Pamela Margaret Stanley (6 September 1909 – 30 June 1991) was a British actress who appeared in a number of stage and film roles in Britain and the United States; the role with which she became most identified with was that of Queen Victoria.
She was educated in France and Switzerland, later studying at the Webber Douglas School of Acting and Singing.[4] Her mother was a noted amateur actress, descended from the Kemble family of actors.[5]
She was cast as Queen Victoria in the 1936 film David Livingstone before returning to the Lyric for another season in Victoria Regina (1937–1938). The noted theatre critic James Agate compared Stanley's performance with a New York production starring Helen Hayes; unfortunately he found Hayes' portrayal of Queen Victoria like "a blazing sun, and I am so blinded by the dazzling performance of Helen Hayes that I literally cannot see Pamela Stanley." Nevertheless, he found the audience very appreciative: "All around me on the first night the air hummed with pretty comments, and blasts of Isn't she sweet? blew down my neck." But he thought that Stanley had "moments of real emotion which, being genuinely her own, genuinely move her audience."[12] Contemporary photographs show that her resemblance to the queen was remarkable.
She appeared yet again as Victoria in the 1938 film Marigold.[13][14]
Family life
Stanley married David Cunynghame (Sir Henry David St Leger Brooke Selwyn Cunynghame, 11th Baronet Cunynghame; 1905–1978), in 1941, becoming Lady Cunynghame. They had three sons, Andrew, John and Arthur; Andrew succeeded his father as the twelfth baronet in 1978.[15]
Stanley made a brief return to the stage in 1968 when she appeared for the last time as Queen Victoria in The Queen’s Highland Servant by William Douglas-Home at the Savoy Theatre in London.[17] According to the author's memoirs, this was his favourite play.[18]
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