Martita Edith Hunt(30 January 1900 – 13 June 1969) was an Argentine-born British theatre and film actress. She had a dominant stage presence and played a wide range of powerful characters. She is best remembered for her performance asMiss HavishaminDavid Lean'sGreat Expectations(1946).
Martita Hunt | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 13 June 1969 Hampstead,London, England | (aged 69)
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1920–1969 |
Early life
editHunt was born inBuenos Aireson 30 January 1900[1]to English parents Alfred and Marta (née Burnett) Hunt. Aged ten,[2]she travelled with her parents to the United Kingdom, where she attendedQueenwood Ladies' CollegeinEastbourne,and then trained as an actress.[1]
Career
editEarly theatrical career
editHunt began her acting career inrepertory theatreinLiverpoolbefore moving to London. She first appeared there in theStage Society's production ofErnst Toller'sThe Machine Wreckersat theKingsway Theatrein May 1923. From 1923 to 1929, she appeared as the Principessa della Cercola inW. Somerset Maugham'sOur Betters(Globe,1924) and as Mrs. Linde inIbsen'sA Doll's House(Playhouse,1925) in theWest End,along with engagements at club theatres such as theQ Theatreand theArts Theatreand a short 1926Chekhovseason at the small Barnes Theatre underTheodore Komisarjevsky(playing Charlotta Ivanovna, inThe Cherry Orchardand Olga inThree Sisters).[citation needed]
In September 1929, she joined theOld Viccompany, then led byHarcourt Williams,and, during the following eight months played Béline inMolière'sThe Imaginary Invalid,Queen Elizabeth inGeorge Bernard Shaw'sThe Dark Lady of the Sonnets,and Lavinia in Shaw'sAndrocles and the Lion.However, her time there was more noted for a succession ofShakespeareanroles: theNurseinRomeo and Juliet,PortiainThe Merchant of Venice,the Queen inRichard II,HelenainA Midsummer Night's Dream,PortiainJulius Caesar),RosalindinAs You Like It,Lady MacbethinMacbeth,andGertrudeinHamlet). The latter three were withJohn Gielgud.
In Hunt's entry in theOxford Dictionary of National Biography,Donald Roy wrote:
"With an arresting appearance and a dominant stage presence, she proved most effective as strong, tragic characters, her Gertrude inHamletbeing accounted by some critics the finest they had seen. "
She then returned to theWest End(briefly returning to the Old Vic to playEmiliain the 1938Othello), notably playing Edith Gunter inDodie Smith'sAutumn Crocus(Lyric,1931), the Countess of Rousillon inAll's Well That Ends Well(Arts, 1932), Lady Strawholme inIvor Novello'sFresh Fields(Criterion,1933), Liz Frobisher inJohn Van Druten'sThe Distaff Side(Apollo,1933), Barbara Dawe inClemence Dane'sMoonlight Is Silver(Queen's,1934), Theodora inElmer Rice'sNot for Children(Fortune,1935), Masha in Chekhov'sThe Seagull(New Theatre,1936), the Mother in an English-language version ofGarcía Lorca'sBodas de sangre( "Marriage of Blood";Savoy,1939), Léonie inJean Cocteau'sLes Parents Terribles(Gate,1940), Mrs Cheveley inOscar Wilde'sAn Ideal Husband(Westminster,1943), and Cornelia inJohn Webster'sThe White Devil(Duchess,1947).
Early film career
editHunt also appeared in many supporting roles in several popular British films, such asGood Morning, Boys(1937),Trouble Brewing(1939), andThe Man in Grey(1943).The Wicked Lady(1945) was an international success, but her next film role inDavid Lean'sGreat Expectations(1946) would be her most famous and most lauded.[3]AsMiss Havisham,she reprised her role from the 1939 stage adaptation byAlec Guinness,which provided the inspiration and template for Lean's film. Her performance met with significant acclaim, andRoger Ebertlater wrote in 1999 that she "dominate[d] the [film's] early scenes, playing Miss Havisham as a beak-nosed, shabby figure, bedecked in crumbling lace and linen, not undernourished despite her long exile."[4]
Later career
editHunt acted inThe Sleeping Princein 1953 at thePhoenix Theatre.From this time on, she divided her time between British and American films, as well as the stage. She won aTony Awardin 1949 for herBroadwaydébut as Countess Aurelia in the English-speaking première of Giraudoux'sThe Madwoman of Chaillot(though she had relatively less impact on the production's 1952 tour). Her last stage role was as Angélique Boniface inHotel Paradiso,an adaptation fromFeydeau,again with Guinness at theWinter Garden Theatrein May 1956.[5]
Other films in which she appeared includedAnna Karenina(1948),The Fan(1949),Anastasia(1956),Three Men in a Boat(1956),The Admirable Crichton(1957),The Brides of Dracula(1960),The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm(1962),Becket(1964),The Unsinkable Molly Brown(1964) andBunny Lake Is Missing(1965). She also appeared on television as Lady Bastable in several adaptations of theSakistories (1962).[citation needed]
Death
editMartita Hunt died ofbronchial asthmaat her home inHampstead,London, aged 69, on 13 June 1969. Her estate was valued at £5,390. She never married.
She was cremated atGolders Green Crematoriumon 19 June. Her ashes lie in the Ivor Novello Rose Bed.
Selected filmography
edit- A Rank Outsider(1920)
- Service for Ladies(1932) as Aline – Countess Ricardi's M=maid (uncredited)
- Love on Wheels(1932) as piano demonstrator
- I Was a Spy(1933) as Aunt Lucille
- Friday the Thirteenth(1933) as Agnes Lightfoot
- Too Many Millions(1934) as Mrs Pilcher
- Mr. What's-His-Name?(1935) as Mrs Davies
- The Case of Gabriel Perry(1935) as Mrs Read
- Man of the Moment(1935) as roulette player
- First a Girl(1935) as Seraphina
- King of the Damned(1935) as woman on plane (uncredited)
- When Knights Were Bold(1936) as Aunt Esther
- Pot Luck(1936) as Mrs Cream
- Tudor Rose(1936) as Jane's mother
- The Interrupted Honeymoon(1936) as Nora Briggs
- The Beloved Vagabond(1936) as Lady with lorgnettes (uncredited)
- Sabotage(1936) as Miss Chatham – the Professor's daughter (uncredited)
- The Mill on the Floss(1936) as Mrs Glegg
- Good Morning, Boys(1937) as Lady Bogshott
- Farewell Again(1937) as Adela Swayle
- Paradise for Two(1937) as Mme Bernard (uncredited)
- Second Best Bed(1938) as Mrs Mather
- Strange Boarders(1938) as Miss Pitter
- Prison Without Bars(1938) as Mme Appel
- Everything Happens to Me(1938)
- Trouble Brewing(1939) as Mme Berdi
- The Nursemaid Who Disappeared(1939) as Lady Alice Ballister
- A Girl Must Live(1939) as Mme Dupont, assistant
- Goodbye, Mr. Chips(1939) as British tourist on bicycle (uncredited)
- Young Man's Fancy(1939) as Duchess of Beaumont
- Old Mother Riley Joins Up(1939) as Commandant
- At the Villa Rose(1940) as Helen Vaquier
- The Middle Watch(1940) as Lady Elizabeth Hewett
- The Good Old Days(1940) as Sara Macaulay
- Tilly of Bloomsbury(1940) as Lady Marion Mainwaring
- Freedom Radio(1941) as Frau Lehmann the concierge
- Quiet Wedding(1941) as Mme Mirelle
- East of Piccadilly(1941) as Ma
- The Seventh Survivor(1942) as Mrs Lindley
- They Flew Alone(1942) as Miss Bland
- Lady from Lisbon(1942) as Susan Wellington-Smythe
- Sabotage at Sea(1942) as Daphne Faber
- Talk About Jacqueline(1942) as Colonel's wife (uncredited)
- The Importance of Being Earnest(1943) as Lady Bracknell
- The Man in Grey(1943) as Miss Patchett
- Welcome, Mr. Washington(1944) as Miss Finch
- The Wicked Lady(1945) as Cousin Agatha
- Great Expectations(1946) as Miss Havisham
- The Ghosts of Berkeley Square(1947) as Lady Mary
- The Little Ballerina(1947) as Miss Crichton
- Anna Karenina(1948) as Princess Betty Tversky
- So Evil My Love(1948) as Mrs Courtney
- My Sister and I(1948) as Mrs Camelot
- The Fan(1949) as Duchess of Berwick
- The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men(1952) as Queen Eleanor
- Treasure Hunt(1952) as Aunt Anna Rose
- Meet Me Tonight(1952) as Mabel Grace
- It Started in Paradise(1952) as Mme Alice
- Folly to Be Wise(1953) as Lady Dodd
- Melba(1955) as Mme Marchesi
- King's Rhapsody(1955) as Queen Mother
- The March Hare(1956) as Lady Anne
- Anastasia(1956) as Baroness Elena von Livenbaum
- Three Men in a Boat(1956) as Mrs Willis
- The Admirable Crichton(1957) as Lady Brocklehurst
- Les Espions(1957) as Connie Harper
- Dangerous Exile(1957) as Lady Lydia Fell
- Bonjour tristesse(1958) as Philippe's mother
- Me and the Colonel(1958) as Mother Superior
- La prima notte(1959) as Lisa Bradwell
- Bottoms Up(1960) as Lady Gore-Willoughby
- The Brides of Dracula(1960) as Baroness Meinster
- Song Without End(1960) as Grand Duchess
- Mr. Topaze(1961) as Baroness
- The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm(1962) as Anna Richter (story teller)
- Becket(1964) as Empress Matilda
- The Unsinkable Molly Brown(1964) as Grand Duchess Elise Lupavinova
- Bunny Lake Is Missing(1965) as Ada Ford
- The Best House in London(1969) as Headmistress (final film role)
References
edit- ^ab"Hunt, Martita (1900–1969)".Oxford Dictionary of National Biography(online ed.). Oxford University Press.doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/67806.(Subscription orUK public library membershiprequired.)
- ^The Illustrated Who's Who of the Cinema, ed. Ann Lloyd, Graham Fuller, Arnold Desser, Orbis, 1983, p. 214
- ^Martita HuntatIMDb
- ^Review ofGreat ExpectationsArchived9 October 2012 at theWayback Machine,Chicago Sun-Times.Retrieved 10 December 2014.
- ^Martita Huntat theInternet Broadway Database
Sources
edit- Who Was Who in the Theatre,1912–1976, 2 (1978), pp. 1241–2
- W. Rigdon,The Biographical Encyclopedia(1966), p. 556
- D. Quinlan,The Illustrated Directory of Film Character Actors(1985), p. 152
- S. D'Amico, ed.,Enciclopedia dello spettacolo,11 vols. (Rome, 1954–68)
- P. Hartnoll, ed.,The Concise Oxford Companion to the Theatre(1972), p. 259
- The Times(14 June 1969), pp. 1, 10
- J. Willis, ed.,Theatre World,26 (1970), pp. 268–9
- F. Gaye, ed.,Who's Who in the Theatre,14th edn (1967), pp. 769–70
- E. M. Truitt,Who Was Who on Screen,3rd edn (1983), 360
- The Guardian(14 June 1969), p. 5
- R. May,A Companion to the Theatre(1973), p. 110
- J.-L. Passek, ed.,Dictionnaire du cinéma(1991), p. 334
External links
edit- Martita HuntatIMDb
- Martita Huntat theInternet Broadway Database
- Donald Roy profile of Martita Hunt,Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
- Martita HuntatFind a Grave
- Martita Hunt Collectionis held by theVictoria and Albert MuseumTheatre and Performance Department
Reference Number(s): THM/132/3
Dates of Creation c. 1910s – 1960s
Physical Description: 11 folders.