Marjorie Westbury
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (December 2021) |
Marjorie Westbury (18 June 1905 – 16 December 1989) was an English radio actress and singer. Her career lasted for more than fifty years.
Born in Oldbury, Worcestershire, she studied Voice at the Royal College of Music in London between 1927 and 1930. During the 1930s, she made many radio broadcasts as a soprano from the BBC's studios in Birmingham. By the late 1930s, she had moved into acting as well as singing. This led in 1942 to a small part in Francis Durbridge's Paul Temple Intervenes.
In 1945, she took on the role of Paul's wife, Steve Temple, and continued to play the part until the radio serials came to an end in 1968. The surviving Paul Temple serials have been broadcast on BBC Radio 4 Extra.
While "Steve Temple" might have been her longest-lasting role, she was a very frequent radio actress into the 1970s and beyond. During the 1950s, she created the part of the (fictional) Austrian soprano Elsa Strauss in the Hilda Tablet series of radio plays by Henry Reed. In 1964, she played the part of the baby in a radio adaptation of Mervyn Peake's long poem The Rhyme Of The Flying Bomb. In 1983, she chose to celebrate the golden jubilee of her first appearance on radio by appearing as "Helen Lancaster" in N. C. Hunter's play, Waters of the Moon.
Westbury's career was mostly on radio with occasional films and theatre work. She died at her farmhouse in Maresfield, near Uckfield, Sussex on 16 December 1989, aged 84.
Filmography
[edit]- 1964: The Finest Hours (as George Westbury – voice)
- 1975: The Girls of Slender Means (voice)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- "Radio Actress Marjorie Westbury Dies of Cancer at 84". AP News. 16 December 1989. Retrieved 19 March 2021.
- Shaw, Dan (4 May 2017). "The Sultry Tones That Won 1950s Radio Actress a Surprise Fortune". Birmingham Post. Retrieved 19 June 2024.