Angela Lansbury: Actress in ‘Murder She Wrote’ and ‘Beauty and the Beast’ Dies at 96, Look Back at Iconic Life

Angela Lansbury: Actress in ‘Murder She Wrote’ and ‘Beauty and the Beast’ Dies at 96, Look Back at Iconic Life

  • Celebrated Murder She Wrote actress Angela Lansbury has died, and according to her family, she died in her sleep
  • The highly accomplished actress died just five days shy of her 97th birthday at her Los Angeles home
  • She is survived by three children, three grandchildren, five great-grandchildren, and her brother Edgar Lansbury

PAY ATTENTION: Click “See First” under the “Following” tab to see Briefly News on your News Feed!

The family has said that the popular London-born Murder She Wrote actress Angela Lansbury has died.

Actress.
Angela Lansbury died at 96. Photo: People.
Source: UGC

Brought ladylike presence to stage

For seven decades, she brought a commanding, ladylike presence to stage, screen and television.

"The children of Dame Angela Lansbury are sad to announce that their mother died peacefully in her sleep at home in Los Angeles at 1:30 a.m. today, Tuesday, October 11, 2022, just five days shy of her 97th birthday," PEOPLE reports.

Read also

'Murder, She Wrote' star Angela Lansbury dies aged 96

PAY ATTENTION: Follow Briefly News on Twitter and never miss the hottest topics! Find us at @brieflyza!

According to the statement, the late actress is survived by her three children, Anthony, Deirdre, and David, three grandchildren, Peter, Katherine, and Ian, five great-grandchildren, as well as her brother, producer Edgar Lansbury.

"She was proceeded in death by her husband of 53 years, Peter Shaw. A private family ceremony will be held at a date to be determined," said the family.

Daughter of Belfast-born actress Moyna MacGill

Born Angela Brigid Lansbury, the character actress (the voice of Mrs Potts in Disney's animated Beauty and the Beast) and leading lady (Broadway's eccentric aunt in the musical Mame) was the daughter of Belfast-born actress Moyna MacGill and her second husband, lumber merchant Edgar Lansbury.

Moyna, who was eager to direct her daughter's future, took the young Angela to plays at London's Old Vic and enrolled her in a school for the arts and dance until the family found itself broke when the senior Edgar died in 1934. Angela was nine.

Read also

Meet Black US girl who lived to 103 after surviving fire that claimed 300 when she was 6

A subsequent war only compounded the family's situation, so in 1940 the Lansbury moved to New York, where Moyna rebooted her acting career and went on tour while Angela babysat her siblings.

Lansbury was a natural

Relocating her brood to Los Angeles and now working in a department store, Moyna helped land her daughter a screen test at MGM — which catapulted the 17-year-old into her Oscar-nominated movie debut as the cockney maid in the Ingrid Bergman-Charles Boyer classic 1944 thriller Gaslight.

"It was thanks to my mother who recognized in me an ability to cut up, to make believe, to run around being somebody other than the little girl that I was," Lansbury told Masterpiece Studio podcast in 2018.
"It made her realise that I was a natural, and she, bless her heart, made the decisions for me very, very, very young," she added

The following year, another Oscar nomination came, this time for the role of singer Sibyl Vane in MGM's The Picture of Dorian Gray, which had been hot on the heels of Lansbury's having played the sister of a very young Elizabeth Taylor in the beloved National Velvet.

Read also

Kate Garraway salary, worth, career, children, husband, Instagram

She wasn't satisfied

She still wasn't satisfied despite being in the biggest dream factory.

"I was a young woman looking for glamor and attention, and I didn't really get it," Lansbury.So what did I do? I got married at 19," she said.

The groom was handsome leading man Richard Cromwell, who turned out to be gay, something Lansbury didn't learn until they separated nine months later.

"My first great, great romance. It was a terrible tragedy," she said, adding that the two remained friends until his death from cancer in 1960.

A new beginning

Shortly after her divorce, she met British actor Peter Shaw who later became a prominent Hollywood agent. They were married in London in 1949, with Moyna serving as matron of honour.

Movie, live TV, and Broadway roles followed, including the role of Elvis Presley's mother in the 1961 hit, Blue Hawaii.

Read also

Joey Heatherton's biography: what is the American actress up to now?

A more substantial maternal role, as Laurence Harvey's monster of a mother in 1962's The Manchurian Candidate (this time, she was only three years older than her screen son), established Lansbury's reputation as a character actress, as well as earned her a third Oscar nomination.

Four years later, she landed on the cover of Life Magazine as the toast of Broadway in Mame, and earned the first of five Tony awards, a record matched only by Julie Harris and then finally broken in 2014, by Audra McDonald.

Family problems of the Shaws

Problems of a highly personal nature — the Shaw children, Anthony (born in 1952) and Deirdre (in 1953), were both on substance abuse forced a 1971 family move to County Cork, Ireland, which, Lansbury said, "was one of the last places on earth that was fairly drug-free."

The thespian commuted between Ireland, London, and New York for the next decade until the kids were clean, then bounced back professionally in 1978, when she created the iconic role of murder accomplice Lovett in the operatic Stephen Sondheim Broadway musical Sweeney Todd.

Read also

What happened to Victoria DiGiorgio, John Gotti's wife?

Debuting in 1984, Murder, She Wrote put Lansbury front and centre for 256 episodes, earning her an impressive 12 Emmy nominations — though, strangely, never a win.

"It's awfully hard to tell the difference between the two," said Peter Shaw when asked to compare his wife to Fletcher.
"Angela has that marvelous gumption, and that's one of the nice things that Jessica has," he added.

Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement

After she solved her last TV murder, Lansbury embarked on numerous other projects, on television and on Broadway.

Although that Emmy continued to elude her (in all, she was nominated 18 times), she did receive a 1996 Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award, a 1997 American National Medal of the Arts, and a 2000 Kennedy Centre Honour.

In a 2014 ceremony at Windsor Castle, she was officially made Dame Angela by Queen Elizabeth — at the time she was playing the spiritualist Madame Arcati in a London production of Noel Coward's Blithe Spirit.

Read also

Who is Hazel Moder, Julia Roberts daughter?

Legend won four Tonys

Lansbury was awarded the Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Theatre in June, marking her sixth Tony Award overall.

The Broadway legend won four Tonys between the time she appeared as Mame Dennis in 1966's Mame and Lovett in 1979's Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street.

She went on to win a fifth Tony for 2009's Blithe Spirit, her first Tony for her performance in a play versus a musical.

"It has been an outstanding life, especially for me. And the great news is, girls, the opportunities are out there for us at all ages," Lansbury told her peers when she received the SAG honor.

Queen takes a bow at 96

Kenya's leading news website Tuko.ke, previously reported that Lansbury's death comes in the wake of Queen Elizabeth's death last month. The queen was mourned and buried under the London Bridge protocol.

Read also

Joey King swears off dating fellow actors! Here's why

The protocol, set up in the 1960s, gives detailed instructions on how to handle the first 10 days after Her Majesty’s passing.

To keep the news a secret in the early stages, those first alerted were told “London Bridge is down”.

The plans have been repeatedly reevaluated and updated over the years, which means Operation London Bridge may have had changes.

PAY ATTENTION: Сheck out news that is picked exactly for YOU ➡️ find the “Recommended for you” block on the home page and enjoy!

Source: TUKO.co.ke

Authors:
Kelly Lippke avatar

Kelly Lippke (Senior Editor) Kelly Lippke is a copy editor/proofreader who started her career at the Northern-Natal Courier with a BA in Communication Science/Psychology (Unisa, 2007). Kelly has worked for several Caxton publications, including the Highway Mail and Northglen News. Kelly’s unique editing perspective stems from an additional major in Linguistics. Kelly joined Briefly News in 2018 and she has 14 years of experience. Kelly has also passed a set of trainings by Google News Initiative. You can reach her at kelly.lippke@briefly.co.za.

Rutendo Masasi avatar

Rutendo Masasi (Human-Interest editor) Rue Masasi is a Human Interest and Entertainment writer at Briefly News who graduated with a BA (Hons) in English from Rhodes University in 2018. Rue also has 2 years of experience in journalism and over four years of experience as an online ESL teacher. She has also passed a set of trainings by Google News Initiative. You can reach her via email: rutendo.masasi@briefly.co.za