Peggy Evans

Peggy Evans

Birth : 1925-01-10, Sheffield, Yorkshire, England, UK

Death : 2015-07-26

History

Peggy Evans (January 10, 1925 - July 26, 2015) was an English actress. She trained at the Rank Organisation's The Company of Youth.

Profile

Peggy Evans

Movies

The Rank Charm School
Self
Documentary about The Company of Youth, The Rank Organisation’s training school for aspirant film actors, nicknamed The Rank Charm School.
Murder at 3am
Joan Lawton
A police detective suspects that his sister's boyfriend is a murderer.
Calling Bulldog Drummond
Molly
Bulldog Drummond leaves retirement to help a Scotland Yard Sergeant catch thieves armed with radar.
The Blue Lamp
Diana Lewis
P.C. George Dixon is a long-serving traditional copper who is due to retire shortly. He takes a new recruit under his aegis and introduces him to the easy-going night beat. Dixon is a classic ordinary hero but also anachronistic, unprepared and unable to answer the violence of the 1950s.
Love in Waiting
Gloria 'Golly' Raine
The story of three women working as waitresses in post-World War II Britain.
Penny and the Pownall Case
Penny Justin
A glamour model helps Scotland Yard to catch a criminal gang.
Look Before You Love
Typist
Romance in Rio for a girl of the embassy staff.
School for Secrets
Daphne Adams
Wartime tale of a group of British scientists efforts to develop the first radar system. They did it just in time for it to be used in the Battle of Britain against the might of the Nazi Luftwaffe. Without it the little island could well have been overrun.
Charley's (Big-Hearted) Aunt
Girl
Charley's (Big-Hearted) Aunt is a 1940 British comedy film directed by Walter Forde starring Arthur Askey and Richard Murdoch as Oxford 'scholars'. The film is one of many to be made based on the farce Charley's Aunt. Taking inspiration from a well-known Victorian play, a modern-day prankster poses as a wealthy woman in a ploy to prevent him and his friends from being expelled from college.
Colonel Blood
Nancy
'1670. Irish patriot caught stealing Crown Jewels talks his way to pardon.' (British Film Catalogue)