Geraldine
McEwan obituary
A
brilliant and fascinating exponent of high comedy and darkest drama
Michael Coveney
Saturday 31 January 2015 / http://www.theguardian.com/stage/2015/jan/31/geraldine-mcewan
Geraldine McEwan, who has
died aged 82, could purr like a kitten, snap like a viper and, like
Shakespeare’s Bottom, roar you as gently as any sucking dove. She was a
brilliant, distinctive and decisive performer whose career incorporated high
comedy on the West End stage, Shakespeare at Stratford-upon-Avon, Laurence
Olivier’s National Theatre, and a cult television following in EF Benson’s Mapp
and Lucia (1985-86).
She was also notable on
television as a controversial Miss Marple in a series of edgy, incongruously
outspoken Agatha Christie adaptations (2004-09). Inheriting a role that had
already been inhabited at least three times “definitively” – by Margaret
Rutherford, Angela Lansbury and Joan Hickson – she made of the deceptively cosy
detective a character both steely and skittish, with a hint of lust about her,
too.
This new Miss Marple was an open-minded woman
of the world, with a back story that touched on a thwarted love affair with a
married man who had been killed in the first world war. Familiar thrillers were
given new plot twists, and there was even the odd sapphic embrace. For all her
ingenuity and faun-like fluttering, McEwan was really no more successful in the
part than was Julia McKenzie, her very different successor.
Although she was not easily confused with
Maggie Smith, she often tracked her stylish contemporary, succeeding her in
Peter Shaffer roles (in The Private Ear and The Public Eye in 1963, and in
Lettice and Lovage in 1988) and rivalling Smith as both Millamant and Lady
Wishfort in Congreve’s masterpiece The Way of the World in 1969 and 1995.
And a decade after Smith won her Oscar for The
Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, McEwan scored a great success in the same role on
television in 1978; Muriel Spark said that McEwan was her favourite Miss Brodie
in a cluster that also included Vanessa Redgrave and Anna Massey.
McEwan was born in Old
Windsor, where her father, Donald McKeown, was a printers’ compositor who ran
the local branch of the Labour party in a Tory stronghold; her mother, Nora
(nee Burns), came from a working-class Irish family. Geraldine
was always a shy and private girl who found her voice, she said, when she stood
up in school and read a poem.
She had won a scholarship to Windsor county
girls’ school, but she felt out of place until she found refuge in the Windsor
Rep at the Theatre Royal, where she played an attendant fairy in A Midsummer
Night’s Dream in 1946. After leaving school, she joined the Windsor company for
two years in 1949, meeting there her life-long companion, Hugh Cruttwell, a
former teacher turned stage manager, 14 years her senior, whom she married in
1953, and who became a much-loved and influential principal of the Royal
Academy of Dramatic Art in 1965.
Without any formal training, McEwan went
straight from Windsor to the West End, making her debut in Who Goes There? by
John Deighton (Vaudeville, 1951), followed by an 18-month run in For Better,
For Worse… (Comedy, 1952) and with Dirk Bogarde in Summertime, a light comedy
by Ugo Betti (Apollo, 1955).
Summertime was directed by Peter Hall and had
a chaotic pre-West End tour, Bogarde’s fans mobbing the stage door every night
and in effect driving him away from the theatre for good; McEwan told Bogarde’s
biographer, John Coldstream, how he was both deeply encouraging to her and
deeply conflicted over his heartthrob star status.
Within a year she made her Stratford debut as
the Princess of France in Love’s Labour’s Lost and played opposite Olivier in
John Osborne’s The Entertainer, replacing Joan Plowright as Jean Rice when the
play moved from the Royal Court to the Palace. Like Ian Holm and Diana Rigg,
she was a key agent of change in the transition from the summer Stratford
festival – playing Olivia, Marina and Hero in the 1958 season – to Peter Hall’s
new Royal Shakespeare Company; at Stratford in 1961, she played Beatrice to
Christopher Plummer’s Benedick and Ophelia to Ian Bannen’s Hamlet.
Kittenish and playful,
with a wonderful gift for suggesting hurt innocence with an air of enchanted
distraction, she was a superb Lady Teazle in a 1962 Haymarket production of The
School for Scandal, also starring John Gielgud and Ralph Richardson, that went
to Broadway in early 1963, her New York debut.
She returned to tour in
the first, disastrous, production of Joe Orton’s Loot, with Kenneth Williams,
in 1965, and then joined Olivier’s National at the Old Vic, where parts over
the next five years included Raymonde Chandebise in Jacques Charon’s landmark
production of Feydeau’s A Flea in Her Ear, Alice in Strindberg’s Dance of Death
(with Olivier and Robert Stephens), Queen Anne in Brecht’s Edward II, Victoria
(“a needle-sharp gold digger” said one reviewer) in Somerset Maugham’s Home and
Beauty, Millamant, and Vittoria Corombona in The White Devil.
Back in the West End, she
formed a classy quartet, alongside Pat Heywood, Albert Finney and Denholm
Elliott, in Peter Nichols’s Chez Nous at the Globe (1974), and gave a
delightful impression of a well-trained, coquettish poodle as the leisured
whore in Noël Coward’s broken-backed adaptation of Feydeau, Look After Lulu, at
Chichester and the Haymarket.
In the 1980s, she made
sporadic appearances at the National, now on the South Bank, winning two
Evening Standard awards for her fresh and youthful Mrs Malaprop in The Rivals
(“Men are all Bavarians,” she exclaimed on exiting, creating a brand new
malapropism for “barbarians”) and her hilariously acidulous Lady Wishfort; and
was a founder member of Ray Cooney’s Theatre of Comedy at the Shaftesbury
theatre.
Geraldine McEwan: mischievously witty, from
Mrs Malaprop to Miss Marple
In the latter part of her stage career, she
seemed to cut loose in ever more adventurous directions, perhaps through her
friendship with Kenneth Branagh, who had become very close to Cruttwell while
studying at Rada. She was a surprise casting as the mother of a psychotic son
who starts behaving like a wolf, played by Will Patton, in Sam Shepard’s
merciless domestic drama, A Lie of the Mind, at the Royal Court in 1987. And in
1988 she directed As You Like It for Branagh’s Renaissance Theatre Company,
Branagh playing Touchstone as an Edwardian music-hall comedian.
The following year she
directed Christopher Hampton’s under-rated Treats at the Hampstead theatre and,
in 1998, formed a fantastical nonagenarian double act with Richard Briers in a
Royal Court revival, directed by Simon McBurney, of Ionesco’s tragic farce The
Chairs, her grey hair bunched on one side like superannuated candy floss.
She was a brilliant but
controversial Judith Bliss in Noel Coward’s Hay Fever (1999), directed as a
piece of Gothic absurdism at the Savoy by Declan Donnellan; McEwan tiptoed
through the thunderclaps and lightning like a glinting harridan, a tipsy
bacchanalian with a waspish lust and highly cultivated lack of concern (“My
husband’s not dead; he’s upstairs.”)
Other television successes included Oranges
Are Not the Only Fruit (1990), playing Jeanette Winterson’s mother, and an
adaptation of Nina Bawden’s tale of evacuees in Wales, Carrie’s War (2004). Her
occasional movie appearances included Cliff Owen’s The Bawdy Adventures of Tom
Jones (1975), two of Branagh’s Shakespeare adaptations – Henry V (1989) and
Love’s Labour’s Lost (2000) – as well as Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1991);
Peter Mullan’s devastating critique of an Irish Catholic education, The
Magdalene Sisters (2002), in which she played cruel, cold-hearted Sister
Bridget; and Vanity Fair (2004).
McEwan was rumoured to have turned down both
being appointed OBE and a damehood, but never confirmed this.
Hugh died in 2002. She is survived by their
two children, Greg and Claudia, and seven grandchildren.
• Geraldine McEwan (McKeown), actor, born 9
May 1932; died 30 January 2015
So sad, I'll always remember her as my favorite Miss Marple - I'll have to rewatch the series in her honor.
ReplyDeleteShe was wonderful. Odd all the focus on Marple where actually I think her interpretation was inferior to that of Joan Hickson's. Where she reigned supreme in light comedy was the incomparable Lucia in Mapp and Lucia with toy boy Georgie Pillson better known as Nigel Hawthorne. Poor old Mapp didn't have a chance.
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