishers p 190 via Google Books Loynd Roy 31 July 1987 RING ROUND MOON AT COLONY STUDIO Los Angeles Times Los Angeles United States Retrieved 18 November 2022 Yet More Theatre Reminiscences November 1977 to February 1978 Cause Celebre Her Majesty s Theatre London 27 February 1978 I remember this as a riveting play the first time I had seen a courtroom drama and you should never underestimate how exciting they can be Glynis Johns was superb as Alma Rattenbury and Lee Montague and Bernard Archard were fantastic as the opposing barristers Davis Mark Earnshaw Tony 15 September 2014 Under Milk Wood Revisited The Wales of Dylan Thomas Amberley Publishing ISBN 9781445637389 via Google Books Maxford Howard 30 June 2022 TV Gothic The Golden Age of Small Screen Horror McFarland Incorporated Publishers p 279 ISBN 9781476645537 via Google Books Johns Ian 8 September 2019 Mrs Amworth Wyrd Britain Retrieved 19 October 2022 the titular lady played with flamboyant aplomb by the fabulous Glynis Johns Chandler Charlotte 9 December 2008 The Girl Who Walked Home Alone Bette Davis A Personal Biography Simon amp Schuster p Contents ISBN 9781847396983 via Google Books NUKIE EW com Retrieved 21 May 2021 Nukie www tcm com Retrieved 21 May 2021 Lenburg Jeff 1999 The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons Checkmark Books p 321 ISBN 0 8160 3831 7 Retrieved 6 June 2020 Browning John Edgar Picart Caroline Joan Kay 10 January 2014 Dracula in Visual Media Film Television Comic Book and Electronic Game Appearances 1921 2010 McFarland Incorporated Publishers p 155 ISBN 9780786462018 via Google Books Canby Vincent 15 April 1988 Review Film Tangled Childhood in Zelly and Me The New York Times Retrieved 30 August 2012 Bjorklund Dennis September 2014 Cheers TV Show A Comprehensive Reference Praetorian Publishing p 294 ISBN 9780967985237 via Google Books Terrace Vincent 2011 Encyclopedia of Television Shows 1925 through 2010 2nd ed Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company p 203 ISBN 978 0 7864 6477 7 Bargain for Frances and Other Frances Stories at Open Library Glynis Johns Opens Foote s Coffin in Egypt at Bay Street June 17 Playbill Playbill 17 June 1998 The Secret Garden Episode aired Nov 5 1994 TV Y 1h 9m on IMDb Marill Alvin H 2003 More Theatre Stage to Screen to Television 1993 2001 Volume 2 Google Books Scarecrow Press p 499 ISBN 9780810845367 Review of The Ref Caution Spoilers Caution Spoilers WordPress 3 December 2016 Retrieved 19 October 2022 Glynis Johns D23 Disney Retrieved 26 January 2017 Banks Michelle August 2000 Magill s Cinema Annual Cengage Gale p 480 ISBN 9780787629038 via Google Books The Powell amp Pressburger Pages 28 September 1946 Vivien Leigh Actress of the Year Townsville Daily Bulletin Qld 29 December 1951 p 1 Retrieved 9 July 2012 via National Library of Australia COMEDIAN TOPS FILM POLL The Sunday Herald Sydney 28 December 1952 p 4 Retrieved 9 July 2012 via National Library of Australia Tree Laurence 28 September 1946 Glynis Johns gangs warily Picturegoer McFarlane Brian Slide Anthony 1 January 2013 The Encyclopedia of British Film Fourth Edition Manchester University Press ISBN 9780719091391 via Google Books Decree For Actress Daily Mirror British Newspaper Archive 26 June 1948 Retrieved 30 December 2022 a b Antony Darnborough The Daily Telegraph 29 December 2000 Retrieved 30 December 2022 BEAUMONT UNION REVIEW WINTER 2017 Johns Glynis 1923 Screen Online Encyclopedia of British Film 2014 Retrieved 19 October 2022 she had a well publicised engagement to producer Antony Darnborough Lieutenant Commander David Foster The Telegraph 18 July 2010 Retrieved 5 January 2024 Glynis Johns Turner Classic Movies Retrieved 8 March 2023 Glynis Johns gets her divorce Western Mail Cardiff 18 May 1956 Retrieved 5 January 2024 via British Newspaper Archive a b c Gates Anita 4 January 2024 Glynis Johns Tony Winner for A Little Night Music Dies at 100 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 4 January 2024 Glynis is divorced on the ground of adultery eresources nlb gov sg 23 June 1962 Retrieved 8 March 2023 Papers of Elliott Arnold Special Collections University of Arizona Library Retrieved 8 March 2023 Glynis Johns Is Engaged New York Times 25 June 1964 British Actress Married Tucson Daily Citizen archives 2 October 1964 Glynis Johns Companions tcm com retrieved 7 April 2019 Benedick Adam 13 October 1994 Obituary Diana Churchill The Independent London Retrieved 15 November 2022 a b Glynis Johns Beauty in classic Hollywood Beauty in classic Hollywood 1955 Retrieved 19 October 2022 Berg Louis 2 August 1953 I m put together all wrong St Louis Globe Democrat Newspapers Retrieved 30 December 2022 Sulway Verity 27 August 2021 Mary Poppins cast now suicidal depression hepatitis death and botched surgery Mirror Retrieved 17 November 2022 Hanna Jeremy 5 October 2023 Mary Poppins Legend Celebrates 100th Birthday Inside the Magic Retrieved 10 October 2023 a b Glynis Johns Belmont Village Senior Living Archived from the original on 21 September 2023 Pennacchio George 5 October 2023 Actress Glynis Johns turns 100 reflects on career dating back to 1930s ABC7 com Retrieved 6 October 2023 Yang Maya 4 January 2024 Glynis Johns who played Mrs Banks in Mary Poppins dies at the age of 100 from natural causes The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 4 January 2024 huwthomas 26 October 2016 Glynis Johns and Clifford Evans Tweet via Twitter a b c Parkinson David 5 October 2023 Glynis Johns 10 Essential Films British Film Institute Retrieved 5 January 2024 Glynis Johns Golden Globe Awards Retrieved 5 January 2024 Portee Alex Dasrath Diana 4 January 2024 Glynis Johns best known for role in Mary Poppins as Mrs Winifred Banks dies at 100 Today Retrieved 5 January 2024 Glynis Johns Playbill Retrieved 5 January 2024 Olivier Winners 1977 officiallondontheatre com Society of London Theatre Archived from the original on 18 March 2018 Retrieved 9 May 2022 Cool Arrival for Actress Edmonton Journal 19 August 1978 p B1 Retrieved 5 January 2024 via Newspapers com Remembering Disney Legend Glynis Johns The Walt Disney Company 4 January 2024 Retrieved 5 January 2024 External links editGlynis Johns at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Data from Wikidata Glynis Johns at the Internet Broadway Database nbsp Glynis Johns at IMDb Glynis Johns at Turner Classic Movies Glynis Johns images at the National Portrait Gallery Glynis Johns interview on BBC Radio 4 Desert Island Discs 24 April 1976 Glynis Johns discography at Discogs Library resources about Glynis Johns Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries By Glynis Johns Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Glynis Johns amp oldid 1217861341, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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