The Man Who Knew Too Much
While vacationing in St. Moritz, a British couple receive a clue to an imminent assassination attempt, only to...
Acting
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nova Margery Pilbeam (15 November 1919 – 17 July 2015) was an English film and stage actress. Pilbeam gained attention as a child stage actress. This led to much work in her teen years. She appeared in Alfred Hitchcock's film The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934), in which she plays a girl who is abducted, following this with her lead performance as Lady Jane Grey in Tudor Rose (1936). She had a starring role in Hitchcock's Young and Innocent (1937), which she regarded as "the sunniest film I was involved with", and formed a constructive professional relationship with Hitchcock.
She appeared in an early British television drama in 1939. That year David O. Selznick wanted Pilbeam for the lead in Hitchcock's Rebecca (1940), and thought she could be an international film star. However, her agent was worried about the length of a five-year contract; meanwhile, Hitchcock, whose outlook on the film was not the same as Selznick's, auditioned hundreds of others over many months, at last giving the role to Joan Fontaine.
Unlike some of her peers, Pilbeam never made a film in Hollywood. She continued acting, with appearances in at least nine British films along with many stage roles, throughout the 1940s. One of her last films was The Three Weird Sisters (1948). She remained working on stage for a short while longer, appearing at the Duchess Theatre in Toni Block's play Flowers for the Living in February 1950.
Pilbeam married Pen Tennyson, a great-grandson of the poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson and an assistant director to Hitchcock, in 1939. Tennyson became a film director the year they were married, but died in a plane crash in 1941 while working as part of the Admiralty's instructional films unit. She was married to BBC Radio journalist Alexander Whyte from 1950 until his death in 1972. Their child Sarah Jane was born in 1952.
In her last years, Pilbeam lived in Dartmouth Park, north London. She died on 17 July 2015 in London, aged 95.
Browse movies and TV shows featuring Nova Pilbeam
While vacationing in St. Moritz, a British couple receive a clue to an imminent assassination attempt, only to...
When a young writer is falsely accused of murdering a famous actress, he escapes custody and joins forces with...
Lots of slogans such as "Be like Dad, Keep Mum" and "Keep it under your Hat" are visible on the walls in variou...
The tragic story of Lady Jane Grey, the young queen who reigned in England for nine days before she was execute...
A fisherman begins studying to be an osteopath. Although he isn't finished with medical school, he begins treat...
The village of Altdorf has to come to terms with Chancellor Hitler and the arrival of a platoon of Stormtrooper...
An escaped World War 2 Nazi doctor impersonates a murdered English doctor so he can work on a vaccination to pr...
In 1940 Sally Maitland is forced to leave England, ostracised as a Nazi sympathiser by everyone including her w...
Tiny Fox-Collier and her son, Tony, are broke. A cheery and handsome young man about town, Tony knows he can re...
Shades of "Romeo and Juliet" with rival British Brewery owners who hate each other and their children who fall...
One wartime Christmas the well-to-do Ferguson family extends a festive welcome to various strays, with comic re...
A girl becomes an unwilling witness in her parents' scandalous divorce case.
Three older sisters live on their family estate in Wales. This household once proudly reigned over a mining tow...
When Susie Long appears, together with her 20 year old son, Pink and Pound are thrown into confusion that one o...
1939 BBC studio production of Peggy Barwell’s play Prison without Bars, set in a girls’ reformatory, which was...
Examines the role of art in WWII; featuring Henry Moore's drawings of London Underground during bombing raids,...