Sport
SMOKERS’ CORNER: A CONFEDERACY OF DUNCES
字号+ Author: Source:PG Game 2025-01-15 22:56:32 I want to comment(0)
LONDON: Oscar-winning British actor Maggie Smith, a star of stage and screen for more than seven dec
LONDON: Oscar-winning British actor Maggie Smith, a star of stage and screen for more than seven decades, died in hospital in London on Friday, prompting a flood of tributes. “It is with great sadness we have to announce the death of Dame Maggie Smith. She passed away peacefully in hospital early this morning,” her sons Chris Larkin and Toby Stephens said in a statement. Smith, who won a Tony, two Oscars, three Golden Globes and five Baftas, achieved late-career international fame for her depiction of the acerbic Dowager Countess of Grantham Violet Crawley in the hit television series Downton Abbey. The Bafta TV and film academy said in a statement that it was “saddened” to hear of her death, calling her “a legend of British stage and screen”. It gave her a special award and fellowship to acknowledge her acclaimed career, which Prime Minister Keir Starmer said had made her a “true national treasure”. Born in 1934 in Oxford in central England, the daughter of an Oxford professor of pathology, Smith made her stage debut in 1952 with the Oxford University Dramatic Society. She won a best actress Oscar for The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie in 1969 and for best supporting actress for her depiction of Desdemona in Othello in the same year. “An intensely private person, she was with friends and family at the end,” her sons, both actors, said. “She leaves two sons and five loving grandchildren who are devastated by the loss of their extraordinary mother and grandmother,” they said, adding their thanks for all the “kind messages and support” they had received. Famed for her scene-stealing charisma, Maggie Smith’s long and successful career got started with a string of successes in London’s West End and on Broadway in the 1950s. She famously appeared opposite Laurence Olivier in an adaptation of Shakespeare’s Othello in 1959. This led to her joining Olivier’s celebrated 1960s National Theatre company where she earned critical acclaim alongside her husband, the actor Robert Stephens. Smith’s marriage to heavy-drinking Stephens, with whom she had her two sons, collapsed in 1973 and they divorced two years later. She remarried shortly after to the screenwriter Beverley Cross, who died in 1998. In recent decades, some of her best known films included Gosford Park (2001), The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel (2012) and The Lady in the Van (2015).
1.This site adheres to industry standards, and any reposted articles will clearly indicate the author and source;
Related Articles
-
A possible upturn in the auto sector?
2025-01-15 22:40
-
12-year-olds sentenced for machete attack
2025-01-15 21:50
-
About 1 million people in Lebanon displaced by Israeli attacks: minister
2025-01-15 21:34
-
26pc out-of-school children concentrated in just 45 tehsils: report
2025-01-15 21:20
User Reviews
Recommended Reads
Hot Information
- 47 tigers dead in Vietnam zoos due to bird flu: state media
- Palestinian medics say 22 killed in Gaza as Israel fights on two fronts
- Sarim Burney moves SHC for start of trial in child trafficking case
- FBR’s digitisation, transformative plan ‘need of the hour’: PM Shehbaz
- LHC reopens boy’s rape case, orders fresh probe
- ARTSPEAK: STEP BACK TO MOVE FORWARD
- 13 commercial plots auctioned for Rs16.6bn
- Germany condemns Iran’s missile attack on Israel
- Unconstitutional package
Abont US
Follow our WhatasApp account to stay updated with the latest exciting content