>with her
> JAM guest Moira Lister has died, aged 84.
>
> Moira appeared once on JAM, in 1969, enraging Kenneth Williams
> fun and competitive spirit. He wrote about the clash in his diary.RIP
> Moira.Cape Town
>
> This obituary is from The Independent.
>
> Moira Lister
> Actress often cast in glacial roles
> Published: 29 October 2007
>
> Moira Lister, actress: born Cape Town, South Africa 6 August 1923;
> married 1951 Vicomte D'Orthez (died 1989; two daughters); died
> 27 October 2007.her
>
> Moira Lister was an accomplished actress whose regal bearing found
> often cast in patrician roles, though she also had a splendidsense of
> humour she was a regular on the first radio series of Hancock'sHalf
> Hour and a versatility that ranged from acclaimed performancesin
> Shakespearean tragedy to her award-winning display of farcicalexpertise
> in Move Over, Mrs Markham.sharply
>
> She was an actress whose name evoked keen anticipation of a
> etched, value-for-money performance, and as recently as 2002 shewas
> still commanding the stage in a sterling revival of Maugham's Thewith
> Constant Wife, as the mother aghast that her daughter should react
> such stoicism to her husband's infidelity. Always elegant andsandals, and
> meticulously groomed (it is fitting that she became the wife of a
> Vicomte) she disliked seeing theatre audiences in jeans and
> with backpacks, feeling that it showed lack of respect for theborn
> performers.
>
> The daughter of Major James Lister and his wife, Margaret, she was
> in Cape Town, South Africa, in 1923, and educated at the Parktownof the
> Convent of the Holy Family, Johannesburg later she was a member
> British Catholic Stage Guild. She was given acting lessons as achild,
> and made her début with the University Players of Johannesburg atthe
> age of six, playing a Prince in The Vikings of Helgeland.Vintage
>
> In 1936 she appeared in Johannesburg with Sir Seymour Hicks in
> Wine, and Hicks was so impressed that he invited her to appearwith him
> in a proposed play in the UK. They arrived on the day of EdwardVIII's
> abdication to find the play cancelled, but Lister made her Londondébut,
> aged 14, in the play Post Road at Golders Green Hippodrome, beforein
> returning to South Africa to continue her education. Further plays
> South Africa included When We Are Married and The Women, then in1944
> she returned to the UK, where she had a featured role on stage inThe
> Shop at Sly Corner and had her first film role with a small partin The
> Shipbuilders (1944).at
>
> A highly successful season with the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre
> Stratford-on-Avon in 1945 included acclaimed portrayals of Juliet,Stoops to
> Desdemona, Olivia in Twelfth Night and Kate Hardcastle in She
> Conquer. In 1947 she starred opposite Noël Coward in PresentLaughter at
> the Haymarket, and many years later she performed a one-woman showfarce
> devoted to Coward. She made her Broadway début in 1948 in the
> Don't Listen Ladies!, returning to have a string of personalsuccesses
> in Rattigan's French Without Tears (1949), the revue SaucePiquante
> (1950) and Ustinov's The Love of Four Colonels (1951).effective
>
> On screen she made an impression with her small role in the
> thriller Wanted for Murder (1946), playing a well-groomedsecretary who
> titivates herself before going into her boss's office to takeshorthand,
> flirting with him unaware that he is, in fact, a notoriousstrangler
> sought by Scotland Yard. More typically glacial roles were thoseof a
> gold-digger out to fleece a naïve Welsh miner spending a weekendin
> London in A Run for Your Money (1950), and a shrewish wife whomeets a
> violent end in Grand National Night (1953 the film's US titlewas The
> Wicked Wife). Other notable films included Pool of London (1950),White
> Corridors (1951), Trouble in Store (1953), The Cruel Sea (1953),in
> which she was the wife of a sailor (Denholm Elliott), Abandon ShipRex
> (1956) with Tyrone Power, and The Yellow Rolls-Royce (1965) with
> Harrison.Gielgud for
>
> In 1956 she was part of the splendid company formed by John
> a season at the Palace Theatre in London that included King Lear(in
> which she was a memorably forceful Regan) and Much Ado AboutNothing (as
> Margaret). She compiled the first of several one-woman shows,People in
> Love, in 1958, touring Australia and South Africa, then starred inher
> London in the hit black comedy The Gazebo (1960), which showcased
> superb comic timing and flair for madcap farce (Debbie Reynoldsplayed
> her role in the film version).(1965),
>
> Other comedies in which she excelled included Any Wednesday
> Getting Married (1967) and notably the hilarious production of Raythe
> Cooney's farce Move Over, Mrs Markham (1971), for which she won
> Variety Club of Great Britain's Silver Heart Award as Best StageActress
> of 1971.series
>
> Her distinctive, husky voice made Lister a radio stalwart in such
> as Simon and Laura and A Life of Bliss, and in South Africa herradio
> roles included the leading parts in Rain, The Deep Blue Sea (shehad
> earlier played a supporting role in the film version) and TheDanger
> Millionairess. On television, she was a sparkling critic of record
> releases in Juke Box Jury, and she was a guest on such shows as
> Man, Call My Bluff and The Avengers.Merry
>
> For three years, 1967-69, she starred in her own series, A Very
> Widow. In 1971 she was the subject of This Is Your Life, and hermarried
> autobiography, A Very Merry Moira, was published in 1969. She
> the Vicomte d'Orthez, a French officer, in 1951 and the marriage,lasted
> described by their daughter Chantal as a devoted relationship,
> until his death in 1989. They had two daughters, Chantal andChristobel.
>highly
> Lister was performing until three years ago, touring with her
> successful one-woman show about Noël Coward, and she was recentlygiven
> the Naledi Award, a lifetime achievement award for her services tothe
> theatre in South Africa.
>
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