Rosalinde Fuller

Birth : 1892-02-16, Portsmouth, Hampshire, England, UK

Death : 1982-09-15

History

From Wikipedia Rosalinde Fuller MBE (16 February 1892 – 15 September 1982) was a British actress, born as Rosalind Ivy Fuller. Rosalind’s acting career began in 1920 (What's in a Name), soon followed by the role of Ophelia to John Barrymore's Hamlet on Broadway in 1922 – the most famous production of Hamlet yet. After many other stage appearances, some with the Provincetown Players, she and her partner, the photographer Francis Bruguière, moved to London in 1927. At this point, she took the opportunity to drop nine years off her age, which is why many sources erroneously give her birth year as 1901. She had a busy stage career in Britain, starting with The Squall (1927) and The Unknown Warrior (1928). Over the following thirty years, she appeared in about sixty different stage plays and acted in at least a dozen radio plays. In the mid-1950s, she launched her own solo show of monodramas which she adapted from short stories. During the 1960s she performed these throughout the world under the auspices of the British Council. She continued to act until the late 1970s. Between 1929 and 1935, she appeared in seven films, most notably Escape Me Never in 1935. She also appeared in Britain's first broadcast television play, Rehearsal for a Drama (1939).

Movies

Escape Me Never
Teremtcherva
Romantic quadrangle involving two brothers, one a burgeoning ballet composer; a willful heiress; and a waif.
The Immortal Gentleman
Ophelia / Juliet / Lady
In the early seventeenth century William Shakespeare, Ben Jonson and Michael Drayton meet in a Southwark tavern and begin discussing the other customers who remind them of characters from Shakespeare's plays.
Song of the Plough
Miss Freeland
'Farm life on the South Downs. A gentleman farmer beats his unscrupulous rival in sheepdog trials.' (British Film Institute)
Contraband Love
Belle Sterling
'Cornwall. Detective poses as escaped convict to catch smugglers.' (British Film Catalogue)