Dora Bryan


Dora May Broadbent, known as Dora Bryan, was an English actress of stage, film and television. She won the BAFTA Award for Best British Actress for A Taste of Honey and the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role in 1995 for The Birthday Party.

Early life

Bryan was born in Southport, Lancashire. Her father was a salesman and she attended Hathershaw County Primary School in Oldham, Lancashire. Her career began in pantomime before the Second World War, during which she joined ENSA in Italy to entertain British troops.

Career

Stage

Bryan made her stage debut as a child in a pantomime in Manchester, and encouraged by her mother, joined the Oldham Coliseum while still a teenager. After spending six years honing her craft there, she moved to London to develop her stage career, becoming a regular performer in the West End. Cast in a production of Noël Coward's Private Lives, the actress was encouraged to adopt a stage name by Coward himself. She opted for Dora Bryant, which she often said was inspired by a box of Bryant and May matches that were lying on the table, but a typographical error left off the last letter on the theatre credits and she became Dora Bryan.
In 1955, Bryan made her debut in West End musical comedy with her performance as Lily Bell in a production of A.P. Herbert's The Water Gipsies. Singing the show's hit songs, "Why Did You Call Me Lily?", "You Never Know with Men", and "It Would Cramp My Style", such was her personal success that the billing outside the theatre was changed after the first night to "Dora Bryan in A.P. Herbert's The Water Gipsies.
Throughout her career, she continued to perform on the stage, often appearing in musicals such as Gentleman Prefer Blondes and Hello, Dolly!. She also headlined a number of stage revues such as The Dora Bryan Show, "My Name Is Dora" and An Evening with Dora Bryan and Friends. She made her Broadway debut as Mrs. Pearce in Pygmalion, starring Peter O'Toole and Amanda Plummer. Other credits include her first Shakespearean role, Mistress Quickly in The Merry Wives of Windsor, Mrs. Hardcastle in She Stoops to Conquer and in Kander and Ebb's 70, Girls, 70 to great acclaim. She appeared with Trevor Peacock in the National Theatre's 1994 revival of Harold Pinter's The Birthday Party.

Screen roles and other work

Instantly recognisable from her voice, which became a trademark of her performances, Bryan followed many of her theatre contemporaries into film acting, generally playing supporting roles. She often played women of easy virtue—for example in The Fallen Idol, one of her early films, and Ealing's The Blue Lamp. She appeared in similarly stereotypical female roles in other films, for example Gift Horse, The Cockleshell Heroes, The Green Man and Carry On Sergeant.
Bryan appeared in radio comedy series including Much-Binding-in-the-Marsh. British Pathe filmed Bryan in 1957 in 'Home on Wheels', featuring her and friends in her personal caravan. She appeared in the film A Taste of Honey, which won four BAFTA awards, including Best Actress for Bryan and Best British Film. In 1963, she recorded the Christmas song "All I Want for Christmas Is a Beatle", which reached no. 20 on the UK charts. She played the Headmistress in The Great St. Trinian's Train Robbery, and she starred in According to Dora, her own television series for the BBC.
Bryan appeared in the UK-Argentine thriller Apartment Zero. The film was directed by Martin Donovan and starred Hart Bochner and Colin Firth. Bryan plays the role of one of two eccentric characters described by The Washington Post as two "tea-and-crumpet gargoyle-featured spinsters who snoop the corridors". It featured in the 1988 Sundance Film Festival. She appeared in two episodes of series one of the BBC sitcom On The Up in 1990 as Mrs Carpenter. She was replaced by actress Pauline Letts for series two and three.
In 1998, Bryan made an appearance in the Victoria Wood sitcom dinnerladies. In 2000, she joined the cast of the long-running BBC comedy series Last of the Summer Wine as Auntie Ros, and in 2001 she was a guest star in Absolutely Fabulous as June Whitfield's on-screen friend Dolly.
A few years later in 2005 her role in Last of the Summer Wine came to an end. At about the same time, she stopped making films. Her last screen appearance was in the short film Gone to the Dogs with Antony Booth. In 2006, she intended to appear both in the comedy Rock-a-Hula Rest Home at a pub theatre in Brighton and in the comedy There's No Place Like a Home, but she had to withdraw because of her inability to memorise her lines.

Awards and testimonials

Her autobiography According to Dora was published in 1987. In 1996, she was awarded the OBE in recognition of her services to acting. The previous year she was awarded a Laurence Olivier Award for her role in the National Theatre production of the Harold Pinter play The Birthday Party. She was the subject of This Is Your Life on two occasions, in April 1962 when she was surprised by Eamonn Andrews at her home in Brighton, and in January 1989 when Michael Aspel surprised her on the stage of the Opera House at the curtain call of Hello, Dolly!. An exhibition about Bryan opened on 13 September 2013 at Rottingdean Museum.

Personal life

Bryan was married for 54 years to former Lancashire and Cumberland cricketer Bill Lawton until his death in August 2008. The couple met in Oldham during World War II and were married at Werneth St Thomas, Oldham in 1954. During her husband's final years, she reduced her public commitments to enable her to look after him, and she suffered with her health, including a serious operation for a hernia.
Bryan once owned Clarges Hotel at 115–119 Marine Parade on Brighton's seafront, which was used as an exterior location in the films Carry On Girls and Carry On at Your Convenience. She and her husband lived there for more than 40 years but were forced to sell the bulk of the building because of bankruptcy, but they retained a flat with a sea view on the first floor for many years. Still maintaining its original structure, the rooms of the hotel have been reconverted into flats. By 2013, she was a wheelchair user and resided in a nursing home in Hove in frail health.
On 31 May 2009, Dora – A Gala Charity Show was held at Her Majesty's Theatre in London to raise funds for two charities nominated by Bryan: the Variety Club Children's Charity and the Alzheimer's Society. Sir Cliff Richard was the star performer, and among the performers and celebrity guests were old friends and colleagues, including June Whitfield, Rita Tushingham, and Joanna Lumley. Bryan managed to attend.

Death

Bryan died on 23 July 2014 at the age of 91. Her funeral service was held on 6 August 2014 at St George's Church, Brighton, where she had regularly attended services.

Selected filmography

Odd Man Out - Girl in Telephone Kiosk The Fallen Idol - RoseNo Room at the Inn - Spiv's Girlfriend Once Upon a Dream - BarmaidNow Barabbas - WinnieAdam and Evelyne - Blonde Sales Assistant Don't Ever Leave Me - Beautician The Interrupted Journey - WaitressThe Cure for Love - Jenny JenkinsThe Blue Lamp - MaisieTraveller's Joy - EvaNo Trace - Maisie PhelpsSomething in the City - WaitressFiles from Scotland Yard - Minnie RobinsonThe Quiet Woman - ElsieCircle of Danger - Bubbles FitzgeraldScarlet Thread - MaggieNo Highway in the Sky - Rosie, Barmaid Lady Godiva Rides Again - Lady in Charge of PublicityHigh Treason - Mrs. BowersWhispering Smith Investigates - La Fosse13 East Street - ValerieGift Horse - Glad FlanaganMother Riley Meets the Vampire - TillyTime Gentlemen, Please! - Peggy StebbinsThe Ringer - Mrs. HackettWomen of Twilight - OlgaMade in Heaven - Ethel JenkinsMiss Robin Hood - PearlStreet Corner - Prostitute at Police StationThe Fake - BarmaidThe Intruder - Dora BeeYou Know What Sailors Are - GladysFast and Loose - Mary Rawlings, the maidThe Young Lovers - Switchboard Operator The Crowded Day - CustomerMad About Men - BerengariaAs Long as They're Happy - MaySee How They Run - IdaYou Lucky People! - Sgt. Hortense TippThe Cockleshell Heroes - MyrtleChild in the House - CassieThe Green Man - LilySmall Hotel The Man Who Wouldn't Talk - TelephonistCarry On Sergeant - NorahOperation Bullshine - Pvt. CoxDesert Mice - GayFollow That Horse! - Miss BradstockThe Night We Got the Bird - Julie SkidmoreA Taste of Honey - HelenThe Great St. Trinian's Train Robbery - Amber SpottiswoodThe Sandwich Man - Mrs De VereTwo a Penny - Ruby HopkinsHands of the Ripper - Mrs GoldingUp the Front - Cora CrumpingtonScreamtime - EmmaApartment Zero - Margaret McKinneyMirrorMask - Aunt Nan