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CRAIG,
WENDY
 Wendy Craig Photo courtesy of the British Film Institute WENDY
CRAIG. Born in Sacriston, County Durham, England. 20 June 1934.
Attended Central School of Speech and Drama, London; Ipswich Repertory
Theatre. Married Jack Bentley; children: Alaster and Ross. Won first
acting award at the age of three; subsequently established reputation
as popular star of domestic situation comedy series. Recipient:
British Academy of Film and Television Arts Award, 1968; Variety
Club TV Personality of the Year Award, 1969, 1973; TV Times Readers'
Funniest Woman on TV, 1972=-74; BBC Woman of the Year, 1984.
Address: Richard Hatton, 29 Roehampton Gate, London SW15 5JR, U.K.
TELEVISION
SERIES
1964
Room at the Bottom
1967-70 Not In Front of the Children
1971-74 And Mother Makes Three
1974-76 And Mother Makes Five
1978-82 Butterflies
1981-83 Triangle
1981-83 Nanny
1989 Laura and Disorder (also co-writer)
1993 Brighton Belles
FILMS
Room
at the Top, 1959; The Mind Benders, 1963; The Servant,
1963; The Nanny, 1965; Just Like a Woman, 1966;
I'll Never Forget Whatshisname, 1967; Joseph Andrews,
1977.
STAGE
The Secret Place, 1957; Heart to Heart, 1962; Late
Summer Affair, 1962; Room at the Top.
British Actor
Wendy
Craig emerged as one of the most familiar faces of British domestic
situation comedy in the 1970s and 1980s, starring in a string of
series in which she typically played a self-searching housewife
and mother struggling to cope with the various demands made by her
family, her home and life in general.
Craig
began a career on the stage as a very young child and later entered
films before establishing herself as a television performer. Not
in Front of the Children was the first of the sitcoms in which
she was cast in the role of harassed mother that she was later to
make peculiarly her own. Resilient and yet sensitive (or, according
to critics of the programme and its successors, simpering and middle-class),
her character Jennifer Corner held the family together through crises
both trivial and more serious. The character appealed to thousands
of real women whose days were similarly filled. Newly-widowed Sally
Harrison in And Mother Makes Three (later retitled And
Mother Makes Five after Sally remarried) and Ria Parkinson in
Carla Lane's Butterflies were essentially extensions of the same
character, only the members of the families and the details of the
kitchen decor changing about her.
Butterflies,
with Lane's fluent scripts, was perhaps the most assured of the
sitcoms in which Craig was invited to explore the state of mind
of a flustered contemporary housewife facing a mid-life crisis.
Supported by the lugubrious but always watchable Geoffrey Palmer
as her husband and the up-and-coming Nicholas Lyndhurst as one of
her two sons (the other was Andrew Hall), Craig played the part
at a high pitch--sometimes arguably over-hysterically--as she debated
ways to break out of the confinements of the life imposed upon her
by her family (chiefly through seemingly endless contemplation of
an affair with the smooth and wealthy businessman Leonard Dunn,
played by Bruce Montague). The comedy was often obvious (Ria's failure
to cook anything without destroying it risked becoming tiresome),
the pathos was sometimes painful and the central character's self-absorption
and inability to help herself was irritating to many more liberated
viewers, but the skillful characterizations and the pace at which
events were played together with the quality of the support kept
the series fresh and intriguing and ensured a large and faithful
audience.
Nanny,
about the experiences of a children's nanny in the 1930s, represented
something of a variation upon the matriarchal roles Craig had become
associated with. The story of nanny Barbara Gray, caring for the
children of the rich and well-connected, was in fact Craig's own
idea, submitted and accepted under a pen name after she got the
idea while flicking through advertisements for children's nurses
in The Lady magazine. It eschewed comedy for a straighter
dramatic approach. Comparisons between Craig's enlightened nanny
Gray adding a helping hand to obviously dysfunctional upper-crust
families and cinema's Mary Poppins were inevitable but did not detract
from the success of the series and an increase in the numbers of
girls planning careers as nannies was duly reported as a result.
Since
the late 1980s, perhaps reflecting changes in society in general,
Craig's matriarch has largely disappeared from the screen. Laura
and Disorder, which Craig and her real-life son had a hand in
writing, depicted her as an accident-prone divorcée newly returned
from the U.S., but proved weak and was only short-lived. Even more
misjudged was the attempt to make a British version of the highly
acclaimed US comedy series The Golden Girls, under the title
Brighton Belles, with Craig cast as Annie, the equivalent
of Rose in the original. The scripts failed entirely to match the
wit and vivacity of the U.S. original and the project was quickly
abandoned.
-David
Pickering
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