Mary Clare(1892-1970)
- Actress
Mary Clare was a versatile British character actress of redoubtable
presence. On the London stage from 1910 (some sources say 1912), she
later alternated her theatrical appearances with acting on screen.
During the
1920's and 30's, she specialised in stately characters and villainesses in period dramas. On stage, she was best served as star of Noël Coward's
"Cavalcade", or in John Galsworthy's
"The Skin Game" (a role she later reprised for the screen). Cinema gave
her fewer opportunities to shine, but she made the most of her often
small parts, moving easily between widely diverse characterisations:
from the shady Baroness of
The Lady Vanishes (1938) to
snooty Lady Hingston in
Portrait of Clare (1950); from
the matronly Nazi spy, minder of would-be Mata Hari
Phyllis Stanley, in
Next of Kin (1942), to that
"poor desolate creature" Mrs. Corney in
Oliver Twist (1948). Among her many
dominant performances in support, there was also a solitary, but
noteworthy, leading role in the mystery
Mrs. Pym of Scotland Yard (1940).