Born to one of Britain's most popular variety performers, Bobby Howes, and his wife Patricia, a singer and actress in her own right, Howes was raised amid a virtual enclave of creative people. Adjoining neighbors were also employed in show business. Her mother's brother was an actor and her own older brother grew up to be a musician. Performing was simply in all of their blood (though her grandfather on her mother's side was a decorated sergeant for heroics in The Charge of the Light Brigade, so derring do was also part of her heritage.
Howes, who had performed at school and possessed a vivacious personality, suddenly got a major life change at age twelve when a visiting agent friend of her parents suggested her for the lead in an upcoming movie. Two hundred (!) girls had already been tested and rejected to play a young actress whose success disrupts her family life considerably. The film Thursday's Child (1942) offered her star billing right out of the gate.
Enjoying the acting process, she proceeded further with roles in The Halfway House (1944), which starred real life father and daughter Mervyn Johns and Glynis Johns, and Dead of Night (1945) also with Mervyn Johns, whose alphabetical billing put her atop Googie Withers and Michael Wilding on the posters.
By 1947, the lovely teen was working in The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby as Kate and the following year was cast in Anna Karenina (1948) as Kitty alongside Ralph Richardson and Vivien Leigh. (She's pictured below with costar Kieron Moore.)
Having grown up to be a lithe, lovely young lady, she was either costarring along with major stars like John Mills (as in The History of Mr. Polly, 1949) or receiving top-billing in minor movies like Fools Rush In (1949), as a bride-to-be facing comedic complications prior to her wedding. In 1950, however, she terminated a contract with Rank Studios to begin work on the stage. (That same year she wed for the first time, but the marriage didn't last beyond 1951.)
She did the musical Caprice, followed by Bet Your Life. British TV offered some wonderful musical opportunities for her as well, such as when she won the title role in Cinderella (1950) and then did The Golden Year (1951), a musical production written specially for her. An unquestionable highlight came in 1953 when she was able to join her father in a West End production of Paint Your Wagon, which ran for a year and a half and was then presented on TV in 1954.
While already succeeding in stage musicals, she took a 180-degree turn with the "kitchen sink" drama A Hatful of Rain, winning over critics who enthus- iastically responded to her dramatic talents. In 1957, she appeared on movie screens again, as seen here, in The Admirable Crichton (known in the U.S. as "Paradise Lagoon.")
The 1902 J.M. Barrie stage play concerns a butler (Kenneth Moore) who saves the lives of his aristocratic employers after a shipwreck. The colorful film offers up visuals that seem to have informed future projects as diverse as Gilligan's Island and The Blue Lagoon (1980!) At the end of the film, Howes is shown to great effect in a white, silk,
form-fitting gown and an ornate hairdo. This was to be a bit of an omen for a whole new chapter in her life.
Howes had been offered the role of Eliza Doolittle in My Fair Lady for the U.S. tour, but turned it down. A second offer was also turned down in order that she could make Crichton. A third offer - one that would allow the Broadway play's Julie Andrews to leave and do the show in London - was too great to turn down. She headed for the Great White Way to inherit the plum role (at a higher rate of pay than had been given Andrews.)
Her arrival was heralded by Life magazine, who placed her on their cover, and her interpretation of the role was a smashing success. Now opposite Edward Mulhare as Professor Henry Higgins, she was making her mark in The Big Apple and would soon be appearing in additional Broadway musicals.
But first, there was a big change in her personal life. She met and married Richard Adler, composer of The Pajama Game and Damn Yankees!, who soon composed a television project catered to her voice, The Gift of the Magi. Her costar in this was glorious Gordon MacRae, though one Bea Arthur also popped up in it.
Adler attempted to fashion a musical for his wife (and now muse) from Of Human Bondage, but it didn't come to pass. However, he created another Broadway show for her which was more than unusual for its time. Kwamina was a gargantuan project with a story set in Africa and starring Howes as a female doctor who becomes involved with, in fact, in love with the black son (Terry Carter) of a chief. With Agnes de Mille in charge of hordes of dancers on an elaborate set, it was a spectacle, but was clearly ahead of its time and closed after a month. (Her father had also just endured a Broadway flop that year with a 12-performance revival of Finian's Rainbow.)
Better things were on the horizon, however. She appeared in a revival of Brigadoon which, while it too was a flop, was personally requested to be performed for President and Mrs. Kennedy at The White House and resulted in her getting a Tony nomination, the first one ever granted to a performer in a revival. (Ironically, it was Vivien Leigh, with whom she'd once worked, who won that year for Tovarich.)
Next on her plate was the 1964 musical What Makes Sammy Run?, opposite Steve Lawrence and Robert Alda. This one was, at last, a hit, running for 540 performances. One mishap occurred during the run that warranted a filmed interview with Howes afterwards. The steel door on her dressing room became locked and impenetrable, causing her to be stuck inside for a time and unable to make it to the stage for her next scene! Lawrence was forced to ad-lib for ten minutes until she could be freed and brought out to perform.
During this time period, the Broadway years, Howes became a frequent panelist on many of the hit (and, around here, immortal!) quiz shows of the day like I've Got a Secret, Password and, in particular, To Tell the Truth.
During a game of Password. |
She also began appearing on practically every variety show of note, sharing songs of romance, comedy or longing with countless American TV viewers. When the mother of her husband's two sons passed away in 1964, she adopted them both. Sadly, her marriage to Adler ended just two years later, however. (One of the boys, Christopher Adler, grew up to be a Broadway lyricist until he was claimed by AIDS in 1984.)
A 1966 television production of Brigadoon made quite a splash for Howes. Starring Robert Goulet, Peter Falk, it was filmed partially outdoors (with rural California standing in for the Scottish Highlands) and showcased the still-lovely songstress as she and Goulet warbled the famous songs from the piece together and apart.
The program won five Emmys, including Best Musical Program, and was a ratings success, but astonish- ingly ABC never rebroadcast it and reportedly erased all their copies of it! Sponsored by Armstrong flooring company, some ragged videos still exist out there.
She also did a 1966 installment of Journey Into Fear with Jeffrey Hunter. A little-known fact (which was unknown to me prior to researching this post!) is that she and Hunter dated for a while and almost got engaged! One thing that may have led to the fizzling of this relationship was the fact that she was heading back to England for what would be more than a year of preparation and filming her next project...
Following the smash success of Mary Poppins (1964), it was producer Cubby Broccoli's intention to re-team that film's stars Julie Andrews and Dick Van Dyke in another musical, with songs by the same duo, The Sherman Brothers. Andrews passed on the part, which next fell into Howe's lap. She immediately underwent dance training (for numbers to be staged by the same team who handled The Sound of Music, 1965) and met up with Van Dyke in England for Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.
The title referred to a battered race car which was lovingly restored by a mad inventor and widower (Van Dyke) who is father to two children. He meets cute with the beautiful Truly Scrumptious (Howes), daughter of a highly successful candy magnate and they begin a relationship.
However, midway through the tale, things take a fantastic turn when the four of them wind up in a dictatorship called Vulgaria, wherein a buffoonish baron has outlawed the presence of children and has decided he wants the car for himself. It's up to Van Dyke and Howes (and, ultimately, the car itself) to rescue the kids and get outta dodge.
Part of the plan involves the couple dressing up as life-size toys to amuse the evil baron, with Van Dyke as a floppy marionette and Howes as a ratcheting, rotating doll on a music box. The deceptively complicated number required Howes to move her appendages to the beat while simultaneously singing through the song at a different tempo. She completed the performance in one-take, causing the extras to burst into applause.
While the film never came close to the staggering success of Mary Poppins (and some lamebrained critics like Leonard Maltin - who called it an "Edsel" and "tuneless" - were unimpressed), it was a decent-sized hit and eventually became a cherished favorite of many a child. True to form, it took a while before I truly appreciated the exquisite loveliness that Howes brought to the movie because as a kid I didn't get the heated conflict between Van Dyke at her at the start. (Remember, I used to hate The Baroness, too, when I was a child!) She was radiant in the role and sported a parade of frilly fashion confections throughout. Lastly, I, for one, was utterly petrified of Robert Helpmann as The Child Catcher and didn't go near an ice cream truck for years!
This major musical movie led to more appearances on TV variety programs, including Hollywood Palace with Bing Crosby.
She then appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show, looking lovely and singing with her customary skill.Am I alone in seeing a little Princess Grace in her styling?
She also was in contention as a replacement for Barbara Bain (who'd left during a contract dispute involving her husband) on Mission: Impossible. She filled in, looking very glamorous in the show's opening moments, for a 1969 installment of the venerable spy show, but ultimately the series went with the surprising choice of young Lesley Ann Warren as a female regular. Howes had a third (very brief) marriage around this time as well.
She was still on hand for television games shows from time to time, as on What's My Line?, where she still brought all the same wacky enthusiasm she'd displayed a decade prior on other shows.
Several other TV appearances followed on Bracken's World, The Virginian and Marcus Welby, M.D. She also did a pilot called Prudence and the Chief, which was a wild west take off on The King and I! Rick Jason played an Indian chief while she was a schoolteacher. Soon enough, she'd be working on the real thing. Back in England, she joined Peter Wyngarde in a production of The King and I. (The shots below are from a TV appearance promoting the show.)
While away from movies and television for the better part of the mid-to-late '70s, she was nonetheless very active on stage. She did various perfor- mances of The Sound of Music, another The King and I - this time opposite Ricardo Montalban, I Do! I Do! and Robert and Elizabeth. In 1980, she returned to the screen in the positively dreadful Death Ship (as seen below), with Richard Crenna and George Kennedy.
Since this, she has continued to work on stage in such demanding roles as Queen Gertrude in Hamlet to musical ones like Desiree in A Little Night Music. In 2000, she made a belated return to Broadway in support of Blair Brown in a musical version of James Joyce's The Dead.
Miss Howes has not worked in movies or on TV since 1992 since she was in the ensemble of a soapy show called Secrets with David Birney, Jaime Lyn Bauer and Peggy Lipton. She continued on stage, however, in Dear World and even played Mrs. Higgins in an American tour of My Fair Lady.
She wed for a final time in 1973 and she and her husband frequently make happy, elegant appear- ances together in Palm Beach and elsewhere. Always effortlessly tasteful and stylish, even now at eighty-eight, she has been part of various documentaries about Broadway and the children's film she co-starred in.
As of this writing, she and the incredible Dick Van Dyke (at ninety-three) are still with us and are happily aware of the long-term impact and success of the fanciful movie they made together.
We always liked Sally Ann Howes in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, but we grew to love her from her infectiously fun and personality-revealing appearances on To Tell the Truth. She didn't have the cinematic career that she seemed destined for, but clearly loved and adored the stage and so it mattered little to her in the long run. The only ones who suffered from her lack of filmed work from the mid-'70s on are those like me who always want to see more of her! She truly is scrumptious.
Thanks for the truly scrumptious post. Wouldn't mind seeing an entry about Peter Wyngarde sometime. Hadn't heard of him until I saw his pic here (quite the peek-a-boo top he's wearing). A quick Google of him produced tons of wild stuff
ReplyDeleteThanks for shining a light on this under-appreciated, lovely lady. It's a pity that history seems to be determined to relegate her to the "also-ran" category, sort of a "poor-man's-Julie-Andrews." As your tribute illuminates, she had/has a great deal to offer in her own right. I had the good fortune to perform in a production of Sondheim's "A Little Night Music" with her several years ago (she was Madame Armfeldt) and she was totally charming, gorgeous, still sang pristinely and was a kind and generous colleague. I even went "antiquing" with her on tour and she was great fun and totally down-to-earth. After working with many other luminaries who fell firmly in the notta-so-lovely category, she was a breath of fresh air!
ReplyDeleteI will echo the truly scrumptiousness of this. A cavalcade of gorgeous hair and talent. She was really beautiful as a brunette and stayed great looking.
ReplyDeleteQuite a storied career, she worked with and married some real heavy hitters. Something super likable about her that is similar to Julie Andrews. Veddy British but completely down to earth. I adored her in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and was also terrified of the child catcher. It didn't keep me away from ice cream trucks thought. I printed out the Mission Impossible hair for future reference.
You're my little chu-chi face Poseidon, for this fabulous post so close to Christmas. And Howe!
Ben, I too looked Peter up after seeing them together in "The King and I" clip. Good lord... He was a unique 1960s presence. I got a kick out of his kingly duds (and the unusual hairstyle he affected for the part. He seemed to always have lots of fluffy hair in other roles and in real life.)
ReplyDeleteGregory, I am agog that you met, worked with and knew Miss Sally! That's amazing. So glad to hear that she was every bit the professional, fun, talented person I've believed her to be, even when the spotlights are off. I recall Joan Collins once saying that she was always being referred to as "The poor man's Elizabeth Taylor" or The poor man's Ava Gardner" and then quipping that the poor man didn't do to badly as a matter of fact! LOL I think that applies here as well. Thanks!
Ha ha, Ginge! I adore that number, You're My Little Chu-chi Face!" I desperately want my talented best friend, a female, and I to perform it somewhere sometime. I wish it could be IN the stage show, but no one does it (nor perhaps can, at least around here!) I've said it before here, but as a kid, I didn't think there was any difference between the child catcher and Liza Minnelli, so I was scared of her, too, for a while! LOL Truth! But I also thought that Chuck Woolery was Elvis and didn't know how he could host "Wheel of Fortune" when I had heard that he recently died...! Ha ha!
Thanks for the good read. Aside from CCBB I thought she was famous for begin famous for being on game shows. What a resume. I looked up Peter Wyngarde too, he was boyfriends with Alan Bates at one point wow.
ReplyDeleteGingerguy nailed it with his praise for this post. I swear, Poseidon, sometimes I am convinced that we were separated at birth. As always, loved the wonderful tribute (and subsequent commentary). Wishing you restful, yet enjoyable, holidays!
ReplyDeleteloulou, one can only imagine all the goings on between Peter and Alan and lord knows who else! (Maybe throw in Peter Allen! LOL) I don't know why I never knew until about a year or two ago that Sally had done ANY game shows...!
ReplyDeleteSonofaBuck, that makes me feel good and I'll tell you why. I always felt like a square peg trying to fit in a round hole and that it wouldn't be POSSIBLE for anyone to think about the things I did or like the same things... This site has helped with that over the last 9+ years. I could have choked with shock the first time a reader confessed he and I seemed "separated at birth!" It's occurred several more times since, which is gratifying. Thanks!
Poseidon, I beamed as I read this. CHITTY is one of my favorite all time movies since I was 5 and saw it when it opened. As such, I've always loved SAH. I had a sweet experience with her - I went backstage after a performance of her Lincoln Center A LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC in 1990. I had my CCBB soundtrack album with me, hoping for an autograph. When she was told that someone was waiting, she came out of her dressing room in a very unassuming robe, signed my album, and was genuinely pleased at my interest. I never forgot that. I wish I could have seen her as Eliza too!
ReplyDeleteThat is just wonderful, Michael!! How terrific when you get to meet a cherished star and they fulfill or even exceed your expectations! I'm so glad I finally profiled her because she clearly deserves any accolade, even one such as from li'l ol' me. 😊
DeleteIt looks like I have only seen her in CCBB, and she does have the 2nd best song after the title, with that marionette one. And the child catcher is a definite Generation X nightmare for all of us!
ReplyDeleteAgreed, Forever1267! You ought to check out her TTTT eps sometime. She was very amusingly goofy on there while still looking great. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteVery nice web page, great picture selection. I remember first encountering her when my parents would let me stay up to see certain special people on Jack Paar or the Tonight Show. Can't recall how I got her onto my list, but I expect it was from me hearing her electrifying singing of songs from Kwamina when they were trying so hard to get it to work. And I have a memory of how touching it was when she told about the first time her two boys called her "mother" after their adoption was finalized. And then I don't recall ever hearing of or seeing her again until decades later, I was VERY homesick in England and CCBB had just opened. Dick Van Dyke was a wonderful reminder of home, and I was elated to see Sally Ann after so long.
ReplyDeleteOne little quibble - in The Dead she and Marni Nixon co-starred as the two sisters who hold the yearly party. It's later as Mrs. Higgins that Marni replaced Sally Ann. I think it's on NPR where Sally Ann talks about asking her husband if he minded her being away to do that, and then she talks about showing Marni how to navigate all the stuff backstage to get to and from safely as Mrs. Higgins.
maryc, thanks for taking time to write and for your recollections, info, etc... I don't know how I got that Marni Nixon thing screwed up, but I'm going to blame it on the IBDB.com site, which is unwieldy and often confusing as far as I'm concerned! LOL I probably got my wires crossed trying to navigate the info. Take care. I appreciate your commenting!
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