The
British Actress Carole Lesley was born Maureen Lesley Carole
Rippingale, on the 27th May 1935. Her parents were Rupert Thomas
Rippingale and his wife Winifred (nee Appleton). The Rippingales had
lived in Essex for at least 3 generations and Maureen grew up happily
alongside her older brother Keith and her younger sister Josephine, in
the Essex town of Chelmsford.
The
young Maureen was full of energy and high spirits. Neighbours recall
that she used to dance under the street lamps outside her Manor Road
home and in the grading room of the Fruit Farm in Galleywood, where she
worked in the Summer.
As
a child Maureen used to enjoy watching a fellow classmate draw sketches
of all the great Hollywood movies stars. This artistic school friend
was to become the mother of journalist, Deborah Orr, who wrote an
article in the Guardian Newspaper mentioning Carol, when the Award
Winning Film The Artist
came out in 2012. Deborah Orr compared Carole Lesley with the fictional
character of George Valentin, Orr said that just like George Valentin, once Leslie stopped making films, she
became very depressed. Whilst she could not find her way back into a
rapidly changing film Industry, many of her fellow actor friends went on
to much greater success. Deborah's mother said “Maureen
loved the movies, she was silly about them. The amazing thing is, my
mother would tell me, her voice full of wonder, that Maureen had
actually managed it. She had reinvented herself as Carole Lesley, a
blonde bombshell, and had been in quite a few films – we even saw her on
the TV in "Doctor in Love" one Sunday afternoon!”
Maureen had made her film debut at the age of 12 playing Una, in the British drama about Scottish Herring fishermen, called The Silver Darlings (1947), which was directed by Clarence Elder. From that moment on she was determined to become an actress.
In 1949 aged 14 she played her second role as the young Clara in “Trottie True” a
British musical comedy film directed by Brian Desmond Hurst telling the
story of a Gaiety Girl of the 1890s. After a brief romance with a
balloonist, Trottie marries Lord Digby Landon, becoming Duchess of
Wellwater. It was known as 'The Gay Lady' in the U.S, and is a rare
British Technicolor film of the period. It also featured a young
Christopher Lee in one of his very first acting roles, as a stage Door
Johhny.
As a young teenager, Maureen
got herself a job working as an usherette in the Pavilion Cinema, in
Duke Street, Chelmsford. After her two appearances in films as a child, she was totally transfixed and compelled by the
idea of being an actress and achieving the stardom she desired. She was inspired even further to pursue a career in
acting, by the performances she saw every night on the silver screen.
She was not content with just being the pretty girl who shone her torch and sold ice cream
to the audiences - she wanted to go to Hollywood and make it big.
In
1951 the naive but very pretty, starry-eyed sixteen-year-old left home
in search of fame and success. The story goes that she ran away to
London, wearing her father's shirt and had only two and four pence in
her pocket. Maureen eventually found work in London's Cabaret Clubs,
where she was able to sharpen her dancing skills and earn regular money
as a chorus girl. From there she went to Paris and worked as a
pin-up model under the name of Leslie Carol.
Photographs from her early days have more recently been a source of inspiration for the British artist Paul Harvey.
With
her drop-dead good looks and curvaceous figure Maureen found plenty of
photographers wanting to take her picture, but eventually, she returned
to England to pursue a serious acting career.
Following an unbilled role
as a Tea Shop Waitress in the Crime Thriller “The Embezzler “(1954) for
Kenilworth Productions, she managed to obtain a seven-year contract at
Associated British Pictures and from then on her official stage name
became "Carole Lesley”.
From
1957, she would appear in a selection of drama and comedy
films. Studio protocol of the day had the eager young starlet attending
plenty of premieres, parties and social events in order to build up her
name and her public presence.
In 1957 she attended the World Charity Premiere of Good Companions and the premiere of Chase a Crooked Shadow at
the Warner Cinema in Leicester Square, London. She was more than ready
to do whatever it took to get herself noticed by movie magazines, such
as The Post, Picturegoer and other assorted publications.
Lesley
was one of a few starlets who briefly rivaled notorious blonde
bombshell Diana Dors as Britain's answer to Marilyn Monroe during the
late 1950s and early 1960s. Her beautifully slim face was slightly
reminiscent of comedic actress Kay Kendall and she willingly exploited
her obvious physical endowments in an elusive attempt to drum up public
attention.
In 1957 Carole had a supporting role in the film Woman in a Dressing Gown
(1957) starring Yvonne Mitchell, Anthony Quayle and Sylvia Syms. The
film won a Golden Globe Award for Best English Language Foreign Film.
Carole played Hilda Harper, a young neighbourly confidante to dowdy
wife Amy, played by Mitchell, whose husband (Quayle) is having an affair
with his secretary (Syms). Woman in a Dressing Gown was in many ways a ground-breaking film for British cinema in the 1950s.
It
deals with themes which prefigured the 'New Wave' movement of the
following decade, which made big stars out of the likes of Albert
Finney, Richard Harris and Tom Courtenay. Unlike the majority of these
'Angry Young Men' Drama’s, Woman in a Dressing Gown
was set in London rather than in the North or the Midlands, and
featured women as characters who, ultimately, prove strong and acquire
self-knowledge. The film was described by film historian Jeffrey
Richards as "a Brief Encounter of the council flats",
taking the scenario of an extra-marital relationship and relocating it
to a less middle-class setting. However, writer Ted Willis described it
more simply, as a film about "good honest fumbling people caught up in tiny tragedies"
Woman in a Dressing Gown
is an important reminder that post-war British realism did not begin
with the new wave, and that the 1950s were not devoid of socially
engaged cinema, as is sometimes suggested. Indeed, one could argue that
this film is considerably more progressive than the new wave that
superseded it, in its focus on the travails of a middle-aged housewife
rather than those of a virile young man.
As the Actress Sylvia Syms put it:
"There
are certain films of that period that have gained enormous fame, the
obvious one is Saturday Night and Sunday Morning. It was a wonderful
film, full of brilliant performances, but it's about a man, and men have
always been more important than women”.
Carole's next supporting role was in the 1957 movie "Dangerous Youth" or "These Dangerous Years"
as it was re-titled in the USA. It was an early Liverpudlian musical
comedy drama built around 29-year-old "teen" pop idol, Frankie Vaughan.
Also in the film were Thora Hird, George Baker, Kenneth Cope, who would
later find fame in “Randall and Hopkirk Deceased” and John Le
Mesuirier, who became much more famous for his role as Sgt Wilson in
Dad’s Army.
Carole
played Dinah Brown, Frankie Vaughan’s girlfriend who is forced to work
in a coffee shop when her own dreams of show business stardom fall
apart. The star of singer Vaughan, who evolves from a gang leader to a
rock-and-roll singer in this picture, was eclipsed soon after by
skyrocketing American sensation Elvis Presley. Carole was captured on
Pathe Newsreel footage attending the film's premier in Liverpool.
In 1958, Robert Muller's Pulp Fiction book Cinderella Nightingale
was published and it was announced that Carole Lesley would take the
starring role in the film version. The story focused on the character of
Iris Littlewood, an ambitious movie loving blonde, who works first as a
waitress, and then does some modelling. Endowed with a
gorgeous body, but with very little talent for acting, she gets a break
with photographer, Miles Meyerstein, who gives up his career to become
her agent. He succeeds in getting publicity for her, and she becomes a
top professional model called Cinderella Nightingale. Miles falls in
love with her, but unable to love him back, she leaves him, takes up
with a new agent and manages to get cast in a leading film role in
America. Iris cannot have a relationship with Miles because she has been
sexually abused by her father. In a desperate effort to regain her
attention, Miles gambles away everything he has. Iris goes off to
Hollywood and Miles meets another young girl who would like to be a
starlet, and the story starts over again, albeit cruel, empty, and
painful.
Another
young popular blonde bombshell, the British Actress, simply called
“Sabrina”, thought that the story resembled her life much too closely -
apart from the fact that she had not in any way been abused by her
father. She sued the publisher and the author for libel and won the
case. All the remaining copies of the book had to be recalled from
circulation. When Sabrina heard they were making a film of the book, she
went back to court to again.
A Newspaper journalist reported the story thus:
29 June 1958 - BATTLE OF THE BLONDES - From Roderick Mann in London
SABRINA may take legal action to stop production of a film she claims is based on her own life. The film is "Cinderella Nightingale"
— which tells the story of a blonde's rise to fame on the strength of
her vital statistics. Already Sabrina has had the book on which the film
is based withdrawn from the bookstalls. She said this week: " 'Cinderella
Nightingale' was all about me. They said it wasn't, of course, but it
was. It contained a cruel libel against my father and me. I had no
alternative but to stop it." Sabrina said the film would cut right across a film she was planning to make — "The Sabrina Story." At Associated-British Studios at Elstree, where "Cinderella Nightingale" is due to be made, Carole Lesley, who is to star in the film, said: "Fancy
Sabrina thinking she could get my film stopped. “What conceit. And,
anyway — how can she suggest I'm going to caricature her in the film?
There's no comparison."
Lesley
was certainly a better actress than Sabrina. The book could also have
easily been mirroring both Carole or Diana Dor's life too, but Sabrina
got her way in court, and Carole lost out on her first leading role in
the process. Had the controversial film actually been made it could have been just
the type of movie that would have boosted Catol's career further.
The film was to have been directed by J. Lee Thompson who had previously worked with Carole in Woman in a Dressing Gown.
He thought it would be the perfect vehicle for her, and she had hoped
it might finally give her the stardom she craved. Steve Chibnall,
Thompson’s biographer, says Muller's book about the exploitation of
feminine beauty in the film world would have made a “fascinating exercise in self-reflexivity both for Lesley and for Lee Thompson”. When the book was eventually re-published in paperback by Pan in 1962, the advertising blurb called it a 'sizzling, up-to-the-minute close-up of the amoral machine that turns a beautiful body into big business'. The story of a pretty girl who becomes 'the darling of the photographers, the prey of the columnists, and the favourite "pin-up" of a fickle public'
does have many resonances with the careers of both Carole Lesley and
Diana Dors. The growing demands for Lee Thompson's services as a
director meant that the film was never made and Carol Lesley missed her
big moment to shine in a role she could have made her own. Unlike
Cinderella Nightingale, she did not get to set foot in Hollywood, even
though she was tailor made for it.
To
take her mind off the situation, Carole was kept busy with more
functions and publicity events. On 22nd May 1958 she attended a Variety
Club garden party held at Battersea Park before heading off to the
famous Cannes Film Festival. She was on the same plane as Jayne
Mansfield. Carole was the sole representative of British glamour at the
Festival, but when she disembarked in Cannes, she was hardly even
glanced at by the waiting press, who only had eyes for Jayne Mansfield
and Italian Actress Rosanna Schiaffino.
Carole
also struggled to get firmly noticed back in the UK, despite her avid
attendances at everything. On 4th August she agreed to help judge a beauty
competition in Southend, simply because Pathe News were covering the event & it was in Essex.
Carole can be seen in the second half of this news report:
Carole can be seen in the second half of this news report:
During
1958 her frequent male escort to events was the handsome Irish actor
Richard Todd. Todd had been a soldier during the 2nd World war. He had
starred in two of the biggest War Movies of the decade – The Longest Day & The Dambusters
- where he played the defining roles of his career.
Before working for
20th Century Fox, he had been under a long contract to the Associated
British Picture Corporation, just like Carole. There is no evidence to
suggest that Lesley and Todd ever had an affair or a relationship in
this time, and he was already married. When attending film industry
events, it was quite common practice for single young starlets to be
accompanied by older more established Actors from the same studio.
RICHARD TODD
However,
unlike today, the private lives of the film stars in those days were
meant to be innocent and conventional, which is exactly the way their
lives were projected by the studios and the press,. When Kenneth Anger's
book, Hollywood Babylon
was first published in the US in 1965, it was full of true tales about
Hollywood excess and decadence. It was banned within 10 days, and was
not republished until 1975. If Carole did have an affair with Todd then
it was never common knowledge and he never spoke about it.
In
1959 she had a very busy year. The Associated British Picture
Corporation film festival in Brussels, Belgium, was just one of the
events she attended, along with actresses Ann Dickens and Betty
McDowell. On 1 June 1959 she was at the premiere of Look Back in Anger
at the Empire Cinema at Leicester Square, with John Kennedy, the
manager of teen star Tommy Steele. In August of 1959 she went to the
Moscow Film Festival with Richard Todd, Tommy Steele, and Peter Arne.
Pathe was there to capture Carole doing what she did best - being an
attractive fun-loving ambassador for the Britsh Film Industry.
On
17th September she was at a Variety Club race meeting in Sandown Park,
Surrey, with fellow actresses Jackie Rae and Jeanette Scott. Despite all these many public appearances, the all-important starring role was elusive.
"LOM & SIMS IN NO TREES IN THE STREET"
The 1950s ended with two more films roles for Carole. The crime drama No Trees in the Street (1959) had
Carole cast in the supporting role of Lola. Sylvia Syms was playing the
female lead again and the movies also starred Herbert Lom, Stanley
Holloway and Melvin Hayes. The film was directed by J. Lee Thompson whom
she should have made Cinderella Nightingale with, and was written by
Ted Willis, from his 1948 stage play of the same name. The reviews for
the film were distinctly average.
One critic wrote that the film “suffers
from artificiality of plot and dialog. Characterizations are reduced to
mere stereotypes. There are some notable exceptions within the drama,
however. Syms is surprisingly moving, giving a sensitive performance
despite the film's constraints. Holloway's characterization of a
bookie's tout is comical and charming. The camerawork attempts a
realistic documentary look, which manages to succeed in capturing the
details of slum life that make the setting seem surprisingly
naturalistic. The finer points of the film, however, are overshadowed by
its faults.
Variety Magazine wrote "Ted
Willis is a writer with a sympathetic eye for problems of the middle
and lower classes...Syms gives a moving performance as the gentle girl
who refuses to marry the cheap racketeer just to escape. Lom, as the
opportunist who dominates the street, is sufficiently suave and
unpleasant."
Nobody mentioned Carole’s performance. She was not singled out, but neither was she given any accolades.
Carole went on to play Private Marge White in the romantic war comedy Operation Bullshine
(1959) which co-starred Barbara Murray, Donald Sinden and Ronald
Shiner. Dora Bryan and Daniel Massey were also cast in the film.
It was
the tenth most popular movie at the British box office in 1959. Although
both these films kept her visible and in the public eye, neither helped
her long held desire to become a fully-fledged Hollywood film star.
The
beginning of the 1960s had Carole appearing on TV in Play of the Week
as the legendary beauty Helen of Troy. There were also many more
publicity events to go to. On 25th January 1960 she was at a gala
opening of a new bowling alley at Stamford Hill, London.
On 31 March 1960 she went to the Royal Film Performance at the Odeon Theatre at Leicester Square London where she was introduced to members of the Royal Family.
On 14th April 1960 she was seen at the gala premiere of Hell is a City at the Apollo Theatre in Manchester.On the 26th May she attended the reopening of the funfair at Festival Gardens, Battersea Park, London, with actor Paul Massie.
On the 18th December 1960, she was present at the opening of The Princess Bowling Centre in Dagenham, Essex.
On 31 March 1960 she went to the Royal Film Performance at the Odeon Theatre at Leicester Square London where she was introduced to members of the Royal Family.
On 14th April 1960 she was seen at the gala premiere of Hell is a City at the Apollo Theatre in Manchester.On the 26th May she attended the reopening of the funfair at Festival Gardens, Battersea Park, London, with actor Paul Massie.
On the 18th December 1960, she was present at the opening of The Princess Bowling Centre in Dagenham, Essex.
During
that year, she also appeared in one of Britain’s most popular comedy
film series, playing the character, Kitten Strudwick in Doctor in Love
(1960). Actor Michael Craig was standing in for Dirk Bogarde while
Carole and Virginia Maskell , played the love interests. Other famous
comedy actors also in the film included: Peter Sallis ( Last of the
Summer Wine) Norman Rossington, John Junkin, Joan Hickson (Miss
Marple), Sheila Hancock, Bill Frazer, Patrick Cargill, John Le Mesurier,
Nicholas Parsons, Joan Sims, Liz Frazer, Leslie Phillips, James
Robertson Justice and Irene Handl.
It almost reads like a who’s who of
British 1950’s and 60’s comedy – and Carol had more than a supporting
role in it. The film went on to become the most popular movie at the
British box office in 1960 - but again, it did nothing to propel Carole further towards her dream of appearing in a Hollywood movie.
Playing
a sexy, straight foil in a light comedy seemed to be a viable platform
for Carole and she went on to appears in three more of these sorts of
movies during the early 1960s but none were as successful as Doctor in
Love.
Three on a Spree (1961)
was a 1961 British comedy film directed by Sidney J. Furie, based on
the 1902 novel Brewster's Millions, which had been previously filmed by
Edward Small in 1945. Carole played the lead role of Susan.
What a Whopper (1961)
was a British comedy film, written by Terry Nation (who went to write
Dr Who), from a story by Jeremy Lloyd and Trevor Peacock. It treats the
subject of the Loch Ness Monster in a tongue-in-cheek fashion. It stars
the pop star Adam Faith as one of a group of Englishmen who travel to
Loch Ness to fake sightings of the monster. The cast also included a
number of leading British film actors, including Wilfrid Brambell
(Steptoe and Son) as a local postman, Sid James and Charles Hawtrey from
the Carry On Films, Spike Milligan as a tramp, Clive Dunn who went on
to star as Corporal Jones in Dad’s Army and Terry Scott who was most
famous for his Comedy show with June Whitfield and for advertising
Curlywurly chocolate bars dressed up as an overgrown schoolboy in the
1970’s. The Scottish TV reporter Fyfe Robertson also appears briefly as
himself, covering the alleged sightings of the monster.
Carole’s last film was The Pot Carriers
(1962) another comedy-drama film set in a British prison, directed by
Peter Graham Scott and produced by Gordon Scott for ABPC.
In
1961 Carole was among the judges at the "Glamorous Grandmother" beauty
contest final in Bognor Regis, Sussex. All that is left of the Pathe film from this event are the outtakes and unedited clips......
On the 3rd September 1962 she attended a charity day at the races in York, with fellow actresses Rita Tushingham, Liz Fraser, and June Thorburn.
On the 28th February 1963 she went to the premiere of Sparrows Can't Sing at the Genesis Cinema, London. Lord Snowdon, Richard Todd, Stanley Baker, and Sylvia Syms were also there.
On the 3rd September 1962 she attended a charity day at the races in York, with fellow actresses Rita Tushingham, Liz Fraser, and June Thorburn.
On the 28th February 1963 she went to the premiere of Sparrows Can't Sing at the Genesis Cinema, London. Lord Snowdon, Richard Todd, Stanley Baker, and Sylvia Syms were also there.
Then
the unthinkable happened. Despite all her many publicity appearances,
Associated Films decided to release her from her contract. Carole
Lesley’s kind of pin up beauty was no longer the current style of
feminine attraction on the screen. The Glamour always had been something
of an illusion. The devastated actress disappeared following the
unhappy news, retreating completely from the limelight.
In August of
1964 she married Michael Dalling and they had 2 children together.but she
never made another movie.
Carol Leslie just wasn't able to sustain the public interest in her, or get the right
roles in the right films like many of her contemporaries. Middle age had
slowly crept in and depression took over as her life changed so much.
Carole's acting career as an adult consisted of less than a dozen films,
and had lasted a mere 5 years from start to finish.
Carole
did have some acting talent and might well, with time and experience,
have improved, as did her rival Diana Dors who became a fine actress in
her later years. Diana put on weight but took on many interesting
character parts after dropping the glamorous image of her youth. If
success eluded Carole during her career, it was not for a lack of trying
on her part. Carole had the same level of "wow" factor of other glamour
girls of the period, and she worked hard to promote herself wherever
she could, but for whatever reason, she just couldn’t make it to
Hollywood, no matter how hard she tried.
Shapely,
scintillating, and a typical peroxide British blonde, Carole wound up
as just another statistic alongside many other vibrant, promising women in the film industry. Sadly she would not be the first statlet with undeniable photogenic assets only
to be left achingly unfulfilled and to die young. From the more famous
beauties such as Marilyn Monroe to other lesser known actresses like
Virginia Maskell, Lupe Velez, Gia Scala, Jean Seberg, Barbara Bates,
Inger Stevens, Marie McDonald, Carole Landis, Peggy Shannon, Pina
Pellicer, and Peg Entwistle, the number of these young and fragile
beauties who would crave stardom and then take their own lives as a direct result of getting it - or not getting it in Catole's case - became staggering more common and
unfailingly sad.
These
were women who seemed to have everything going for them -- good looks,
sex appeal, drive and ambition, combined with a decent modicum of acting talent -- yet they couldn't
see beyond their own goddess-like celluloid image or handle a fickle public's
adoration in discovering their own true worth. Many of these women believed
too much of their own hype and publicity and then spiraled into a deep depression when it was all
over, simply because they still had an insatiable need for attention and they could not move on from being an "actress".
Back
in the 1950’s a young girl called Leslie Proctor, like many other
teenagers, had collected newspaper cuttings of pictures actresses like
Carole Lesley in her scrapbook. “The
stars of that time were so glamorous; they posed provocatively to show
off tiny waists, beautiful breasts and long legs yet, though sexy, there
was nothing crude or pornographic about these pictures.”
Leslie
Proctor was a young mother, struggling to meet ends meet in 1973 when
she first met Carole Leslie. Proctor had a friend who did cleaning work for
the social services but she couldn’t always make it to every client. In
such moments she called on Proctor to take her place.
“It was all unofficial but the odd fiver I made this way was like a
treasure trove so I was happy to oblige. My friend knew I was both
reliable and unlikely to shop her”.
Leslie Proctor described meeting Carole Leslie in the 1970's:
“She
was called Leslie Dalling by then, and lived literally round the corner
in a pleasant semi-detached house on a road, overlooking the railway
station in New Barnet, London. The front door was on the latch and she
called me upstairs as I went in. I certainly didn’t recognize the
beautiful peroxide blonde of my teenage years in the thin, sad looking
woman with bleached hair showing dark roots, twisted up on her head. I
found her sitting up in bed, smoking a cigarette. Cuddled up beside her
was a small boy of about three years old, dressed in a vest and nothing
else, sucking his thumb. I brought her a cup of tea and she asked me
to sit with her for a while. Lesley talked a lot about herself and her
youth. She was absorbed by it. I can hear her voice now as she told me
that she had once met the Queen at a film premiere. ‘I used to go over
to Paris to have my hair done and wore clothes by Maggy Rouff,' she told
me, 'I was a model, you know, and then I became a film star.’
Carole
Leslie told Leslie Proctor that her husband, Michael, was still
involved with films and would make her a star again, when she was
better. She’d been depressed that was all. He was away on business even
then on her behalf. Proctor thought she seemed confused, sad and had
no fire in her at all.
Despite
the fact that, at that time the atmosphere in the house was one of
neglect, the sitting room was tidy and neat. Proctor noticed several
attractive photos of Carole on the sideboard and it was then that the
sudden realization came to her. She had mentioned the name Leslie
Carol. Could this possibly be Carole Lesley the actress whose pictures Proctor had once pasted into a scrapbook? She bid Carole goodbye and ran
home to dig out her scrapbooks and find the few old pictures she had.
Was this glorious beauty really the sad and lonely woman she’d just
spoken to? It made Leslie Proctor immensely sad to see that despite the
youthful beauty, relentless efforts and promise, Carole had never risen
to real fame. This disappointment was slowly destroying Carole as it
had so many other beautiful women of that time, who got caught up with
the allure of stardom.
Leslie Proctor goes on to explain: “Some
of her minor roles in prestigious films such as “Woman in a Dressing
Gown” and “No Trees in the Street” were considered as good performances,
but she just didn’t have that extra special something that makes a face
and figure stand out among the many other hopefuls. She just didn’t
grab the public imagination enough. In the end, all the fight had been
taken out of her. All her immense efforts had been in vain.”
Leslie
Proctor never got to talk to Carole Leslie again but she would sometimes
see her walking down the street with her youngest boy to collect her
other son from school.
Carole’s two sons both later moved to America and had families of their own.
On 28 February 1974, at her home in New Barnet, Carol Lesley died from an acute overdose of pills at the young age of 38.
Leslie Proctor was saddened when she heard what had happened:
“Just
a few months after I had given birth to my own son, I was shocked to
read in the paper that Carol Lesley was said to have committed suicide. I later
heard that she was addicted to sleeping pills, had gone to several
doctors in order to fuel her addiction, then hidden the stash of
collected pills away from her husband's surveillance, under one of the
bushes in the garden… when I met her she seemed a deeply depressed, once
beautiful woman, still haunted by a glamorous past that had vanished
like a mirage before her eyes.”
Deborah
Orr’s Mother (Carole’s old school friend) was also upset when she read
the news and threw away all the drawing of Hollywood film stars which she had kept for all those years.
“My
mother was of the opinion, knowing Maureen as she had, that she would
probably have been happier if she'd had no success in show business at
all, rather than the tantalizing status of being “Very Nearly Famous”.
My mother reckoned that it must have been so much more awful for Maureen
to have come so close to her heart's desire – Hollywood stardom – and
then have it all slide inexorably away from her. But I can't help
feeling that somewhere there must have been disillusionment, a little
bit of disappointment that the human perfection she and Maureen had
taken so literally at face value, and celebrated with such innocent
charm, had been so manifestly a trick of the light, flickering on a
screen, in the dark. ”
Fractured
affairs of the heart and lack of self-esteem were often blamed as the
culprits for other film stars impulsive suicides. Carole Lesley was well
out of the public eye and practically forgotten by the time her end
came. Moreover, in the following decades, precious little has been
printed about her and why her death happened. Her husband and relations
felt sure her death was an accidental overdose, especially as she left
no note. It is always so hard for those close to see the truth of such a
terrible act. I have found comments from Carole's neighbours and
friends on some of those Pathe News Videos on You Tube, all saying that she was a lovely friendly lady. We shall never really know what happened and
whether Carol Lesley's death was indeed a tragic accident or pe-meditated suicide, but it was
nevertheless a sad but seemingly inescapable fate for this incredibly
beautiful, talented woman.
Many
years later, Carole Lesley was finally and suiably commemorated in her home town of
Chelmsford, Essex The Pavilion Cinema where she had once worked had been
demolished some years ago but these days 26 flats, over shops, are now
there in its place. They are named after Maureen – as Carole Lesley
Court.
The
decision was taken by Lynn Roberts, Chelmsford Council's street naming
officer, a lady with some imagination, who first read in a local
Newspaper about the wish of Maureen's sister, Josie Passfield, to see
Carole commemorated in some way. The Lord of the Manor of Great Baddow,
Tony Appleton, who had also promoted the cause of her commemoration,
said "Maureen was a sparky girl, with guts, who made it against the odds. She deserves to be remembered in this way."
I enjoy her films, "What A Whopper," being my favourite. What a sad end to a beautiful lady and a fine actress. God bless you, Carole. X
ReplyDeleteWhat a terrible sad end to a gorgeous girl,I've recently watched her starring role in "These Dangerous Years" and realised I'd seen that same very pretty face in another British film earlier this year on TV called "Woman in a Dressing Gown" She really worked hard promoting herself and deserved to be treated a damn sight better than she actually was by Associated British Picture Corporation, Shame on the Directors at ABPC, God bless you, Carole Lesley RIP
ReplyDeleteTragic tale,of a lovely talented but troubled actress
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