Heather Angel (actress)
Heather Grace Angel was a British actress.
Early years
Angel was born 9 February 1909 in Headington, Oxford, England. She was the daughter of Mary Letitia Stock and Andrea Angel, an Oxford University chemistry lecturer and initially a don at Brasenose College and later at Christ Church. They were married in 1904 and, after the wedding, they moved to the Banbury Road. Andrea Angel's maternal grandfather was an Italian refugee and he was named after his uncle Andrea Rabagliati.In the 1911 UK Census, the family is shown as living at 17 Banbury Road, Oxford along with three servants. She was the younger of two sisters.
Andrea Angel was killed in the Silvertown explosion in January 1917, and posthumously awarded the Edward Medal. In his will, he left his wife £374 and shortly thereafter, his wife moved to London with the two daughters. By 1929, when Heather was 19, she was already appearing with an overseas touring theatre company managed by Charles Bradbury-Ingles. The same record shows that she was living at 20 Queen Anne's Grove, London W4, when she left.
Stage
Angel began her stage career at the Old Vic in 1926 and later appeared with touring companies. Her Broadway debut came in December 1937, in Love of Women at the Golden Theatre. She also appeared in The Wookey.Film
Angel appeared in many British films. She made her first screen appearance in City of Song. She later had a leading role in Night in Montmartre, and followed this success with The Hound of the Baskervilles. She then decided to move to Hollywood. She sailed on the Majestic to New York on 21 December 1932 with her mother. Over the next few years, she played strong roles in such films as The Mystery of Edwin Drood, The Three Musketeers, The Informer and The Last of the Mohicans.In 1937 she made the first of five appearances as Phyllis Clavering in the popular Bulldog Drummond series. She was cast as Kitty Bennett in Pride and Prejudice and as the maid, Ethel, in Suspicion. Angel was also the leading lady in the first screen version of Raymond Chandler's The High Window, released in 1942 as Time to Kill. She was one of the passengers of Alfred Hitchcock's Lifeboat. Her film appearances in the following years were few, but she returned to Hollywood to provide voices for the Walt Disney animated films Alice in Wonderland and Peter Pan. From 1964 until 1965, she played a continuing role in the television soap opera Peyton Place. After that role, she played Miss Faversham, a nanny and female friend of Sebastian Cabot's character of Giles French in the situation comedy Family Affair.
Personal life
Angel married actor Ralph Forbes in Arizona in 1934, a union that lasted less than ten years. Angel had acted with Henry Wilcoxon in Self Made Lady when they were both in Britain. When she heard Wilcoxon was also in Hollywood, she contacted him. She invited him to polo matches at the home of Will Rogers and later taught him horseback riding. They acted together in two other films: The Last of the Mohicans and Lady Hamilton. Though they remained lifelong friends, they never married. Heather and her husband were both present at the wedding of Wilcoxon to his first wife. They had intended to host the wedding at their house in Coldwater Canyon.Angel married Robert B. Sinclair, a film and television director, in 1944. On 4 January 1970, an intruder, Billy McCoy Hunter, broke into their home. When Sinclair attempted to protect Angel, Hunter killed him in her presence, then fled. He was allegedly found with a knife and pistol when arrested. The incident is believed to have been a failed burglary. Angel had one son with Sinclair in 1947.
Recognition
Angel has a motion pictures star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her contributions to the film industry. Her star is located at 6301 Hollywood Boulevard.Death
Angel died from cancer in Santa Barbara, California, and was buried in Santa Barbara Cemetery.Filmography
- City of Song as Carmela
- Night in Montmartre as Annette Lefevre
- The Hound of the Baskervilles as Beryl Stapleton
- Frail Women as Girl
- Self Made Lady as Sookey Roberts
- Mr. Bill the Conqueror as Rosemary Lannick
- After Office Hours as Pat
- Men of Steel as Ann Ford
- Pilgrimage as Suzanne
- Charlie Chan's Greatest Case as Carlotte Eagan
- Berkeley Square as Helen Pettigrew
- Early to Bed as Grete
- Orient Express as Coral Musker
- Murder in Trinidad as Joan Cassell
- Romance in the Rain as Cynthia Brown
- Springtime for Henry as Miss Smith
- The Mystery of Edwin Drood as Rosa Bud
- It Happened in New York as Chris Edwards
- The Informer as Mary McPhillip
- The Headline Woman as Myrna Van Buren
- The Three Musketeers as Constance
- The Imperfect Lady as Evelyn Alden
- The Last of the Mohicans as Cora
- Daniel Boone as Virginia Randolph
- The Bold Caballero as Lady Isabella Palma
- Bulldog Drummond Escapes as Phyllis Clavering
- Western Gold as Jeannie Thatcher
- Portia on Trial as Elizabeth Manners
- The Duke Comes Back as Susan Corbin Foster
- Bulldog Drummond in Africa as Phyllis Clavering
- Army Girl as Mrs. Gwen Bradley
- Arrest Bulldog Drummond as Phyllis Clavering
- Bulldog Drummond's Secret Police as Phyllis Clavering
- Undercover Doctor as Cynthia Weld
- Bulldog Drummond's Bride as Phyllis Clavering
- Half a Sinner as Anne Gladden
- Pride and Prejudice as Kitty Bennet
- Kitty Foyle as Wife in Prologue
- Shadows on the Stairs as Sylvia Armitage
- That Hamilton Woman as A Streetgirl
- Singapore Woman as Frieda
- Suspicion as Ethel
- The Undying Monster as Helga Hammond
- Time to Kill as Myrle Davis
- Cry 'Havoc' as Andra
- Lifeboat as Mrs. Higley
- Three Sisters of the Moors as Anne Brontë
- In the Meantime, Darling as Mrs. Nelson
- The Saxon Charm as Vivian Saxon
- Alice in Wonderland as Alice's Sister
- Peter Pan as Mrs. Darling
- The Premature Burial as Kate Carrell
- Gone with the West as Old Little Moon / Narrator
- Backstairs at the White House as Mrs. Wallace