Annabel Maule
Margaret Annabel Maule (born 8 September 1922) is a British actress.[1][2][3] She played in several films and television series as well as numerous characters in Sunday Night Theatre on BBC.
Annabel Maule | |
---|---|
Born | Margaret Annabel Maule September 8, 1922 |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1938–1985 |
Life and career
Maule was born in Lambeth, London in September 1922 to director-manager Donovan Maude and Mollie Shiells. She is the sister of actor Robin Maule (1924–1942).[4] Maule married Douglas Dickson in Chelsea, London, in 1946, though the marriage was later dissolved.[5]
She appeared in the West End in the play His Excellency in 1950 and 1951.
Maule published a book, "Theatre Near the Equator: The Donovan Maule Story", about her family life in 2004.[6]
Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1938 | Save a Little Sunshine | Marlene | |
1939 | First Stop North | Bett | TV Movie |
1948 | Wuthering Heights | Isabella Linton | TV Movie |
1952 | Beauty and the Beast | Jane | TV Movie |
1956 | The Tamer Tamed | Bianca | TV Movie |
1957 | Romantic Chapter | Isabel | TV Movie |
1957 | A Time of Day | Ruth Calthorpe | |
1959 | Model for Murder | Hospital Sister | |
1959 | The Hill | Maude | TV Movie |
1959 | Probation Officer | Eva Grantham | |
1956–1959 | BBC Sunday-Night Theatre | Mrs. Kirkley / Connie Ewing | |
1959 | Interpol Calling | Amy | |
1960 | Danger Tomorrow | Helen | |
1960 | Inside Story | Julie Wilson | |
1960 | ITV Television Playhouse | Mrs. Sybil Leighton | |
1960 | On Trial | Rebecca Jarrett | |
1960 | Maigret | Dr. Lucile Decaux | |
1961 | Theatre 70 | Joan Penrose | |
1957–1961 | Armchair Theatre | Mother / Probation Officer / Sister Taylor / Miss Klegg | |
1960–1961 | BBC Sunday-Night Play | Peggy Dobson / Sophie Vauquin | |
1961 | Boyd Q.C. | Hilda Venning | |
1962 | Compact | Jessica Gilchrist | |
1965 | The Flying Swan | Leonora Croft | |
1966 | The Wednesday Play | Miss Hart | |
1968 | Dixon of Dock Green | Eleanor King / Eleanor Smith | |
1985 | Out of Africa | Lady Byrne | (final film role) |
References
- "Annabel Maule | Theatricalia". theatricalia.com.
- "Annabel Maule". BFI.
- "Annabel Maule | Movies and Filmography". AllMovie.
- "Annabel Maule". National Portrait Gallery, London. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
- Who's Who in the Theatre, Volume 15 (1972), pg. 1163
- Theatre Near the Equator: The Donovan Maule Story
External links
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