Hazel M. Neilson-Terry (23 January 1918 – 12 October 1974) was an English actress. A member of the theatrical dynasty the Terry family she had a successful stage career, and also made some cinema films. Among her roles was Ophelia in Hamlet opposite her cousin John Gielgud.
In the 1938 Malvern Festival season she appeared in The Last Trump, which transferred to the West End. Following what The Times called "various unremarkable engagements" she starred in a year-long ENSA tour as Amanda in Noël Coward's Private Lives.[5] In 1944 she understudied Peggy Ashcroft as Ophelia in Gielgud's last London Hamlet, and had the chance to play the role in Manchester and London.[1]
After World War II, her roles included Lydia in Coward's Peace in Our Time (1947), the Queen in Terence Rattigan's Adventure Story (1949), and Mesita in The Seagull (1949). The obituarist in The Times wrote, "After absence from the theatre during much of the fifties, she was uncommonly good as the housekeeper, an exacting part, in the fine cast (John Gielgud and Ralph Richardson among it) that brought Enid Bagnold's The Last Joke to the Phoenix in September, 1960." In 1961 she played Rachel in The Irregular Verb To Love in the West End.[1]
Personal life
Terry was married, first to the actor Geoffrey Keen and then to David Evans.[5] Her daughter, Jemma Hyde (1941–2017),[6] became an actress. Hazel Terry died in London, aged 56, from undisclosed causes.[5]
^Joseph, C. "Kate - The Making of a Princess". Harper Collins 2011. Retrieved 23 September 2018. Ann Terry, who is the couple's great-niece – the niece of Dorothy's husband ...... Dame Ellen Terry's nephew, Dennis Neilson-Terry....daughter Hazel .....(grandfather) of Maurice Glassborow and Monica Nielson-Terry's's daughter Matita Glassborow at Chapel Allerton Nursing Home on 12 ..... Dame Ellen was the sister of (Sir John) Gielgud's grandmother Kate and Monica's...