You know, here in the U.S., we don't
always have access to some of the fine acting work that goes on
around the globe, though things are ever becoming more available.
Thus, I have probably only seen a fraction of the performances that
today's profiled actress has given. To be honest, though, she could
have enacted nothing but one single role of hers and I would be a
devoted fan for life. As it is, I have that and then also have the
joy of seeing her every now and again in something else, and it's
never a disappointment! (You probably have, too, perhaps without
knowing it.) We're referring to stalwart English stage, big screen
and television actress Judy Parfitt.
November 7th, 1935 is the
day that produced one Judy Catherine Claire Parfitt, the
square-jawed, polar-blue-eyed baby girl that would grow up to become
a highly-accomplished actress. Parfitt went from an all girls high
school to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts where she honed her
craft to a fare thee well. Before she was twenty, she found herself
on the stage, absorbing every conceivable detail that could serve her
in her career pursuit.
A string of stage roles continued,
though Parfitt was informed that she would likely never achieve
stardom before middle age thanks to her unconventional looks. She was
what my grandmother would have called a “handsome” woman;
attractive, but not “pretty.” Having developed a penetrating
glare, she was arresting to look at in any case and would become even
more so as the years progressed.
In 1962, Parfitt began to appear on
British television, first in adapted versions of plays and then in
episodic programs as a guest star. In 1963, she wed fellow actor Tony
Steedman, with whom she would remain until his death in 2001. Their
only child, David, was born in 1964. She also landed a bit part in
the 1964 movie Hide and Seek, a thriller which starred Ian
Carmichael, Curd Jurgens and Janet Munro.
All through the mid-1960s, she
continued to appear on British TV with a multi-episode role on A Man
Called Harry Brent (1965), the role of Rosa Dartle on an episodic
version of David Copperfield (1966), a trio of parts on ITV Play of
the Week (1963-1966) and a guest role on The Saint (1967) with Roger
Moore.
She also worked on a TV adaptation of
Les Miserables, appearing in four installments as Madame Thenardier
and popped up four times on The Avengers (between 1962 and 1968),
among many other jobs. She and her husband worked together several times in the 1960s including the four-episode program Angel Pavement, all about the people of 1930s London.
Her life took a significant turn,
however, in 1969 when she was cast in a stage rendition of Hamlet as
Queen Gertrude. Nicol Williamson played the title Dane, her son, even
though he was but ten months her junior! Her husband was played by
Anthony Hopkins while pop singer Marianne Faithful was enlisted to
play Ophelia. The production was a huge success and plans fell into
place to film it as a movie with the same cast.
Hamlet brought her a wave of attention
for her striking work in the famous part and she immediately found
herself in demand elsewhere. She was featured in two 1970 British TV
series. Villette, as shown below, based on a Charlotte Bronte novel, cast her as a
teacher at a girls school and Diamond Crack Diamond had her playing
opposite Alan Dobie as her husband in a dramatic thriller.
Another feature film also came her way
in 1970, The Mind of Mr. Soames. This was a contemporary drama with
science-fiction and thriller overtones concerning a young man who has
been in a coma for thirty years (since birth) and is awakened by a
dedicated and experimental doctor (Robert Vaughn, not the actor shown.) I include these shots for their visual interest.
The man (played by Terence Stamp, who at first resembles Rasputin!) has been kept in an almost cryogenic state, muscles worked, but hair and beard not cut, all along. Thus, when he's awakened (and given a shave and a haircut), he's a little baby in a grown man's body! (Before anyone gets balled up about any potential nudity, there's really nothing to see here. Clearly, manscaping was also ignored during the lad's time in a coma!)
The man (played by Terence Stamp, who at first resembles Rasputin!) has been kept in an almost cryogenic state, muscles worked, but hair and beard not cut, all along. Thus, when he's awakened (and given a shave and a haircut), he's a little baby in a grown man's body! (Before anyone gets balled up about any potential nudity, there's really nothing to see here. Clearly, manscaping was also ignored during the lad's time in a coma!)
He has to be taught to eat, dress,
speak and so forth. After a lengthy tutoring process, he begins to
get restless for the outside world and runs away, eventually being
struck down by a reckless driver. Parfitt plays the careless driver's
concerned and comforting wife.
The husband can barely register any
compassion for Stamp, but Parfitt puts him to bed, cleans his
clothes, fixes his breakfast and, if one picks up on some of the
subtext, introduces him to the act of sex! It's a small role, but she
invests it with her customary devotion to detail and emotion.
One of her 1968 TV appearances, Journey
to the Unknown, was paired with another episode of the series and
repackaged as a feature film called Journey to Murder. “Hosted by”
Joan Crawford, the “movie” featured Parfitt as the wife of Joseph
Cotten, a man who's hired a hit man to kill himself, but then changes
his mind.
It would be four more years before she
stepped before a movie camera again, but she continued to show up in
scads of British television programs. She joined her old Hamlet
costar Anthony Hopkins in The Edwardians (1972), guested on Robert
Vaughn's The Protectors (though they hadn't shared any scenes in Mr.
Soames) and played The Red Queen in Alice Through the Looking Glass
(1973).
Galileo (1975) put forth a sharp cast
that included Topol, Edward Fox, Colin Blakely, Clive Revill,
Margaret Leighton, John Gielgud and others including her. Many other
roles followed in notable or prestigious projects like Rumpole of the
Bailey (1978), Pride and Prejudice (1980), A Tale of Two Cities (as
Madame Defarge, 1980) and the long-running series Crown Court
(various up to 1984.)
In 1984, she portrayed a doctor in
Champions, about jockey John Hurt grappling with cancer, and joined
other great ladies such as Anna Massey and Billie Whitelaw in the house-moving comedy The Chain. There was also a production of Passion Play with Barry Foster and others.
The real jewel in her crown that year, though, was
just that! The renowned miniseries The Jewel in the Crown offered her
a meaty role as the bitchy, domineering mother of the leading
character. In it, she was paired with no less than Dame Peggy
Ashcroft as an acting partner and the role earned her a BAFTA
nomination (Jewel swept the entire category, with Ashcroft winning
the award.)
Things slowed up a bit as far as screen
work was concerned, but Parfitt remained active all through her
career on the stage, portraying anything from Ranevsky in The Cherry
Orchard to Cleopatra in Anthony and Cleopatra. In 1987, she was cast
as Hugh Grant's mother in the Merchant Ivory film Maurice, which was
a cult favorite among gays thanks to its three-cornered romantic
storyline between Grant, James Wilby and Rupert Graves.
1987 was a key year for Parfitt for
another reason, though. She took part in one of Hollywood's most
bizarre examples of a sitcom. The Charmings was a “fish-out-of
water” concept in which Snow White and Prince Charming, having wed
and intending to live happily ever after, are instead put to sleep
for a thousand years and awaken to life in suburban California!
Parfitt played the evil queen who
plotted various corny exploits while her magic mirror (containing the
image and voice of Paul Winfield!) wisecracked back to her! The
Prince, Snow White, their two children and one dwarf who somehow
ended up along for the ride, went through the paces of typical
sitcom-y scenarios with an underlying thread about how their simple
and kind approach to life was often at odds with the 1980s greed and
selfishness that was prevalent at the time.
The show has a devoted base of loyal
fans, though it suffered from, first, recasting of the female lead
and, secondly, a time slot change that took it from its initial
mid-season debut spot on Fridays to a second-season one on Thursday
opposite Family Ties, which trounced it. (NBC's Thursday night
line-up was famously solid for many years.) Her husband Tony, however, did get to guest star as Santa Claus in the Christmas episode.
Lingering in the U.S. for a brief
while, she appeared on an episode of Murder, She Wrote, but was soon
back in the U.K. where she proceeded to small roles in Getting It
Right, with Lynn Redgrave, and the erotic thriller Dark Obsession, shown here with
Gabriel Byrne, both 1989.
In 1991, the unlikely duo of John
Goodman and Peter O'Toole starred in the comedy King Ralph, in which
sloppy American-raised Goodman wins a place as King of England when
every prior claimant to the throne is killed in a freak accident!
Parfitt appeared with Julian Glover as the King and Queen of Finland.
Now fifty, she was in the midst of a
fairly fallow period, though when she worked it was usually to great
effect. She enjoyed roles in several British miniseries such as The
Blackheath Poisonings (1992) and Eye of the Storm (1993) and joined
the cast of Gena Rowland's Silent Cries (1993) as one of several women
placed in a Singapore prison camp during WWII.
1995 is the year that Parfitt filmed
the role that made me sit up and take notice from then forever after.
Practically unknown to U.S. audiences, she won a featured part in
Taylor Hackford's cinematic adaptation of Dolores Claiborne, based on
a Stephen King novel. Hackford's wife Helen Mirren, fully aware of
Parfitt's skills, recommended her to him and her audition left the
film's star Kathy Bates practically breathless.
Introduced as a withered, brittle
invalid, she is revealed through flashbacks to have been an elegant,
stylish, exceedingly commandeering and exacting socialite. It was an
eye-popping, mesmerizing portrayal that knocked a lot of people's
sock off and SHOULD have resulted in an Academy Award nomination as
Best Supporting Actress.
I've already paid tribute to the film
itself here, so I won't go on and on about it, but suffice it to say,
there isn't one breath that she takes or one gesture or blink of her
eye in the entire thing that I don't find fascinating. She's just
perfection incarnate in the part.
Back it was, though, to the assortment
of TV movies and occasional film parts (including 1997's Wilde as a
societal fixture.) Parfitt had long parlayed her regal bearing, steel
gaze and inherent elegance into wealthy matron roles and parts of
royalty and in 1998's Ever After, she played another fairy tale
Queen, this time the Prince's mother in the retooled rendition of the
Cinderella story starring Drew Barrymore.
In 2000, Parfitt played the mother of
Alex Kingston on the hit medical series ER. She would return a couple
more times up until 2002. But Parfitt had been dealing with an
emergency situation all her own. Her beloved husband Tony (a
successful actor in his own right) had been struggling with dementia
for a few years, causing an avalanche of heartache for her as she
watched him waffle between normalcy and childlike confusion. He died
in 2001.
Now in her mid-sixties, she ought to
have been scrambling for work as an actress, but continued to find
her services required as the next few years unfolded. One key project
was The Girl with a Pearl Earring, in which she (seen here with Tom Wilkinson) was the iron-clad
mother-in-law of the painter Johannes Vermeer (Colin Firth.)
Her stone-faced willfulness came
through beautifully in the part and earned her another BAFTA
nomination, though this time the award was granted to Renee Zellweger
for her corn pone cowgirl turn in Cold Mountain.
She continued to turn in solid
performances in projects like the miniseries Little Dorritt (2008.) She has also kept her feet wet on stage as in this shot below from the 2010 production of Really Old, Like Forty Five.
In recent years, Parfitt has found terrific success on British
television, this time in shows that have been successfully exported
to the U.S. and other countries. There was 2013's Up the Women, about
suffragists in the early 20th century. Another was The
Game (2014), in which she played (in her own words) the biggest bitch
ever in a show about the secret spy workings of MI5.
Then especially there has been the 2012
show Call the Midwife, in which she plays a memory-affected nun whose
sideline observations (the character is a retired midwife) have won
her legions of new fans. Still running at present, the pregnancy and
delivery drama has emerged as a considerable hit, with her welcome
comic relief a highlight. She appears alongside Vanessa Redgrave and
Jenny Agutter as well as other talented actresses.
Parfitt is a vocal advocate against
actresses undergoing plastic surgery in order to appear younger.
Never at any time a vain actress about her appearance, she credits
the laws of nature with giving her an un-retouched instrument with
which to convey all the expressions and emotions that give both
comedy and drama its magic. Citing Maggie Smith and Eileen Atkins as
fellow examples (and the younger Nicola Walker as well) of old gals who can deliver, she is now
as busy or busier than she's ever been and can barely cross a street
in England without being approached about her work as Sister Monica Joan.
Out of her makeup-less nun drag,
Parfitt is still a handsome woman and a sparking, witty guest on talk
shows. At age seventy-nine, she is enjoying and appreciating the
fruits of a long, workmanlike career as an actress and it couldn't
happen to anyone more deserving. We adore her and always look forward
to seeing her in action!
she's ALWAYS tremendous.
ReplyDeleteExcellent, unforgettable actress.
ReplyDeleteA marvellous, well-researched post on a fascinating actress. Here in the UK we were lucky to see her in lots of television roles, she first came to my attention in VILLETTE. I have the dvd of that HAMLET, must watch it soon - but CALL THE MIDWIFE is not really my cup of tea, but she looks marvellous in it.
ReplyDeleteGeez Poseidon I look away for a couple of days and there's two new posts! I'm not complaining mind, I really couldn't be more pleased especially when one of them is about the divine Judy Parfitt. Like most I discovered her in Dolores Claiborne, she was robbed of a nomination for it-in my opinion she should have won that year. It's been a delight ever since to look at her older work and to see her turn up in various places. LOVE her comic back and forth with Timothy West as the King and Queen in Ever After and I'm a regular viewer of Call the Midwife. The whole cast is good but she adds a special touch as Sister Monica Joan. Really enjoyed your look at her career and hope that she continues to delight us for years to come.
ReplyDeleteShe's in a class of actors that would make reading the phone book mesmerizing. Dolores Claiborne, the movie, perfection. I don't know how many times I've seen it and never grow tired of it. Such a great cast and full of memorable lines. "Sometimes being a bitch...", "your days of satin and lace...", " SELENA!".
ReplyDeleteAnd now Call the Midwife. But what a tear-jerker. Keep the Kleenex handy while watching. Addictive watching.
Long may she reign.
OMG! Sister Monica Joan was in Dolores Claiborne. I am floored Poseidon. This was a fascinating read. I didn't know that Marianne Faithful was already acting by the late 60's (love her)and I remember loving Judy as Maurice's Mom. I adored her in "Dolores" but had no idea that she was on "Midwife" Sister Monica Joan gets the best lines, and it's skillful how she makes the character wise and childlike at once. I love that show even though I usually writhe in horror and discomfort watching some embattled (and incredibly) realistic birthing process. What a glorious career.
ReplyDeleteWhat a long and glorious career! I always loved her as Vera in Dolores Claiborne, and as Clive's snooty mother in Maurice ("Would you be so kind as to post this?"), and in Wilde, but had no idea her resume was so long and varied. She did specialize in catty, high-riding b*tches, though ("the only thing a woman's got to hang on to"!) Cheers to you as always, Poseidon, your blog is one of my top faves!
ReplyDeleteAnd I just couldn't let a reference to Joan Crawford's "hosting" duties on the cheapest paneled set in history pass me by. I live for any episode of "Journey To The Unknown" and will look for the Judy Parfitt one. There is an intro to a Patty Duke episode (post "Valley Of The Dolls) that I used to rewind and watch over and over. "She won't find that there" became a favorite phrase.
ReplyDeleteGreetings, friends! I'm just back from a three-night trip to glorious Lake Erie for some much needed sun and relaxation. I got this post up the night before, frantic to have something out there during my absence. The bad news is that something weird went wrong (i.e. user error!) with my photos here and somehow over 400 of my archived pictures all now have the exact same name!!!! So I cannot find things easily and will have to go through each one and rename it for future use. Fun...
ReplyDeleteIt did my heart good to see so many of you sharing my adoration of the divine Ms. Parfitt! I'm glad I settled on her for a subject. I have never seen "Ever After" myself, but will have to keep my eyes peeled for it. Back when I first discovered "Maurice," my attention was turned to, er, other things, but I bet now I would really enjoy watching Judy in action as much as Rupert Graves. Something to look forward to.
Thank you all so much for your support, remarks, recommendations and so on. I'm off to work on these damned photos, but will attempt to grind out another post asap, too.
Gingerguy, the Parfitt/Cotten one is on youtube and looking good. It's called "Do Me a Favor and Kill Me" -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HNwOYKIsTLg
ReplyDeleteAwesome! there goes my lunch hour.
ReplyDeleteI loved her as the evil queen in The Charming. That was such a fun show. I also live for her character in Delores Claiborne. She is very entertaining and I will have to search out some of her other projects. Thanks again, Poseidon, for a wonderful read.
ReplyDeleteyes, great i have Diamond crack Diamond with Alan Dobie a fine actor too he has never had an award for his 60 acting career either should have a lifetime bafta fellowship anyway, i've loved so, many of this lady performances over the year good blog
ReplyDelete