An enchantingly beautiful, luminous blonde, Mary Ure was born in
Glasgow on February 18th, 1933. Her first film was
Zoltan Korda's
Storm Over the Nile (1955), a
misfiring remake of
The Four Feathers (1939). Next
was
Windom's Way (1957) - a tale of
rubber plantation strikes and marital strife, but more significant
events had been occurring off-screen. In 1956, she starred as "Alison"
in
John Osborne's "Look Back in
Anger" at the Royal Court theatre in London. She began an affair with
the married Osborne and, after his divorce, they tied the knot in 1957.
By 1958, however, the marriage was falling apart. Osborne could be cold
and detached and he did not hold his wife in particularly high esteem,
as he wrote in the second volume of his memoirs, "Almost a Gentleman".
She began an affair with
Robert Shaw
around 1959 though she wasn't divorced from Osborne until 1962 and was
complicit in the charade that the father of her first child, Colin born
31 August 1961, was Osborne's. In the meantime, she transferred her
fragile, captivating portrayal of "Alison Porter" from stage to screen
in the 1959 film adaptation of
Look Back in Anger (1959),
which also starred
Richard Burton
and
Claire Bloom. Her beautiful
performance of "Clara Dawes" in 1960's
Sons and Lovers (1960) won her an
Oscar nomination. In this time, she also performed a season at
Stratford and, while pregnant, "The Changeling" at the Royal Court with
Shaw. At the time she was pregnant, Jennifer Bourke, Shaw's first wife,
was also pregnant by him (at his death in 1978 he left 9 children).
In 1963, she married Shaw and, after an absence of three years,
returned to cinema screens with a good performance in
The Mind Benders (1963) with
Dirk Bogarde, a thought-provoking sci-fi
drama. Then it was
The Luck of Ginger Coffey (1964)
and the flawed
Custer of the West (1967),
both with Shaw. Neither of these productions made a significant impact,
though Ure performed admirably. In 1968, she made her one and only
bona-fide big-budget blockbuster,
Where Eagles Dare (1968) with
Richard Burton and
Clint Eastwood. It was a huge success but
it would be two years before Ure's next, and last, film appearance.
In the meantime, she had continued to act on stage. Shaw's first wife, Jennifer
Bourke, had given up her career as an actress to be a wife and mother.
Ure didn't give up her career but the demands of motherhood (she bore
Shaw 3 more children) and her growing dependence on alcohol meant it
lapsed. Her final film was
A Reflection of Fear (1972), an interesting horror psychodrama but Ure was absurdly
cast as the mother of
Sondra Locke, only 11 years younger than herself. After this, she returned to the stage.
She died of an accidental overdose on April 3rd, 1975, taking too many sleeping pills on top of alcohol after a very late night, following an opening night on
the London stage. She was a wonderful
actress whose luster lingers in the mind long after the film has ended.
Sadly, her own life ended aged at just 42.