Thursday, 5 May 2022

URSULA JEAN MCMINN INDO -BRITISH ACTRESS BORN 1906 MAY 5 - 1973 APRIL 21

 

URSULA JEAN MCMINN  

INDO -BRITISH ACTRESS 

BORN 1906 MAY 5 - 1973 APRIL 21



Ursula Jean McMinn (5 May 1906 – 21 April 1973), better known as Ursula Jeans, was an English film, stage, and television actress.[1][


Biography[edit]

Jeans was born in SimlaBritish India, to English parents, and brought up and educated in London.[3] She was the youngest of three siblings. Her brother Desmond Jeans was a boxer and actor, and her elder sister, Isabel, was also an actress.[4] In 1931 she appeared in Edward Knoblock's Grand Hotel at the Adelphi Theatre.

Jeans made her stage debut in London in 1922,[5] before joining the cast of the London production of The Play's the Thing, an adaptation of Ferenc Molnár's play, The Play at the Castle by P. G. Wodehouse.[6] The cast included Gerald du Maurier, Ralph Nairn, Henry Daniell (before he went to Hollywood), and Henry Forbes-Robertson.[7]




She made her stage debut in New York in 1933.[8] Her first marriage was to actor Robin Irvine (1931–1933, his death). Her second marriage was to actor Roger Livesey from 1937 until her death.[9] (Livesey's sister Maggie was already married to Desmond Jeans.) She appeared in one film with Livesey, The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943).[10] She entertained troops with ENSA during World War II, sometimes working with her husband. After the war, she continued acting, including starring as Mrs. Tarlton, in one of the eight episodes of the BBC's 'H M Tennant's Globe Theatre', in 1956; and, in a stage tour of Australia and New Zealand, between 1956–1958.

Last years and death[edit]

Memorial plaque in St Paul's in Covent Garden to Jeans and her husband Roger Livesey

Jeans made one appearance each, in Dixon of Dock Green, in 1967, as Mrs. Regan; in Theatre 625, as Mother Denis, '68; and as Ursula Benton, in The Root of All Evil? (1968 TV series), also in '68.

She continued to act into the 1970s and died of cancer in 1973, aged 66, some 18 months after her diagnosis.[9]

She shares a memorial plaque with her second husband, Roger Livesey, in the actors' church St Paul's, Covent Garden.

Partial filmography[edit]

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