Janet_Munro

Janet Munro

Janet Munro

British actress (1934–1972)


Janet Munro (born Janet Neilson Horsburgh; 28 September 1934 6 December 1972) was a British actress. She won a Golden Globe Award for her performance in the film Darby O'Gill and the Little People (1959) and received a BAFTA Film Award nomination for her performance in the film Life for Ruth (1962).

Quick Facts Born, Died ...

Munro starred in three Disney films: Darby O'Gill and the Little People (1959), Third Man on the Mountain (1959) and Swiss Family Robinson (1960). Other film credits were roles in The Trollenberg Terror (1958) and The Day the Earth Caught Fire (1961).

Munro married the actor Tony Wright, and then the actor Ian Hendry. She died of a heart attack at age 38.

Biography

Early life

Born Janet Neilson Horsburgh in Blackpool, Lancashire in 1934, she was the daughter of Scottish comedian Alex Munro (real name Alexander Neilson Horsburgh) and his wife, Phyllis Robertshaw. She used her father's stage name professionally.[1]

Munro grew up on the road with her father, often appearing with him on stage. Her mother died when Janet was seven, and she was brought up by her father at first. She later recalled "during the war he was head of entertainment for the RAF, and I went along with him wherever he happened to be. We entertained the troops. I wore kilts and sang. My voice was even smaller than I was, but the boys didn't seem to mind – I was a bit of baggage from home."[2]

She moved to the village of Embsay at age ten to live with her aunt and uncle for a time. When her father remarried, she was brought up by him and her stepmother. After leaving school she worked in a shoe shop but her goal was to become an actress.[3] "I never had any doubt as to what I wanted to be", she said later.[2]

Early appearances

Munro's father wanted her to join him on his act, but she desired to become a legitimate actress. She got a job at a repertory company as a student messenger and "learned as I went along, playing bits, and by the time I was 17 I was stage manager for the company."[2] She worked in towns like Preston, Oldham and Hull and her wage at the time was around £8 a week.[3]

Munro appeared in a BBC TV adaptation of I Capture the Castle (1954), playing the lead part of Rose.

She had a small part in the Gordon Harker comedy Small Hotel (1957) and started appearing regularly on British TV shows such as ITV Television Playhouse ("One of Us", "Pickup Girl", "Lace on Her Petticoat") and Armchair Theatre ("Trial by Candlelight", "The Deaf Heart").[4]

Munro could be seen in ingenue parts in the feature films The Trollenberg Terror (1958), a horror film, and The Young and the Guilty (1958), a melodrama written by Ted Willis. She appeared on stage in Daughters of Desire[5] and was chosen "Miss English Television of 1958".

Disney

Munro's big break came in March 1958 when cast as the female lead in Disney's Darby O'Gill and the Little People (1959). Although the film was shot in Hollywood it was cast out of London. Disney saw her in "Pick Up Girl" and she was screen tested over a two-day period. Disney liked her so much he signed her to a five-year contract.[2][6]

Disney immediately used her again as the female lead in Third Man on the Mountain (1959) opposite James MacArthur. Contemporary reports compared her with June Allyson.[7]

Munro made her US television debut when she played the romantic lead in a TV adaptation of Berkeley Square (1959) for Hallmark Hall of Fame. She was directed by George Schaefer and appeared opposite John Kerr. One review said she did "beautiful work."[8]

Munro returned to England to play Tommy Steele's love interest in Tommy the Toreador (1959), then made a third film for Disney, Swiss Family Robinson (1960), again romancing MacArthur. It was shot in the West Indies over five months.

Munro was going to be in Bon Voyage for Disney with Karl Malden but it was not made for another few years, with Deborah Walley in the role announced for Munro.[9] Instead she appeared in The Horsemasters (1961) for him, shot in England for American television, and released theatrically in some markets.

Munro returned to US television with Time Remembered (1961) for Hallmark Hall of Fame.[10]

British films

Munro was the female lead in the science fiction film The Day the Earth Caught Fire (1961), one of her best remembered parts.[11]

She had the female lead role in Life for Ruth (1962), directed by Basil Dearden, which earned her a BAFTA nomination for Best Female Actor.[12]

She returned to Armchair Theatre ("Girl in a Bird Cage", "Afternoon of a Nymph" with Ian Hendry who she was to marry) and was top billed in a film for the first time with Bitter Harvest (1963), but it was not a success.[13]

Munro was the female lead in Hide and Seek (1964) with Ian Carmichael and A Jolly Bad Fellow (1964) with Leo McKern, one of her alumni from The Day the Earth Caught Fire. She had a cameo in Daylight Robbery (1964).

Return to acting

Munro was inactive in her profession for a few years in order to concentrate on raising a family but returned to acting after her second marriage to Ian Hendry ended in 1968.[14]

She appeared in episodes of Vendetta ("The Running Man"), and Thirty-Minute Theatre ("Turn Off If You Know the Ending") and had a support part in Sebastian (1968).[15]

Munro travelled to New York to star in a TV adaptation of The Admirable Crichton (1968).[16] She had a cameo in Cry Wolf (1969).

Munro was in ITV Playhouse ("Premiere: Flower Dew"),[17] and had the lead in a series, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1969). Reviewing the latter, The Guardian called her "a revelation. She is no longer the B picture girl next door. She is a woman and her acting has power and experience of life."[18]

Her last roles were in Play for Today ("The Piano"), and in several episodes of the TV series Adam Smith. In July 1971 she appeared on stage in Look – No Hands.[19]

Personal life

Munro was married to actor Tony Wright from 1956 until 1959. She married Ian Hendry in 1963; the couple had two children, Sally and Corrie. They lived in a house on Pharaoh's Island.

Val Guest, who directed Munro in The Day the Earth Caught Fire, later said "Janet's life was a disaster... [she] didn't become an alcoholic until she met Ian. She tried too hard to keep up with him."[20]

Munro and Hendry were divorced in December 1971. Hendry offered no contest to the charge that the marriage had broken down due to Hendry's "unreasonable behaviour".[21]

Death

Munro died aged 38 on 6 December 1972 on her way to hospital after collapsing at her home in Tufnell Park.[22][23] Her death was ruled due to a heart attack caused by chronic ischaemic heart disease.[24] She was cremated and interred at the Golders Green Crematorium.[25]

Filmography

More information Film, Year ...

Awards and nominations

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References

  1. Hershman, Gabriel (2013). Send in the Clowns – The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry. lulu.com. p. 60. ISBN 978-1291270976.
  2. Hopper, H. (13 July 1958). "You'll love janet munro!". Chicago Daily Tribune. ProQuest 182125751.
  3. White, Clive (17 October 2009). "Too-short life of star who captivated Walt Disney". Craven History.
  4. Jennings, Betty (19 March 1960). "EVERYTHING HAPPENS TO ME". Picture Show. London. pp. 7–8.
  5. Gardner, Raymond (28 March 1970). "The Kash register". The Guardian. p. 8.
  6. Jennings, B. (19 March 1960). "EVERYTHING HAPPENS TO ME". Picture show. pp. 7–8. ProQuest 1880298630.
  7. Hopper, H. (29 April 1958). "Walt disney discovery, janet munro, to be star". Chicago Daily Tribune. ProQuest 182172561.
  8. Smith, Cecil. (9 February 1959). "THE TV SCENE: Wisdom Shines in Darkest Hours". Los Angeles Times. p. A10.
  9. A.H. WEILER. (25 December 1960). "GREAT EXPECTATIONS". The New York Times. ProQuest 115084507.
  10. Hopper, H. (20 August 1960). "Walt disney will film romantic teen comedy". Chicago Daily Tribune. ProQuest 182536538.
  11. "Movie gossip". The Australian Women's Weekly. Vol. 28, no. 51. 24 May 1961. p. 19. Retrieved 28 January 2018 via National Library of Australia.
  12. "18 FILMS COMPETE FOR BRITISH TITLE". The New York Times. 4 February 1963. ProQuest 116512767.
  13. "Bitter Harvest". Western Herald. New South Wales, Australia. 2 April 1965. p. 5. Retrieved 28 January 2018 via National Library of Australia.
  14. "Television News". Chicago Tribune. 28 April 1968. p. s22.
  15. Adler, R. (25 January 1968). "Sebastian' arrives". The New York Times. ProQuest 118244553.
  16. "Television news". Chicago Tribune. 28 April 1968. ProQuest 175700255.
  17. "BRIEFING: The week's television". The Observer. 29 September 1968. p. 22.
  18. Dewhurst, Keith (30 December 1968). "The tenant of Wildfell Hall". The Guardian. p. 6.
  19. "The Spectator's Arts Round-up". The Spectator. Vol. 227, no. 7464. London. 17 July 1971. p. 108.
  20. Swires, Steve (February 1991). "Inferno Maker". Starlog. No. 163. p. 57.
  21. "Hendry divorce". The Guardian. 11 December 1971. p. 7.
  22. "Actress dies". The Guardian. 7 December 1972. p. 1.
  23. "Obituary". Variety. 13 December 1972. p. 63.
  24. "Death". The Canberra Times. Vol. 47, no. 13, 301. 8 December 1972. p. 5. Retrieved 28 January 2018 via National Library of Australia.
  25. "JANET MUNRO DEAD; SCREEN ACTRESS, 38". The New York Times. 7 December 1972. p. 40.

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