Charmion King


Charmion King was a Canadian actress.

Biography

Born in Toronto, Ontario. King studied theatre at the University of Toronto, where she performed at the University's Hart House Theatre, getting notice in Shaw's Saint Joan.
In 1947, King joined the Straw Hat Players, a summer circuit troupe in the Muskoka Lake district. In 1951, King went to England for two years of study.
In 1953, King returned to Canada and joined the cast of the new Crest Theatre. She gave notable performances as the main character in the Madwoman of Chaillot and in Chekhov's Three Sisters . It was at the Crest that she met her future husband Gordon Pinsent.
King went on to the Stratford Festival appearing in productions of The Winter's Tale, Three Sisters and Uncle Vanya. In 1960, she appeared in Toronto at the Royal Alexandra Theatre and on Broadway in Tyrone Guthrie's production of Love and Libel.
After appearing in Orpheus Descending at the Crest in 1962, King took a break from acting. In 1964, her daughter Leah was born. King raised Leah while Gordon developed his career. After a while, King stopped receiving offers to act. It would be a decade before she returned to acting.
In 1972, King appeared at the Shaw Festival in a production of The Royal Family, directed by the Crest's Donald Davis, and also starring Jonathan White, Ruth Nelson, Patricia Gage and Paul Kligman. In 1977, King returned to the Toronto stage at the St Lawrence Centre in Easter. She also appeared in S.H.O.R.T.S at Toronto's Redlight Theatre, and in Sweet Bird of Youth at Hart House Theatre. In 1979, King created the role of Jessica Logan in Jitters for the Toronto Free Theatre. She reprised the role at New Haven's Long Wharf Theatre that year and in a revival in Toronto in 1986. In 1980, King starred with Alan Scarfe, Frances Hyland and Eric House in Night of the Iguana by Theatre Plus. In 1988, King starred with Kate Reid in Arsenic and [Old Lace (play)|Arsenic and Old Lace] at Hart House Theatre. Her final stage role was in February 2006 with Toronto's Soulpepper Theatre Company in Our Town.
In 1991, King played Noah's wife in Timothy Findley's Not Wanted On The Voyage for CBC-Radio's "Arts National" series.
King has also acted in notable television films, including Anne of [Green Gables (1985 movie)|Anne of Green Gables] and Jackie, Ethel, Joan: The Women of Camelot. She also starred in the Canadian television series Wind at My Back and House of Pride. In 1988, she appeared in the film Shadow Dancing.
King won the Nellie Award in 1985 for best radio actress in Canada.

Personal life

King was married to Gordon Pinsent for 44 years until her death. Their daughter, Leah Pinsent, is also a noted Canadian television actress.
King died, aged 81, in Toronto, reportedly from complications of emphysema.
Her papers are in the collection of the Toronto Public Library.

Filmography

Film

Television