Brenda de Banzie

Brenda de Banzie

ActressSoundtrack
Born
July 28, 1909
Died
March 5, 1981
Awards
0 wins, 1 nominations

The daughter of a musical conductor, fair-haired, matronly Brenda de Banzie appeared in around 40 films. As the result of two outstanding performances she became an unexpected star when well into her middle age. Brenda first came to public notice as a sixteen year old chorus girl on the London stage…

Biography

The daughter of a musical conductor, fair-haired, matronly Brenda de Banzie appeared in around 40 films. As the result of two outstanding performances she became an unexpected star when well into her middle age. Brenda first came to public notice as a sixteen year old chorus girl on the London stage in "Du Barry Was a Lady" in 1942. By that time, she had already been treading the boards in repertory for some seven years. The theatre was, first and foremost, her preferred medium. In the early 1950s, she had an excellent run of top-billed performances at the West End which included "Venus Observed" with Laurence Olivier, and "Murder Mistaken", in which she played a wealthy hotel owner whose husband is plotting to bump her off for her money. For this, she won the coveted Clarence Derwent Award as Best Supporting Actress.

Critical plaudits tempted her to try her luck on screen, so Brenda eventually made her celluloid debut in Anthony Bushell's murder mystery The Long Dark Hall (1951). Her performance -- as a rather vulgar and dowdy boarding house landlady -- drew good notices, including one from Bosley Crowther of The New York Times. In 1954, director David Lean cast Brenda in her defining role as Maggie Hobson, an ambitious spinster, opposite Charles Laughton and John Mills in Hobson's Choice (1954). As it turned out, she pretty much stole every scene from her illustrious co-stars. Rather surprisingly, a BAFTA eluded her. In 1958, Brenda landed the prize role of Phoebe Rice, the bitter, alcoholic wife of a second-rate music hall performer (played superbly by Olivier) in John Osborne's The Entertainer (1960). She recreated her performance for Broadway and for the film version in 1960 and received a Tony Award nomination. Sadly, despite such promise her stock did not improve thereafter and she was relegated for the remainder of her career to matronly character roles. Brenda passed away on the operating table during surgery for a non-malignant brain tumor in March 1981.

Actress

The Ten CommandmentsThe Ten Commandments(1971)as Mother
W. Somerset MaughamW. Somerset Maugham(1969)as Mrs. Albert Forrester
A Matter of InnocenceA Matter of Innocence(1967)as Eva Innes-Hook
Out of the UnknownOut of the Unknown(1965)as Mrs. Dakers
Drama 61-67Drama 61-67(1961)as Mrs Massingham Fox

Soundtrack

The EntertainerThe Entertainer(1960)

Archive Footage

Invitation au voyageInvitation au voyage(2016)as Self
The English ProgrammeThe English Programme(1976)as Maggie Hobson
Great PerformancesGreat Performances(1971)as Lucy Drayton (clip from The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956))

Known for

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Photos 26

Laurence Olivier, Alan Bates, Gilbert Davis, and Brenda de Banzie in The Entertainer (1960)Laurence Olivier, Alan Bates, Brenda de Banzie, and Joan Plowright in The Entertainer (1960)Alan Bates and Brenda de Banzie in The Entertainer (1960)Brenda de Banzie and Joan Plowright in The Entertainer (1960)Brenda de Banzie and Joan Plowright in The Entertainer (1960)Brenda de Banzie and Roger Livesey in The Entertainer (1960)