Glenda Jackson, 87, Award-Winning Actress & Politician


Long before the age of having any film you want at your fingertips with a click of a remote – and longer still before flipping through new releases and classic films at your local video rental store – you had to wait to see older films in the movie theater on a re-release. 

Back around 1978 I caught a double bill of Neil Simon’s “The Odd Couple” and the film “House Call.” The reason for the double bill – and if I am telling the truth the real reason I saw these films – was for the actor Walter Mattheu, who starred in both. But I took notice of a British actress who was starring with Mattheu. Her name was Glenda Jackson. She made an impression – and I was delighted when the two teamed up again in the 1980’s “Hopscotch”.

Glenda Jackson, who in the course of her long career won the ‘triple crown’ of acting with two Academy Awards, three Emmy Awards, and a Tony Award, took her final taxi at the age of 87 on June 15, 2023.

Jackson was born in Birkenhead, England, in 1936. She began acting on the stage, appearing in repertory theater productions throughout the United Kingdom. In 1962, she made her film debut in the British drama “A Taste of Honey.”

Jackson’s breakthrough role came in the 1969 film “Women in Love.” She won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance as a passionate and independent woman in love with two men. She won the Academy Award for Best Actress again in 1973 for her performance in the comedy “A Touch of Class.” Other film roles included This Sporting Life (1963); The Music Lovers (1971); Sunday, Bloody Sunday (1971) Mary, Queen of Scots (1972); The Maids (1974); The Incredible Sarah (1976); House Calls (1978); Stevie (1978); The Class of Miss MacMichael (1978); Lost and Found, with George Segal (1979); Hopscotch (1980); Return of the Soldier (1982); Turtle Diary (1985); Business as Usual (1987); Beyond Therapy (1987); Salome’s Last Dance (1988); The Rainbow (1989); and The Secret Life of Sir Arnold Bax (1992).

Jackson continued her prolific work in film and television throughout her career. She won three Emmy Awards for her work in the television films “The Duchess of Duke Street” (1976), “The Slap” (1984), and “The Sea Wolf” (1993).

She won a Tony Award for her performance in the Broadway play “A Touch of the Poet” (1975). She won praise as the neurotic Nina Leeds in O’Neill’s “Strange Interlude” in 1985, and took home a best-actress Tony for her role as “A” a woman over 90, facing her mortality, in Edward Albee’s “Three Tall Women” in 2018. Jackson astounded many in the theater when she, in a bold move, took on the role of “King Lear” in 2016.

Jackson was a versatile actress who was equally comfortable in dramatic and comedic roles. A powerful and passionate performer, she brought her characters to life with intelligence, wit, and emotion. She will be remembered as one of the great actresses of her generation.

In addition to her film and television work, Jackson was also a successful politician. She served as a Labour Member of Parliament for Hampstead and Highgate from 1992 to 2010. She was a vocal advocate for social justice and equality.

In 2019 she won a BAFTA award after returning to TV to play an elderly grandmother struggling with dementia in the drama ‘Elizabeth Is Missing.”

Even after her final curtain call, devotees of Glenda Jackson can enjoy an upcoming yet-to-be-released work.  Ms. Jackson had just finished working with actor Michael Caine in film called “The Great Escaper,” about an aging World War II veteran who escapes from his nursing home to attend the 70th anniversary of the D-Day landings in France. It will be great to appreciate the work of this actress in a brand-new release – in addition to all her movies available at the touch of a button.

– Jeff Burson – Writer
– Lesa Rosato Burson – Edito
r

The 80th Annual Academy Award Obit List

I watch the Academy Awards last night, like I do every year, and waited for the segment that I enjoy watching every year. This is when the Oscars salute the people who have taken the Final Taxi in the last year. Here is the list if you missed it:

Roscoe Lee Browne
Barry Nelson
Kitty Carlisle Hart
Betty Hutton
Calvin Lockhart
Jane Wyman
Melville Shavelson (writer)
Curtis Harrington (director)
Jack Valenti
Michael Kidd (dancer)
Michelangelo Antonioni
Delbert Mann (director)
Montague “Monty” G. Westmore (makeup)
Peter T. Handford (sound)
Bud Ekins (stuntman)
Bernard Gordon (writer)
Dabbs Greer
Jean-Claude Brialy
Harold Michelson (art director)
Laraine Day
Jean-Pierre Cassel
Lois Maxwell
Laszlo Kovacs (cinematographer)
Robert Clark (director)
George Jenkins (art director)
Johnny Grant (executive)
Frank E. Rosenfelt (executive)
Martin Manulis (producer)
Donfeld (costume designer)
Sembene Ousmane (director)
Freddy Fields (agent)
Robert Lantz (agent)
Ray Kurtzman (executive)
Miyoshi Umeki
Suzanne Pleshette
Deborah Kerr
Peter Ellenshaw (visual effects)
Peter Zinner (film editor)
Freddie Francis (cinematographer)
Ingmar Bergman (director)
Ray Evans (music)
William Tuttle (makeup)
Heath Ledger

I suddenly felt a bit shocked as it ended. Wait a minute. There is a few names missing off that list.

I would think most of the old-time  Hollywood players would have wanted Joey Bishop or Robert Goulet names to be seen.

Also curiously missing was Alice Ghostley. I would think that a star in To Kill A Mockingbird or Grease would be enough to warrant mentioning. I missed seeing Lois Nettleton and Marcel Marceau, the famous mime who was in films.

 
Ron Carey was in many Mel Brooks films and did not have his name on the list nor was Sidbad’s Kerwin Mathews.

 Beside actors not being on there I saw no mention of the animator for the Pink Panther opening credits, Warren Batchelder (who also did several Warner Bros cartoons) and missing was Art Stevens the man who drew several Disney classic films including “Peter Pan”, “Winnie the Pooh”, “Fantasia” and later co-directed “The Fox and the Hound” and “The Rescuers.”

 
The biggest slap in the face was to Charles Lane. Lane, whose career spanned more than 60 years, appeared in such film classics as “It‘s a Wonderful Life,” “Arsenic and Old Lace” and “Primrose Path ” and “Murphy’s Romance” with Sally Field in 1986.

Mr. Lane was in “The Music Man,” “It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World” and “The Carpetbaggers,” among his many films.

 
Someone at the Academy Awards needs to do their homework and remember the old Hollywood stars.