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IMDbPro
Mona Washbourne in What Became of Jack and Jill? (1972)

Biography

Mona Washbourne

Edit

Overview

  • Born
    November 27, 1903 · Solihull, Warwickshire, England, UK
  • Died
    November 15, 1988 · St Georges Square, London, England, UK (undisclosed)
  • Birth name
    Mona Lee Washbourne
  • Height
    1.63 m

Biography

    • British character player Mona Washbourne was a natural symbol for the working-class as much of her early career was in playing midwives, barmaids, nannies, landladies and factory workers. Born November 27, 1903, in Birmingham, England, where she attended Yardley Secondary School. The daughter of Arthur Edmund Washbourne and Kate (nee Robinson) Washbourne, the piano was her early passion and she initially trained at the Birmingham School of Music to be a concert pianist. Following concerting on the stage and broadcast playing on radio, she made her professional stage debut in April 1924 in Yarmouth with the "Modern Follies" concert party, as both pianist and soubrette.

      From this point, she delved herself completely into acting and went on tour with the "Fol-De-Rols" revue for three seasons, developing a special flair for bawdy, eccentric comedy. She performed in various repertory companies and earned her first major dramatic success on the London stage at the Westminster Theatre in 1937 with "Mourning Becomes Electra" in the dual roles of Minnie and Mrs Hills. On the quirkier side, she won kudos for her Madame Arcati in "Blithe Spirit" (1945) and for her doting journalist in "The Winslow Boy" (1946). She went on to transfer her role in Winslow contre le roi (1948) to film in the postwar years and saw a new avenue for her talents open up.

      While most of her early film roles tended toward the small and dowdy, they were also quite colorful and seldom failed to make some sort of impression. They also grew in size as years passed. She played a midwife in Toubib or not toubib (1954); the older, ill-fated first wife to Bluebeard-like charmer Dirk Bogarde in L'assassin s'était trompé (1955); the protagonist's mum in Billy le menteur (1963) (another role she originated on stage in 1960); the no-nonsense Mrs. Pearce in My Fair Lady (1964); an aristocratic old shrew who unknowingly employs a psychopath Albert Finney in the remake of La force des ténèbres (1964); and a doddering aunt to another psychopath, Terence Stamp, in L'obsédé (1965).

      Continuing to impress on the stage with roles in Noël Coward's "Nude with Violin" (1957) and "Present Laughter" (1958), she also appeared to great effect in "Misalliance" (1967) and was a natural for her role as the perpetually perplexed and flummoxed Veta Simmons in a madcap production of "Harvey" (1975), replacing Helen Hayes. In the United States, she earned a Tony nomination for her contribution in "Home" (1970). She crowned her career remarkably alongside Glenda Jackson as the dithery maiden aunt who lives with her eccentric niece, the poet "Stevie Smith", in the play "Stevie". A two-person show, she and Jackson won additional acclaim when they took Stevie (1978) to film. Washbourne won the top critics supporting awards, including New York, Boston and Los Angeles, but was not nominated for the Oscar as Best Supporting Actress.

      Her final career years (in the early 1980s) were spent on TV with roles as "Mrs. Higgins" in a version of George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion (1981) starring Twiggy and Robert Powell; "Nanny Hawkins" in the epic miniseries, Retour au château (1981) and the "Queen Mum" in Charles & Diana: A Royal Love Story (1982). Long married to actor Basil Dignam, he died in 1979. She died less than a decade later, in 1988, at age 84. The couple had no children.
      - IMDb mini biography by: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net

Family

  • Spouse
      Basil Dignam(1940 - January 31, 1979) (his death)

Trivia

  • Was nominated for Broadway's 1971 Tony Award as Best Supporting or Featured Actress (Dramatic) for David Storey's "Home."
  • Sister-in-law of Mark Dignam.
  • She was educated at Yardley Secondary School, Birmingham.

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