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Acteur dans 35 films

Né(e) le 27 août 1911

Lieu de naissance
Chelsea, London, England, UK

Mort le 16 avril 2005 (à 93 ans)

Kay Walsh

Acteur dans

1972

  • Dieu et mon droit

1970

  • Scrooge
  • The Virgin and the Gypsy
  • Connecting Rooms

1966

  • Les Sorcières

1965

  • Sherlock Holmes contre Jack l'Éventreur

1964

  • The Beauty Jungle

1963

  • L'epouvantail
  • 80,000 Suspects

1962

  • La Chambre Indiscrète
  • Reach for Glory

1961

  • Lunch Hour

1960

  • Tunes of Glory

1958

  • The Horse's Mouth

1955

  • Cast a Dark Shadow

1954

  • Lease of Life
  • The Rainbow Jacket

1953

  • La Reine vierge

1952

  • Rapt

1951

  • Encore

1950

  • The Magnet
  • Last Holiday
  • Le Grand alibi

1948

  • Oliver Twist
  • Vice Versa

1947

  • The October Man

1944

  • Heureux mortels

1942

  • Ceux qui servent en mer

1940

  • The Middle Watch
  • The Chinese Bungalow

1939

  • Sons of the Sea
  • The Missing People

1938

  • I See Ice

1937

  • Keep Fit

1936

  • Secret of Stamboul
  • A participé à

    • Les Grandes espérances
​From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Kay Walsh  (born Kathleen Walsh, 15 November 1911,Chelsea, London, England; died 16 April 2005, Chelsea, London) was an English actress and dancer. She grew up in Pimlico, brought up by her grandmother. She began her career as a dancer in West End music halls. Walsh made her film debut in How's Chances? (1934) in a small part, and had a larger role in another 1934 film, Get Your Man. She continued to act in "quota quickies" films for several years. Walsh first met David Lean, then a film editor, in 1936, during the filming of Secret Of Stamboul. They began a relationship and Walsh broke off her engagement to Pownell Pellew. Walsh and Lean married on 23 November 1940. She moved on to higher-prestige films with appearances in two Noel Coward-scripted films, In Which We Serve (1942) and This Happy Breed (1944), both directed by Lean. Walsh had campaigned for Lean to receive co-director credit on In Which We Serve. Walsh contributed dialogue to the 1938 film of Pygmalion, and also devised the scenario for the closing sequence of Lean's film adaptation of Great Expectations (1946), for which she received a writing credit on the latter film. She also devised the opening sequence of Lean's adaptation of Oliver Twist (1948), as well as performing the role of Nancy. Walsh and Lean divorced in 1949, on grounds of infidelity based on Lean's relationship with Ann Todd. Walsh continued to work as a character actress in films through the 1950s, including films with Alfred Hitchcock and Ronald Neame. Her own favourite film role was that of the barmaid Miss D. Coker in Neame's 1958 film of The Horse's Mouth, with Alec Guinness. Between films, she appeared regularly in plays and farces at the Strand and Aldwych Theatres, directed by Basil Dean. She was a semi-regular on the 1979 Anglo-Polish TV series Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson. She remained active in films until her retirement in 1981, after the film Night Crossing. Walsh later lived in retirement in London. She died at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital from multiple burns, following an accident, aged 93. Her second marriage was to the Canadian psychologist Elliott Jaques, and they adopted a daughter, Gemma, in 1956. This marriage also ended in divorce. Description above from the Wikipedia article Kay Walsh, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia





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