Britain's first notorious post-war sex siren in films, the enticing,
green-eyed blonde bombshell Christine Norden, was a singer and dancer
who had been performing since her teens. The story goes that she was
"discovered" by agents of the distinguished film mogul Sir
Alexander Korda
while waiting outside a theatre ticket line.
Born Mary Lydia Thornton of humble beginnings to a bus driver three days after
Christmas 1924, she was the first entertainer to land on the
Normandy beaches in 1944 to perform for Allied troops after D-Day.
Korda promptly signed her to a seven-year contract and placed her in
stark, dark-edged films as a fetching, sometimes singing femme; she
appeared in a surprising number of quality films, including
Mine Own Executioner (1947),
An Ideal Husband (1947),
Nightbeat (1947) and
Saints and Sinners (1949).
A prime pin-up attraction over the years, she admitted to many affairs
(with both men and women) over the years. By the early '50s her film career
was over, however, and she trod the New York theatre boards for the
next few decades, making her Broadway debut in the musical "Tenderloin"
in 1960 and appearing in such productions as "Marat/Sade." She made
history of sorts as the first actress to appear topless on Broadway in
the 1967 production of "Scuba Duba."
Christine was married five times and has one of the craters of the
planet Venus named after her as a tribute to her being a "forerunner of
the modern sex symbol." Her last husband developed and named a
mathematical formula in her honor. She eventually returned to London
for her final years, developed a respiratory infection and died of
lobar pneumonia following bypass surgery at age 63. Her memoirs were
discovered posthumously but deemed too gamey to be published at the
time. Friend and royal biographer Michael Thornton, to whom they were
left, has now made segments of her private story public.