Fenella Fielding
- Birth Date:
- 17.11.1927
- Death date:
- 11.09.2018
- Person's maiden name:
- Fenella Marion Feldman, OBE
- Categories:
- Actor
- Nationality:
- english
- Cemetery:
- Set cemetery
Fenella Fielding, OBE (17 November 1927 – 11 September 2018) was an English stage, film and television actress, popular in the 1950s and 1960s and known as "England's first lady of the double entendre".
She is known for her seductive image and distinctively husky voice. Fielding appeared in two Carry On films, Carry On Regardless (1961) and Carry On Screaming! (1966).
Family
She was born in 1927 as Fenella Marion Feldman in London, to a Romanian Jewish mother, Tilly (née Katz; 1902–1977), and a Lithuanian Jewish father, Philip Feldman. She is the younger sister of Basil Feldman, Baron Feldman. She grew up in Lower Clapton and later Edgware where she attended North London Collegiate School. Her father at one time managed a cinema in Silvertown, east London. She later came to live in Chiswick, west London.
Career
Fielding began her acting career in 1952, concentrating on stage productions. She was given her first break when she accompanied the then unknown actor Ron Moody to an audition (they had met her in an amateur production at the London School of Economics). Her performance in Sandy Wilson's musical version of Valmouth made her a star in the late 1950s. By 1959 she was appearing with Kenneth Williamsin the comedy revue Pieces of Eight, written by Harold Pinterand Peter Cook. Fielding also guested in the Hancock's Half Hour episode "The Poetry Society" broadcast in December 1959.
Fielding starred in her own television programme Izeena (1966). She had occasional guest appearances in television programmes such as The Avengers (after being passed over as Patrick Macnee's regular partner in favour of Honor Blackman) and in Danger Man. She appeared in four episodes of Morecambe and Wise Show between 1969 and 1972. She was in two of the Carry On films, the second was her role as the vampish Valeria in Carry On Screaming! (1966), and three of the Doctor films (including Doctor in Clover). She interspersed these with performances in plays by Ibsen, Shakespeare and Henry James, reputedly keeping an edition of Plato's writings by her bed. Other theatre credits around this time included Sheridan and Chekhov.
Fielding was the uncredited Village announcer in The Prisoner (1967–68), and co-starred with Tom Postonand Robert Morley in the remake of The Old Dark House (1963). In Dougal and the Blue Cat, based on The Magic Roundabout, she voiced the character of the Blue Voice—referred to as "Madam" by both Buxton (the blue cat of the title) and Dougal at various stages throughout the film. In the late 1960s, she was approached by Federico Fellini to work on one of his films, but turned the work down because she was already booked to perform on stage at the Chichester Festival Theatre.
Fielding also starred in the children's television series Uncle Jack from 1990-1993 as the notorious villainess, The Vixen. In 1999, Fielding starred in Rik Mayall and Adrian Edmondson's film Guest House Paradiso. She toured in a production of Lady Windermere's Fan the same year.
In 2011, Fielding appeared at the Jermyn Street Theatre, London in an English Chamber Theatre presentation of Jane McCulloch's Dearest Nancy, Darling Evelyn, the dramatised letters of Nancy Mitford and Evelyn Waugh.
Since 2012, Fielding has performed readings of English translations of Greek classics by David Stuttard. Her partners for this have been Simon Russell Beale and later Stephen Greif. Her autobiography, written by Fielding and Simon McKay, was published in both audio and book form in 2017 and has led to a number of appearances on stage reading extracts from it. Fielding was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2018 Birthday Honours for services to drama and charity.
Fielding suffered a severe stroke in August 2018. A spokesperson for her family announced that she is unlikely to work again. She died on 11 September 2018.
Voice work
Fielding voiced 'MOOD', the quirky supercomputer in the video game Martian Gothic in a script written by science fiction author Stephen Marley. Since 2000 she has been recorded with Savoy, a book publishing and recording company. Her work with them includes readings of Colette, J.G. Ballard's Crash and T. S. Eliot's Four Quartets. She made an album of cover songs including Robbie Williams's "Angels", Kylie Minogue's "Can't Get You Out of My Head", New Order's "Blue Monday" and the White Stripes' "Passive Manipulation".
In 2006, she toured Ireland in The Vagina Monologues. She provided the voice to two tracks on the Graham Roos album Quest. For the last five years, Fielding has been a guest contributor on BBC Radio 4's PM and Broadcasting House.
Critical reception
A 2007 article in The Independent remarked that it was "one of the mysteries of British life that Fenella Fielding, whose wit and distinctive stage presence captivated figures such as Kenneth Tynan, Noël Cowardand Federico Fellini, should have drifted into obscurity rather than being celebrated", and the same article quotes The Times as saying that Fielding's performance as Hedda Gabler was "one of the experiences of a lifetime".
A 2017 article in The Guardian highlighted a career "renaissance in recent years" and describes Fielding as a phenomenal storyteller. "She reminds me of the great raconteur Quentin Crisp – the same love of language, mastery of its rhythms, perfectly formed sentences, and a joie de vivre even when relating her profound despair."
In contemporary culture
People Are Very Free With Their Bad Advice... Metafenella, screen capture, 2014Fielding is the subject of MetaFenella, a contemporary public artwork by artist Martin Firrell.
Selected filmography
- Sapphire (1959)
- Follow a Star (1959)
- Foxhole in Cairo (1960)
- Doctor in Love (1960)
- No Love for Johnnie (1961)
- Carry On Regardless (1961)
- In the Doghouse (1962)
- Doctor in Distress (1963)
- The Old Dark House (1963)
- Carry On Screaming! (1966)
- Drop Dead Darling (1966)
- Doctor in Clover (1966)
- Lock Up Your Daughters (1969)
- The Zany Adventures of Robin Hood (1984)
- Guest House Paradiso (1999)
- The All Together (2007)
Source: wikipedia.org
No places
Relation name | Relation type | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Marty Feldman | Coworker | ||
2 | Ron Moody | Coworker |
No events set