Dame Flora McKenzie RobsonDBE (28 March 1902 – 7 July 1984) was an English actress and star of the theatrical stage and cinema, particularly renowned for her performances in plays demanding dramatic and emotional intensity.[1] Her range extended from queens to murderesses.[2][3]
Early life
Flora McKenzie Robson was born on 28 March 1902 in South Shields, County Durham,[4] daughter of David Robson (1864-1947) and Eliza Robson (nee McKenzie; 1870-1953) both of Scottish descent. She had six siblings.[5] Many of her forebears were engineers, mostly in shipping.[6] Her father was a ship's engineer who moved from Wallsend near Newcastle to Palmers Green in 1907 and Southgate in 1910, both in north London, and later to Welwyn Garden City.[7]
Her father discovered that Flora had a talent for recitation and, from the age of five, she was taken around by horse and carriage to recite, and to compete in recitations. This established a pattern that remained with her.[6]
She struggled to find a footing in the theatre after she graduated from RADA with a bronze medal since she lacked the conventional good looks which were then an absolute requisite for actresses in dramatic roles.[citation needed] After touring in minor parts with Ben Greet's Shakespeare company she may have played small parts for two seasons in the new repertory company at Oxford, but her contract was not renewed.[9] She was told that they required a prettier actress.[16] Unable to secure any acting engagements, she gave up the stage at the age of 23, and she took up work as a welfare officer in the Nabisco shredded wheat factory in Welwyn Garden City.[9]Tyrone Guthrie, due to direct a season at the new Festival Theatre, Cambridge, asked her to join his company.[7] Her performance as the stepdaughter in Pirandello's Six Characters in Search of an Author made her the theatrical talk of Cambridge.[17] She followed with Isabella in Measure for Measure with Robert Donat, Pirandello's Naked, the title role in Iphigenia in Tauris, Varya in The Cherry Orchard, and Rebecca West in Henrik Ibsen's Rosmersholm.[18][19]
In 1931, she was cast as the adulterous Abbie in Eugene O'Neill's Desire Under the Elms.[20] Her brief, shocking appearance as the doomed prostitute in James Bridie's play The Anatomist put her firmly on the road to success.[21] "If you are not moved by this girl's performance, then you are immovable" the Observer critic wrote. This success would lead to her famous 1933 season as leading lady at the Old Vic.[22]
She continued her acting career late into life, though not on the West End stage, from which she retired at the age of 67, often for American television films, including a lavish production of A Tale of Two Cities (in which she played Miss Pross).[23] She also performed for British television, including The Shrimp and the Anemone.[24] In the 1960s, she continued to act in the West End, in Ring Round the Moon, The Importance of Being Earnest and Three Sisters, among others.
She continued to act on film and television. She was last briefly seen as a Stygian Witch in the fantasy adventure Clash of the Titans in 1981.[2] Both the BBC and ITV made special programmes to celebrate her 80th birthday in 1982, and the BBC ran a short season of her best films.
Her private life was largely focused on her large family of sisters Margaret and Shela, and her nephews and nieces[citation needed].
She shared a home in Wykeham Terrace, Brighton with her sisters for 8 years before she died[29] in Brighton, aged 82, in her sleep, of cancer.[9][30] She was never married and had no children.[9] The sisters died around the same time: Shela shortly before Flora, in 1984, and Margaret on 1 February 1985.[citation needed]
Legacies
Dame Flora Robson Avenue, built in 1962, in Simonside, South Shields, is named after her.[31]
There is a plaque on the house in Wykeham Terrace, Dyke Road, Brighton, and also one in the doorway of St Nicholas's Church, of which Flora Robson was a great supporter.[32][33]
There is also a plaque to commemorate the opening of the Prince Charles Cinema (Leicester Square, London) by Flora Robson.[34]
In 1996, the British Film Institute erected a plaque at number 14 Marine Gardens, location of Flora Robson's other home in Brighton, where she lived from 1961 to 1976.[35]
A plaque at 40 Handside Lane in Welwyn Garden City records Flora Robson living there from 1923 to 1925.[36]
A blue plaque sponsored by Southgate District Civic Trust and Robson's former school Palmers Green High School was unveiled at her family home from 1910 to 1921, The Lawe, 65, The Mall, Southgate, on 25 April 2010.[5]
Robson attended the opening of the Flora Robson Playhouse in Jesmond, Newcastle upon Tyne, in 1962, which was named in her honour.[37] The building was demolished in 1971 and the theatre company it housed relocated to the new University Theatre.[citation needed]
Grace Rovarte in Time and Yellow Roses at the St. Martin's Theatre, London, 1961
Miss Moffatt in The Corn is Green at the Connaught Theatre, Worthing, the Flora Robson Playhouse, Newcastle upon Tyne and on tour to South Africa, 1962