Anne Heywood


Anne Heywood was an English actress and beauty pageant titleholder. She won the title of Miss Great Britain in 1950. She was known for her long personal and professional association with producer Raymond Stross as well as playing a series of roles that broke on-screen sexual taboos, and was nominated for a Golden Globe [Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama] for her performance in [The Fox (1967 film)|The Fox].

Early life and career

Heywood was born Violet Joan Pretty in 1931 to Harold James and Edna Elizabeth in the Handsworth area of Birmingham.
In 1947, aged 15, she joined Highbury Little Theatre in Sutton Coldfield and then won a University of Birmingham Carnival Queen competition. She then entered a National Bathing Beauty Contest and won. She won the Miss Great Britain title under her real name in 1950.
Heywood made three television appearances on the Carroll Levis TV Show and then spent four years touring UK theatres. Later she also attended the London [Academy of Music and Dramatic Art].

Career

Rank Organisation

She had a small role in Lady Godiva Rides Again. She was then signed to the Rank Organisation, who changed her name and gave her small supporting roles in Checkpoint, Find the Lady, and Doctor at Large. The Danziger Brothers borrowed her for the lead femme fatale in the low-budget film noir The Depraved with Robert Arden.
Rank gave Heywood the second female lead in Dangerous Exile and she was the female lead in Violent Playground with Stanley Baker, which established her as a film name. Variety wrote "Getting her first big chance, as David McCallum's elder sister, Anne Heywood shows up as one of the most promising young actresses lately to be introduced into British pix. The girl has warmth and charm and is extremely easy on the optics."
She made Floods of Fear with Howard Keel. Herbert Wilcox used her as Frankie Vaughan's leading lady in The Heart of a Man, then for Rank she starred in a romantic comedy Upstairs and Downstairs. In April 1959 Variety reported "Having jettisoned Belinda Lee, the Rank Organization is now pinning most of its faith to Anne Heywood. In the three or four recent releases in which she’s been given star roles this ex-beauty queen has come on apace."
In June 1959 Rank released a single from Heywood on its record label - "Love Is", which featured in The Heart of a Man.
She was loaned to an Italian company for the historical costume drama Carthage in Flames.

Raymond Stross

Heywood starred in the war movie A Terrible Beauty opposite Robert Mitchum. It was produced by Raymond Stross, who married Heywood. She told the press, "The girls in English films are always blamed for being sexless but it isn't us. It's the directors. They are all nervous and inhibited about sex."
In December 1960 Heywood announced she had terminated her seven year contract with Rank, which had two years to go. "I'm fed up with playing wishy-washy good girls," she said. "I want to play women with sex appeal... I haven't made a film for over a year and I have had to turn down some wonderful offers from Hollywood and the Continent. I've got plenty of sex appeal. British films just didn't give me the chance to use it. They are written around men. No one writes good, meaty dramatic parts for girls."
Heywood starred in some British comedies, Petticoat Pirates and Stork Talk then did three films produced by Stross: The Brain, The Very Edge, and 90 Degrees in the Shade. Stross announced a film called Angel with Heywood but it appears to have not been made.
Heywood was making High Jungle for MGM with Eric Fleming but the film was cancelled when Fleming drowned.
Heywood starred in The Fox, a screen adaptation of a D. H. Lawrence novella, which was produced by Stross and co-starred Sandy Dennis and Keir Dullea. The film generated controversy at the time due to its lesbian theme and nudity from Heywood. It was also a major commercial success. A newspaper referred to her and Stross as the "English Carlo Pontis." She was signed to a four picture deal by Paramount.
Heywood went to Italy to play a nun in The Lady of Monza, playing The Nun of Monza, then did a movie with Richard Crenna produced by Stross, Midas Run. She was second-billed in an espionage adventure film with Gregory Peck, The Chairman but she was only on screen for five minutes. She was mentioned as a possible star of Myra Breckinridge, but did not appear in the final film.

Later career

Heywood starred in I Want [What I Want (film)|I Want What I Want], a box-office and critical flop produced by Stross, then went to Italy for the giallo film The Killer Is on the Phone and The Nun and the Devil, again as a nun. In Hollywood, she was the female lead in Trader Horn, a failed remake of a 1931 classic film, then she returned to Italy for Love Under the Elms.
Heywood starred in Good Luck, Miss Wyckoff, produced by Stross and in the Italian satanic horror Ring of Darkness. Both films were failures. She then had supporting roles in the miniseries Sadat and the science fiction film What Waits Below. Her penultimate role was portraying Manon Brevard Marcel in a 1988 two-part episode, "The Mystery of Manon," of the popular US television series The Equalizer, starring fellow British actor Edward Woodward.
After the death of Stross in 1988, she retired from acting.

Personal life

Heywood was married for twenty-eight years to British film producer Raymond Stross, who produced most of her films after they met in Ireland in July 1959 during the filming of A Terrible Beauty. After their marriage in Zurich, Switzerland on 12 February 1960, the couple subsequently collaborated on several British and international films, including The Brain, The Very Edge, Ninety Degrees in the Shade, The Fox, Midas Run, I Want What I Want, and Good Luck, Miss Wyckoff.
Following Stross' death in 1988, Heywood retired and never appeared on screen again. In 1991, she married her second husband, George Danzig Druke, a former Assistant Attorney General of New York State, who died on 7 October 2021 in Beverly Hills, aged 98. Heywood lived in Beverly Hills, California.

Death

Heywood died from cancer in Houston, Texas on 27 October 2023, aged 91. Her death was announced 7 months later.

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1951Lady Godiva Rides AgainDorothy Marloweas 'Violet Pretty'
1956Find the LadyReceptionist
1956CheckpointGabriela
1957Doctor at LargeEmerald
1957The DepravedLaura Wilton
1957Dangerous ExileGlynis
1958Violent PlaygroundCatherine Murphy
1959Floods of FearElizabeth Matthews
1959The Heart of a ManJulie
1959Upstairs and DownstairsKate
1960Carthage in FlamesFulvia
1960A Terrible BeautyNeeve Donnelly
1961Petticoat PiratesChief Officer Anne Stevens
1962Stork TalkLisa Vernon
1962The BrainAnna Holt
1963The Very EdgeTracey Lawrence
1965Ninety Degrees in the ShadeAlena
1967The FoxEllen March
1969The Lady of MonzaVirginia de Leyva
1969Midas RunSylvia Giroux
1969The ChairmanKay Hanna
1972I Want What I WantRoy/Wendy
1972The Killer Is on the PhoneEleanor Loraine
1973The Nun and the DevilMother Giulia
1973Trader HornNicole Mercer
1974The First Time on the GrassMargherita
1979Ring of DarknessCarlotta Rhodes
1979Good Luck, Miss WyckoffEvelyn Wyckoff
1984What Waits BelowFrieda Shelley