blinkx
  • UK/FILE: Scottish-born actress Deborah Kerr has died at the age of 86

  • 00:00:43
  • ITN Source
    • Browse

UK/FILE: Scottish-born actress Deborah Kerr has died at the age of 86

Scottish-born actress Deborah Kerr died on Tuesday (October 16) according to her agent Anne Hutton. "Her family was with her at the time. She had suffered from Parkinson's disease for some time and had just had her 86th birthday and so was an elderly lady. She just slipped away." Kerr's flame-haired beauty and image as an English rose made her a darling of Hollywood, and she starred in more than 40 films spanning nearly 50 years in cinema. "Her type of refined sensuality proved refreshingly attractive, since it hinted at hidden desires and forbidden feelings, giving her acting an extra edge and interest," the Daily Telegraph wrote in its obituary. Born Deborah Jane Kerr-Trimmer on Sept. 30, 1921 in Helensburgh, Scotland, she trained in ballet before moving on to theatre, and then film. The actress landed her breakthrough screen role in 1940, as a frightened Salvation Army worker in the all-star adaptation of the satire, "Major Barbara". However, it was her work in three separate parts in the Michael Powell-Emeric Pressburger production "The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp", as the various women in the hero's life, that brought her wider recognition. In 1947 Kerr moved to Hollywood, and in 1953 she shattered her prim image by playing an adulterous, alcoholic army wife who has an illicit affair with another officer, played by Lancaster. Their kissing scene on the beach, lapped by the waves, is one of the most enduring in cinema, and the role earned Kerr her second Academy Award nomination for best actress following that for "Edward, My Son" four years earlier. Ever-conscious of her image, Kerr joked while shooting bathing suit tests for the scene: "I feel naked without my tiara." Her third Oscar nomination came for the 1956 picture "The King and I", in which she famously played a governess opposite Yul Brynner's Siamese monarch, and she went on to garner three more best actress nominations, none of which she won. She was finally awarded an honorary Academy Award in 1994 "in appreciation for a full career's worth of elegant and beautifully crafted performances". In 1945 Kerr married Anthony Bartley, an RAF hero of the Battle of Britain. They had two daughters and divorced in the late 1950s. She married screenwriter Peter Viertel in 1960. She is survived by Viertel and her two daughters.

ITN Source | October 25, 2007Watch more videos from ITN Source

Tags:. .attractive. .wrote. .edge. .various. .proved











Academy   Actress   Adaptation   Adulterous   Affair   Alcoholic   Allstar   Anthony   Appreciation   Army   Attractive   Ballet   Barbara   Bartley   Blimp   Breakthrough   Brought   Cinema   Colonel   Crafted   Darling   Deborah   Desires   Divorced   Edge   Elderly   Elegant   Enduring   Forbidden   Frightened   Garner   Governess   Hidden   Hinted   Hollywood   Honorary   Hutton   Illicit   Image   Jane   Joked   Kerrs   Lancaster   Lapped   Married   Monarch   Nominations   None   Obituary   Opposite   Oscar   Parkinsons   Prim   Proved   Raf   Recognition   Refined   Refreshingly   Role   Salvation   Satire   Scotland   Screenwriter   Sensuality   Separate   Sept   Shattered   Siamese   Slipped   Spanning   Telegraph   Theatre   Tiara   Various   Viertel   Wider   Wrote   Yul