Wendy Allnutt (born 1 May 1946) is an English stage and screen actress.

She now teaches at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, leading a degree course in Training Actors Movement.[1]

Life

Born in Lincoln, Allnutt trained for an acting career at the Central School of Speech and Drama from 1963 to 1966. She soon gained many parts on and off stage, and a full-face portrait of her filled the cover of TV Times magazine dated 3 February 1968.[2]

In 1967, Dennis Potter sent Allnutt what has been called a love-letter in print,[3] in which he said

Wendy Allnutt is paralysingly beautiful, with huge, dark eyes which suddenly flood with warmth or freeze into an icy indifference. She can also act...”[3]

Allnutt had met fellow actor Colin McCormack in her first year at the Central School of Speech and Drama and married him in East Berkshire in 1968. They were still together when McCormack died in 2004 and had two children together, Katherine and Andrew McCormack.[4][5]

As well as her work on screen, she also appeared in Royal Shakespeare Company productions and in West End theatre. She went on to develop a second career in teaching, working at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art and the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, and also teaching courses in Italy.[1] In 2003, she was the choreographer for a production of Oliver Goldsmith's She Stoops to Conquer.[6]

Films

Television

Notes

  1. 1 2 Wendy Allnutt DipCSSD FGS, profile at Guildhall School of Music and Drama web site accessed 30 June 2018
  2. Wendy Allnutt cover, with caption “Wendy Allnutt as SARAH a 20th century miss”, in TV Times magazine for 3–9 February 1968
  3. 1 2 W. Stephen Gilbert, The Life and Work of Dennis Potter (2002), p. 180
  4. Kenneth Rea, Colin McCormack: Classical actor who was a stalwart of the RSC (obituary) in The Guardian dated 9 July 2004, accessed 20 June 2018
  5. “ALLNUTT, WENDY E and MCCORMACK, JOHN C” in Register of Marriages for the Easthampstead Registration District, vol, 6A. (1968), p. 71
  6. Wendy Allnutt at British Film Institute online, accessed 30 June 2018
  7. Denis Gifford, British Film Catalogue: Two Volume Set - The Fiction Film (2016), p. 785
  8. Jay Robert Nash, Stanley Ralph Ross, The Motion Picture Guide, Volume 3 (1986), p. 944
  9. Jay Robert Nash, Stanley Ralph Ross, The Motion Picture Guide Volume 9 (1987), p. 3795
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.