Anne Rogers
Anne Rogers | |
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Born |
July 29, 1933 (age 82) Liverpool, United Kingdom |
Occupation | Actor, dancer, singer |
Anne Rogers (born 29 July 1933) is an English actress, dancer, and singer.[1]
Career
Anne Rogers was born in Liverpool and began her stage career at the age of 15. She was in the original London production of The Boy Friend, playing the female lead of Polly Browne for nearly four years.[2]
She was unable to play in the Broadway production of The Boy Friend because of London commitments, but later went to the U.S. to play Eliza Doolittle in the Hollywood and Chicago productions of My Fair Lady, winning the Sarah Siddons Award for her performance. [3][4] After two years, she returned to London to play the same role for three years at the Theatre Royal (Drury Lane).[5] She appeared on Broadway in "Half a Sixpence" and "42nd Street." When she played Jessie Matthews in the 2003 West End production of "Over My Shoulder," the Telegraph welcomed her back as a “marvelous old trouper.”[6] She played Gladys in the gala New York performance of the musical Busker Alley in 2005, starring alongside Jim Dale, Glenn Close and George S. Irving.
Stage shows
- The Boy Friend
- My Fair Lady
- She Loves Me
- I Do! I Do!
- Half a Sixpence
- Zenda
- 42nd Street
- Gigi
- Camelot
- A Streetcar Named Desire (in South Africa)
- Over My Shoulder (as Jessie Matthews)
- Busker Alley.
- The Drowsy Chaperone
TV appearances
- Elizabeth, The Queen
- Rock and Roll Mom
- Sparkling Cyanide
- Birds on the Wing
- Song of Songs
- Hogan's Heroes
- Doctors (BBC 2008)'
- MacGyver (Season 2 - Three for the Road)
Awards
Awards | ||
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Preceded by Shirley Booth |
Sarah Siddons Award - Sarah Siddons Society, Chicago 1958 |
Succeeded by Ruth Roman |
Reference list
Notes
- ↑ "Anne Rogers". BFI.
- ↑ Green (1980), p. 40.
- ↑ Chicago Tribune
- ↑ "My Theatre Club". mytheatreclub.com.
- ↑ "Anne Rogers - Biography - AllMusic". AllMusic.
- ↑ "The Fall of a Showbiz Darling" The Daily Telegraph, 30 October 2003.
Bibliography
- Green, Stanley (1980). Encyclopedia of the Musical Theatre. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-80113-6.