Morag Hood
Morag Hood was a British actress who featured in numerous television programmes, stage productions, and audio presentations in the UK from the 1960s up to the late 1990s.
Early life
Hood was born in Glasgow, Scotland, and attended Bellahouston Academy. She was a graduate of the University of Glasgow.Career
Television
One of Hood's earliest jobs was as a presenter of youth programmes on Scottish Television in 1963. In April 1964, she and fellow presenter Paul Young interviewed the Beatles. The interview, recorded at the Scottish Television studios in Cowcaddens, Glasgow, was thought to be lost for many years. The reel of 16mm film was found in 2008, in a rusting film can in a south London garage.She is best known for playing Natasha Rostova in the epic 1972 BBC television adaptation of War and Peace, though several critics felt that she was miscast, and Frances Earnshaw in the 1970 film version of Wuthering Heights. She played a complaining and prideful Mary Musgrove in BBC's 1971 version of Jane Austen's Persuasion. Morag Hood appeared in numerous other British television series, including: Z-Cars, The Borderers, Bergerac, Jane Eyre, Families and Hamish Macbeth. Hood also appeared in an episode of Auf Wiedersehen, Pet as Joy Chatterley, an attractive local resident who ended up having a fling with Oz. She starred in the controversial 1990 BBC1 drama A Sense of Guilt.