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Biography for Maggie Smith

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Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 (2010)
as Cast (credited as Maggie Smith)
Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang (2010)
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Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (2009)
as Professor Minerva Mcgonagall (credited as Maggie Smith)
Becoming Jane (2007)
as Lady Gresham (credited as Maggie Smith)
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (2007)
as Minerva Mcgonagall (credited as Maggie Smith)
Keeping Mum (2006)
as Grace Hawkins (credited as Maggie Smith)
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (2005)
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as Janet Widdington
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (2004)
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 MAGGIE SMITH
AKA: Dame Maggie Smith;
Margaret Natalie Smith;
Born: 1934-12-28
Birth Name: Margaret Natalie Smith
Birth place: Ilford, Essex, England, United Kingdom
Profession: singer, actor, stage manager
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Biography

One of the most revered and rewarded actresses on both sides of the Atlantic, Maggie Smith has created a gallery of characters who run the gamut from repressed spinsters to comical eccentrics. The attractive redhead with the distinctly adenoidal voice, the youngest daughter of a pathologist with ties to Oxford, decided to pursue an acting career while still in her teens. She got her start as an assistant stage manager and performer at the Oxford Playhouse where she made her debut in a 1952 production of "Twelfth Night". Four years later, Smith was improbably singing and dancing on Broadway in the sketch revue "New Faces of '56". That same year, she first appeared on screen in a blink and you'll miss it bit role as a party guest in "Child in the House". Her official screen debut was in "Nowhere to Go" (1959).

Joining the Old Vic company in 1959, Smith was cast alongside Laurence Olivier in "Rhinoceros". By 1962, she was earning her first accolades in the Peter Shaffer double bill "The Private Ear" and "The Public Eye". The following year, the actress garnered plaudits for her turn as a love-starved secretary secretly attracted to her boss in "The VIPs". Her stellar performance led co-star Richard Burton to half-jokingly accuse her "grand larceny" and set the stage for most of her memorable on screen work. Also that same year, Olivier invited her to become a charter member of the National Theatre and cast her as his Desdemona in "Othello", which she recreated on screen in the 1965 film version, earning her first Academy Award nomination as Best Supporting Actress.

The Sixties were a heady time for Smith. In addition to building her impressive resume with acclaimed roles, she embarked on a torrid love affair with the still-married Robert Stephens, causing a minor scandal when she gave birth to their first child in June 1967. (They married ten days after son Christopher's birth.) She and Stephens co-starred as illicit lovers in "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" (1969), but critics and audiences were captivated more by her performance as the neurotic and fascistic Scottish schoolteacher. Indeed, her portrayal of Jean Brodie was so impressive it earned the Best Actress Academy Award.

Having taken time out to give birth to a second son in 1969, Smith was back at the top of her game in 1972 headlining a London revival of Noel Coward's "Private Lives" and starring as the oddball relative sojourning across Europe in "Travels With My Aunt", a performance that netted her a Best Actress Oscar nomination. Following the collapse of her union with Stephens and her second marriage to playwright and old beau Beverley Cross, the actress spent much of the mid- to late 70s in North America. If she wasn't appearing in various classic roles at Stratford, Ontario, she was making films, like the Neil Simon spoof "Murder By Death" (1976) or the Agatha Christie adaptation "Death on the Nile" (1978). Simon provided her with one of her richest roles in his "California Suite" (1978), that of Diana Barrie, an insecure British actress coping with a crumbling marriage and the spotlight glare brought on by an Academy Award nomination. Although her onscreen character may have lost the coveted statue, Smith took home her second Oscar for her nuanced portrayal. In 1979, she returned to Broadway recreating her London success in Tom Stoppard's play "Night and Day."

Smith proved a hilarious foil for Michael Palin in two comedies, "The Missionary" (1982) and "A Private Function" (1984). As the repressed chaperone who lives vicariously through her charge in the Merchant Ivory production "A Room with a View" (1986), the actress excelled. Her delicious and witty line readings delivered in plummy tones coupled with her expert timing proved irresistible. Smith picked up several awards for her work and received a Best Supporting Actress Academy Award nomination. As the decade waned, she made a rare, but indelible small screen appearance delivering an Alan Bennett monologue in "Bed Among the Lentils" (shown in the USA on PBS' "Masterpiece Theatre") and had one of her best dramatic roles on film as the repressed spinster who blossoms when she finds romance with a con man in "The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne" (1987).

Playwright Peter Shaffer especially tailored his stage comedy "Lettice and Lovage", about an outlandish tour guide, for the actress and it proved a triumph in both London and New York, where she added a Tony Award to her trophy collection. Smith was lovely was the aged Wendy Darling in "Hook" (1991), although playing a character much older than herself led to typecasting. For much of the rest of the decade, her on screen personae tended to dour, elderly types, ranging from the tart Mother Superior in "Sister Act" (1992) and its 1993 sequel to her Emmy-nominated turn as Southern matriarch in the small screen remake of "Suddenly, Last Summer" (PBS) to the Duchess of York in "Richard III" (1995). Director Agnieszka Holland tapped into similar qualities casting Smith as the no-nonsense housekeeper Mrs. Medlock in "The Secret Garden" (1993) and as the meddlesome aunt in "Washington Square" (1997).

Although she was enjoying a strong career as a character player in films, Smith did not neglect the theater, appearing in several high profile, critically-acclaimed performances. Her Lady Bracknell in "The Importance of Being Earnest" in 1993 was said to rival Dame Edith Evans' interpretation. She originated the central character in the London premiere of Edward Albee's award-winning "Three Tall Women" in 1994 and three years later co-starred with Eileen Atkins in a revival of Albee's "A Delicate Balance". Heading back to the big screen, Smith was impressive as a grande dame in Italy whose misguided admiration for Benito Mussolini recalled Jean Brodie's admiration of Franco in "Tea with Mussolini" (1998). The following year, she was featured as Aunt Betsey in a BBC remake of "David Copperfield" and netted another Emmy nod when the program aired in the USA on PBS.

As the new millennium dawned, Smith brought a poignant sense of loss to her turn as a member of the Anglo-Irish aristocracy in the elegiac "The Last September" (2000). Her next screen role as the stern, shape-shifting Professor Minerva McGonagle in "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" (2001) perhaps brought her to her widest audience and earned her a legion of new, young fans. She reprised the role in the sequels, "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets"(2002) and "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban" (2004), the latter expertly directed by Alfonso Cuaron.

Smith earned nearly unanimous praise for her scene-stealing portrayal of the tart-tongued, imperious Countess of Trentham in the Robert Altman-directed "Gosford Park" (2001). Her delicious dispensation of the bon mots in Julian Fellowes script brought the actress her sixth career Academy Award nomination as Best Supporting Actress. Smith next graced the big screen in "Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood" (2002) before embarking on what was one of the most anticipated theatrical events in a long time, her first on stage teaming with Judi Dench in David Hare's new play "The Breath of Life." Her role in the acclaimed HBO TV adaptation of William Trevor's novel "My House in Umbria" (2003), in which she played an English romance novel writer who invites her fellow survivors of a terrorist bombing to join her at her Italian villa. In yet another feather in her storied cap, Smith won an Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie for her portrayal, along with being nominated for other accolades.

Smith next starred in the British-made "Ladies in Lavender" (2004), a period drama in which she played a spinster living with her sister (Judi Dench) in an idyllic coastal town outside Cornwell. When a handsome young German man mysteriously washes ashore, both sisters immediately fall in love, pitting the two against each other for his affections. Smith again revived her role as Professor McGonagle for "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire" (2005), the first installment helmed by a British director (Mike Newell).



Family

FATHER: Nathaniel Smith. Pathologist. Worked at Oxford University.

MOTHER: Margaret Hutton Little. Scottish.

BROTHER: Ian Smith. Born on December 8, 1928; twin of Alistair.

BROTHER: Alistair Smith. Born on December 8, 1928; twin of Ian.

SON: Chris Larkin. Actor. Born on June 19, 1967; father, Robert Stephens.

SON: Toby Stephens. Actor. Born on April 21, 1969; father, Robert Stephens.



Companion

HUSBAND: Robert Stephens. Actor. Married on June 29, 1967; marriage was troubled by her career success and his alcoholism and bouts of depression; separated in 1974; divorced in February 1975; father of Smith's two sons; died in 1995 at age 64.

HUSBAND: Beverley Cross. Author. Married from June 23, 1975 until his death on March 20, 1998 at age 66; first became romantically involved in the early 1950s; became engaged; separated in the mid-60s when she fell in love with Robert Stephens; re-met in the early 1970s and rekindled relationship.



Milestone

Spent first five years in Ilford, England

1939: Family moved to Oxford

Was an assistant stage manager and performer at the Oxford Playhouse

1952: Stage debut in Oxford University Dramatic Society production of "Twelfth Night"

1956: Broadway debut in the sketch revue "New Faces of '56"

1956: Made uncredited appearance as a party guest in "Child in the House"

1957: Made London stage debut in "Share My Lettuce"

1959: Official feature film debut in "Nowhere to Go"

1959 - 1960: Was a member of the Old Vic company, where she first played opposite Laurence Olivier in "Rhinoceros"

1962: Offered praiseworthy performances in "The Public Ear" and "The Private Eye"

1963: First major film role, opposite Rod Taylor and Richard Burton in "The VIPs"

1963: Joined National Theatre as a charter member; played Desdemona to Olivier's "Othello"

1965: Earned first Academy Award nomination reprising her stage role of Desdemona in a film adaptation of "Othello"

Had title role in the National Theatre production of "Miss Julie"

1967: Played featured role in "The Honey Pot"

1969: Won first Oscar for the role of a fascistic Scottish schoolteacher at an all-girl's school in "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie"

1972: Headlined a London production of Noel Coward's "Private Lives"

1972: Earned Best Actress Academy Award nomination as Best Actress for "Travels with My Aunt"

1974: Made rare TV guest appearance on "The Carol Burnett Show" (CBS)

1976: Played Dora Charleston, a spoof of Myrna Loy's Nora Charles in the Neil Simon-scripted "Murder By Death"

Headlined an L.A. stage production of "The Guardsman"

1978: Won second Oscar for her turn opposite Michael Caine playing an Oscar-nominated actress in "California Suite"; scripted by Neil Simon

1978: Offered a scene-stealing turn in "Death on the Nile"; adapted from an Agatha Christie mystery

1979: Returned to Broadway recreating her London stage role in Tom Stoppard's play "Night and Day"; earned a Tony nomination

1980: Portrayed writer Virginia Woolf in "Virgina" at Stratford (recreated the role in London's West End in 1981)

1982: Co-starred with Michael Palin in the comedy "The Missionary"

1982: Acted in second film adapted from an Agatha Christie mystery "Evil Under the Sun"

1984: Reteamed with Palin to co-star in the Alan Bennett-scripted comedy "A Private Function"

1986: Co-starred as the meddling chaperone in "A Room with a View"; earned Best Supporting Actress Academy Award nomination

1987: Made rare but memorable TV appearance in the "Bed Among the Lentils" segment of the "Talking Heads" series of one-person dramas scripted by Alan Bennett; premiered on British TV and aired in USA on PBS' "Masterpiece Theatre"

1988: Created the role of Lettice Douffet in Peter Shaffer's play "Lettice and Lovage" in London; reprised role in NYC in 1990 and earned a Tony Award

1991: Played an aged Wendy Darling in the Steven Spielberg directed, "Hook"

1992: Co-starred with Whoopi Goldberg as the mother superior in the comedy "Sister Act"; reprised role in "Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit" (1993)

1993: Starred in TV remake of Tennessee Williams' "Suddenly, Last Summer" (PBS); garnered an Emmy nomination

1993: Played Lady Bracknell in a highly praised turn in London revival of "The Importance of Being Earnest"

1993: Cast as Mrs. Metlock in the remake of "The Secret Garden"

1994: Starred in London staging of Edward Albee's award-winning "Three Tall Women"

1995: Played the Duchess of York in "Richard III" starring Ian McKellen and directed by Richard Loncraine

1996: Reprised TV role in London stage production of "Bed Among the Lentils"

1997: Earned praise for her turn as the meddlesome aunt in "Washington Square"

1997: Starred in the London stage production of Edward Albee's "A Delicate Balance"

1998: Reteamed with Michael Caine for the supernatural comedy "Curtain Call" (aired on Starz!)

1999: Appeared alongside Judi Dench, Cher and Joan Plowright in Franco Zeffirelli's "Tea With Mussolini"

1999: Played Aunt Betsey in BBC remake of "David Copperfield"; aired in USA on PBS in 2000; received Emmy nomination

1999: Starred in Alan Bennett's play "The Lady in the Van"

2000: Headlined the British film "The Last September" as a member of the British aristocracy in 1920s Ireland

2001: Portrayed the contemptuous Countess of Trentham in Robert Altman's ensemble "Gosford Park"; earned a Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination

2001: Portrayed Prof. Minerva McGonagall in "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone"; adapted from the first novel in the best-sellling fantasy series by J.K. Rowling

2002: Reprised role of Professor McGonagall in "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets"

2002: Starred opposite Judi Dench in David Hare's stage play "The Breath of Life"; reprised role on Broadway in 2003

2002: Starred in the tv-movie "My House in Umbria"; received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress

2004: Again portrayed Professor McGonagall in "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban" directed by Alfonso Cuarón

2005: Reprised role of Prof. McGonagall in "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire" directed by Mike Newell

2006: Played Rowan Atkinson"s housekeeper in the British comedy "Keeping Mum"

2007: Reprised the role of Prof. McGonagall in "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix"

2007: Appeared opposite Anne Hathaway in the period film, "Becoming Jane"

2009: Reprised the role of Prof. McGonagall in "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince," the sixth book in the fantasy series directed by David Yates



Education

Oxford High School for Girls - Oxford, England Oxford Playhouse School - Oxford, England - drama - 1951-1953 - Enrolled at age 16


Bibliography

"Maggie Smith, A Bright Particular Star" Michael Coveney



Citizenship

United Kingdom


Notes

Smith has suffered from Grave's disease for a number of years.

She was made Commander of the British Empire in 1969 and a Dame Commander of the British Empire in 1990.

Smith has received honorary doctorates from The University of Cambridge and the University of St. Andrews, Scotland

She was a recipient of the Taormina Gold Award in 1985.

Inducted into the Theatre Hall of Fame in 1994.

Received the 1999 William Shakespeare Award for Classical Theatre presented by the Shakespeare Theatre in Washington, DC.

"[Smith] looks like a pair of scissors ... a closed pair that cuts even when closed. She must be, I think, the narrowest creature ever to come through a stage door ... The range comes in part from her hands, which occasionally seem larger and more mobile than she does ... The velocity comes in part from her speech, which seems to have been recorded at 3-3/4 and played at 7-1/2 without the least loss of intelligibility." --Walter Kerr in a 1970 review.

Harold Clurman wrote of her performance in Tom Stoppard's "Night and Day": "Easy and always on target, she is above all endowed with a capacity to think funny."

"The etchings of style in a Maggie Smith performance are unmistakable. First observe the face, with its sharp, art-deco angles, which she tends to stretch into a long rectangle to chart psychic damage, the lines creased as if with a palette knife, the lips pressed taut, elongating the skin between her lips and her nose and lending it a moneyed air. She can alter the shape of her luminous nut-brown eyes to italicize a word or phrase. Her string-bean figure is Modigliani-like in some settings, meager and scarecrow-like in others. In comic roles, her wire-drawn body becomes a mannequin for wondrous costumes, especially hats. Her arms pain the air in broad waves of expressive color, and as she swivels her frame around, usually in counterpoint to her line readings, she does so many witty things with her rubbery wrists that they're almost always the first thing you focus on when she walks onstage or appears on-screen." --Steve Vineberg for Salon.com, June 7, 2000.

"When I started acting almost 50 years ago, it wasn't about fame. It was about acting. What is required of actors today is beyond credence. If you want to act these days, it seems to be vital that you tell the world everything about your private life and remove every single garment you possess while you are about it. There's absolutely no mystery any more." --Dame Maggie Smith in a rare press interview in The Daily Telegraph, November 10, 2001.

"The most marvellous thing about Maggie is that she can go from comedy to tragedy in one sentence. She's very like me in that she thinks things are disastrous and hilarious in equal measure. We are both very lugubrious, but we both like to have a laugh as well." --actor Alan Bates quoted in The Daily Telegraph, November 10, 2001.

Smith admits she autographs anything thrust in front of her, although she points out, "I used to write 'Glenda Jackson,' It saves time if that's who they think you are." --From Newsday, January 13, 2002.

"She's terribly private, but I would say she's the least aloof person I know. She has a wicked sense of humour. If you have dinner with her, the next day you literally ache from having laughed so much." --an unidentified friend of the actress' quoted in The Daily Telegraph, February 17, 2002.

"If you live long enough in England, they think you're amazing. What's that thing they say about English actors? `You're too old for the part, you're too young for the part or you're just WONderful because you've survived.' So that's what that's about. It's not about anything else." --Maggie Smith quoted in The Daily Telegraph, February 17, 2002.

"Yes, it's true. I'm always playing this sort of formidable woman, I suppose. It is funny, how you get sort of stuck with that. It's boring." --Smith quoted in Entertainment Weekly, March 15, 2002.


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