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Actors - Wendy Barrie


Wendy Barrie (18 April, 1912 – 2 February, 1978) was a Hong Kong-born actress who worked in British and Hollywood films.

Her birth name was Marguerite Wendy Jenkins and she was born in Hong Kong to British parents. Her father was a successful attorney who could afford to educate her at quality schools in England and Switzerland. While still in her teens, she began pursuing a career as an actress. Adopting the stage name Wendy Barrie, she began her acting life in English theatre then in 1932 made her screen debut in the film "Threads" that was based on a play. She went on to make a number of motion pictures for London Films
under the Korda brothers, Alexander and Zoltan, the best-known of which is 1933's The Private Life of Henry VIII
which starred Charles Laughton
and Robert Donat
with Merle Oberon
as Anne Boleyn, Elsa Lanchester
as Anne of Cleves and Barrie as Jane Seymour.

Contracted by Hollywood's Fox Film Corporation for a 1934 film directed by Scott Darling that was made in Britain, the following year Wendy Barrie moved to the United States and made her first Hollywood film for Fox opposite Spencer Tracy
in the romantic comedy, It's a Small World. Loaned to MGM, Barrie starred opposite James Stewart in the 1936 film, Speed. After several more films, in 1939 she starred with Richard Greene
and Basil Rathbone
in the 20th Century Fox version of The Hound of the Baskervilles
and for RKO with Lucille Ball
in dramatic roles in Five Came Back
directed by John Farrow
.

During the early 1940s, Wendy Barrie made several of "The Saint" and "The Falcon" mystery films with George Sanders. She made her final motion picture in 1943 and with the dawn of television, near the end of the decade Barrie turned to roles in that medium. During 1948 and 1949 she hosted a DuMont Television Network comedy for children featuring a cowboy puppet called "The Adventures of Oky Doky." However, she is best remembered by national audiences as host of one of the first-ever television talk shows. "The Wendy Barrie Show" debuted in November of 1948 on ABC, then ran on Dumont Television and NBC, ending its run in September of 1950.

After more than fifteen films in Britain and more than thirty in Hollywood, Wendy Barrie's contribution to the industry was recognized with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1700 Vine Street.

She died in Englewood, New Jersey in 1978, aged 65, following a stroke that had left her debilitated for several years. She was buried in the Kensico Cemetery in Valhalla, New York.

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Wendy Barrie ]



Some related entries: Stephen Macht | Jon Bon Jovi | Will Hay | Jeffrey Weissman | Amy Brenneman | Kate Collins | Tomasz Mędrzak | Virginia Payne | Alex Henteloff | Prov Sadovsky | Stéphane Audran

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