Diana Rigg, Avengers and Game of Thrones star,
dies aged 82
Actor who played Emma Peel in hit spy series and
Bond’s only wife was diagnosed with cancer in March
Rigg also appears in Channel 5’s hit remake of All
Creatures Great and Small, which is currently airing. She will be seen in the
BBC drama Black Narcissus later this year, and Edgar Wright’s film Last Night
in Soho next year, in her final role.
Hannah J
Davies
@hannahjdavies
Thu 10 Sep
2020 14.39 BSTLast modified on Thu 10 Sep 2020 16.35 BST
The actor
Diana Rigg, known for her roles on stage and in film and television –including
the The Avengers and On Her Majesty’s Secret Service – has died at the age of
82.
Rigg, who
rose to prominence in the 1960s thanks to her starring role as Emma Peel in The
Avengers alongside Patrick Macnee, enjoyed a long and varied career, playing
Lady Olenna Tyrell in HBO’s smash hit Game of Thrones, a show she admitted in
2019 that she had never watched. She also played Countess Teresa di Vicenzo, or
Tracy Bond, James Bond’s first and only wife to date, in the 1969 film On Her
Majesty’s Secret Service.
Confirming
her death, her agent said that Rigg had died “peacefully” on Thursday morning,
adding that she had been “at home with her family who have asked for privacy at
this difficult time”.
Her
daughter, the actor Rachael Stirling, said Rigg had been diagnosed with cancer
in March, and had “spent her last months joyfully reflecting on her
extraordinary life, full of love, laughter and a deep pride in her profession.
I will miss her beyond words.”
The pair
appeared together in the Doctor Who episode The Crimson Horror in 2013. The
episode’s writer, Mark Gatiss, tweeted a tribute, saying: “It was my great joy
and privilege to have known Diana Rigg. From three slightly hysterical months
at the Old Vic in ‘All About Mother’ to writing The Crimson Horror for Diana
and her wonderful daughter Rachael. Flinty, fearless, fabulous. There will
never be another.”
Enid Diana
Elizabeth Rigg was born near Doncaster in 1938. She spent part of her childhood
in India, where her father worked as a railway executive. After attending
boarding school in Pudsey, Yorkshire, Rigg trained at Rada alongside Glenda
Jackson and Siân Phillips.
Prior to
The Avengers, she enjoyed a successful theatre career performing with the Royal
Shakespeare Company; she would later return to the stage to perform in
productions including Tom Stoppard’s plays Jumpers and Night and Day. On
Broadway, she earned two Tony nominations in the 1970s, and in 1992 she won the
award in the titular role of Medea, which she played in the West End and on
Broadway.
To many,
however, she is best known as Emma Peel in The Avengers, having appeared in 51
episodes of the hit spy series between 1965 and 1968. In a 2019 interview with
the Guardian, she said that becoming a sex symbol overnight had shocked her,
adding that she “didn’t know how to handle it”, and kept unopened fan mail in
the boot of her car “because I didn’t know how to respond and thought it was
rude to throw it away. Then my mother became my secretary and replied to the
really inappropriate ones saying: ‘My daughter’s far too old for you. Go take a
cold shower!’”
After
finding out that she was being paid less than the cameraman on the series, Rigg
fought for greater pay, saying in 2019: “I was painted as this mercenary
creature by the press [for fighting against the pay disparity on the series]
when all I wanted was equality. It’s so depressing that we are still talking about
the gender pay gap.”
Other TV
roles included the part of the Duchess of Buccleuch in ITV’s Victoria. Rigg won
the Bafta TV award for best actress for the BBC miniseries Mother Love in 1989,
and an Emmy award for her role as Mrs Danvers in an adaptation of Rebecca
(1997).
Leading the
tributes, Stoppard said: “For half her life Diana was the most beautiful woman
in the room, but she was what used to be called a trouper. She went to work
with her sleeves rolled up and a smile for everyone. Her talent was luminous.”
Her
director in Medea, Jonathan Kent, said: “Diana Rigg’s combination of force of
personality, beauty, courage and sheer emotional power, made her a great
classical actress – one of an astonishing generation of British stage
performers.
“I was so
fortunate to direct her in a series of great classical roles: Medea, Phèdre –
in Ted Hughes’s version, specially written for her – Mother Courage and
Dryden’s Cleopatra. Her dazzling wit and that inimitable voice made her an
unforgettable leading figure in British theatre.”
Rigg also
appears in Channel 5’s hit remake of All Creatures Great and Small, which is
currently airing. She will be seen in the BBC drama Black Narcissus later this
year, and Edgar Wright’s film Last Night in Soho next year, in her final role.
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