Patricia Dainton
Patricia Dainton | |
---|---|
Born |
Hamilton, Lanarkshire, Scotland, UK | 12 April 1930
Years active | 1947–1961 |
Patricia Dainton (born 12 April 1930) is a Scottish actress who appeared in a number of film and television roles between 1947 and 1961.
Early years
Dainton was born in Hamilton, Scotland, the daughter of film and stage agent Vivienne Black.[1] She left Scotland at age 10, moving to London. She attended the Italia Conti Academy of Theatre Arts in London and the Cone school of dance.[2]
Stage
After her stage debut at Stratford-upon-Avon, Dainton acted in the suburbs of London, with roles in Babette, Watch on the Rhine, Quiet Wedding, and A Midsummer Night's Dream.[2]
Film
Dainton's "dancing and acting debut in Technicolor" came in The Dancing Years,[2] with her screen debut in the 1947 film Dancing with Crime. She trained at the Rank Organisation's "charm school". (Another source says that Dainton "made her first film debut in 1942 in The Bells Go Down.").[1] Her twin brother, George Bryden also made a couple of film and stage appearances around this time.[3]
Patricia was married to the actor turned producer Norman Williams and they had two children.
55 years after her last film role, she appeared in the public eye again, both attending the Renown Film Festival and providing introductions to her films in "An Afternoon with Patricia Dainton" on her 86th Birthday for TalkingPictures TV.
Selected filmography
- Dancing with Crime (1947)
- Love in Waiting (1948)
- Castle in the Air (1952)
- Hammer the Toff (1952)
- Paul Temple Returns (1952)
- Tread Softly (1952)
- Operation Diplomat (1953)
- No Road Back (1957)
- The Passionate Stranger (1957)
- At the Stroke of Nine (1957)
- Witness in the Dark (1959)
- The House in Marsh Road (1960)
- The Third Alibi (1961)
References
- 1 2 Corfe, Robert (2011). This Was My England. Arena Books. pp. 190–191. ISBN 9781906791735. Retrieved 13 January 2016.
- 1 2 3 "19-Year-Old Scottish Beauty Jumps Quickly to Stardom". Utah, Salt Lake City. The Salt Lake Tribune. January 24, 1951. p. 25. Retrieved January 12, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0117323/?ref_=nmbio_trv_1