This ill-fated British actress was born in the Shepherd's Bush area of
London, England, on February 27, 1936. After the outbreak of World War
II, young Virginia and her family were evacuated to South Africa. She
eventually returned to London and entered a convent school where the
pretty, gray-eyed brunette developed an interest in acting.
Virginia attended drama school and finally broke into the business with TV
parts, usually playing demure young lasses in assorted dashing action
series such as "The Buccaneers" and The Adventures of Robin Hood."
Making a minor film debut for director
Roy Boulting with
Happy Is the Bride (1958), she
achieved better notices with her second film. In
Our Virgin Island (1958), she played
the bride of
John Cassavetes who learns
to adapt to a Robinson Crusoe-styled existence. Co-starring an
up-and-coming
Sidney Poitier, the story
lightly tinges on racial issues.
On the strength of this, Virginia won a
contract with British Lion Pictures and showcased well in
The Man Upstairs (1958) with
Richard Attenborough, but less so
playing a airline stewardess in the mediocre
Jet Storm (1959) which also wasted a
top-notch cast including Attenborough,
Mai Zetterling,
Diane Cilento,
Stanley Baker and
Sybil Thorndike.
Virginia's reticent but sincere approach to films worked remarkably well in an understated way,
and she proved just as quietly compelling on stage with a prime role in
"The Catalyst" in 1958 with
Phil Brown and
Renée Asherson. She showed escalating
promise and earned BAFTA nominations for her memorable work in
Young and Willing (1962)
and as
Peter Sellers' forlorn wife in
Only Two Can Play (1962), but then all filming stopped.
This abrupt end was primarily due to her marriage in
1962 and a change of focus on family life. Other than occasional TV appearances
in such popular series as "Danger Man" and "The Prisoner," Virginia was
seldom seen. It was learned that following the birth of her second son
in February, 1966, she began showing acute signs of post-natal
depression.
In the summer of 1967 Virginia returned auspiciously to
filming with a remake of the soap drama
Interlude (1968) playing the
cast-off wife of orchestra conductor
Oskar Werner. She suffered a severe nervous
breakdown following the film's shoot and never recovered.
On a bitterly cold day on January 24, 1968, Virginia took a major overdose of
antidepressants, drove away from her home at Princes Risborough. She was found collapsed in a nearby wooded area the next day
suffering from acute hypothermia. Although she was revived briefly, she
died shortly after at a nearby hospital.
Virginia won a posthumous National Board of Review award and a BAFTA nomination for her work in
"Interlude." During her relatively short career, the actress seemed doomed to
play unhappy, sympathetic third parties in romantic triangles. While
a notable sadness touched many of Virginia Maskell's roles, her performances are all the more haunting to watch knowing her personal tragedy.