Smith, who has died aged 89, is best known for her wickedly acerbic line readings in Downton Abbey. While utterly plausible as a despotic, bitchy and libidinous toff, she could also play downtrodden and democratic, naive and clenched. With the baleful eyes of a bloodhound and an exquisitely raspy voice, she grips you every which way, and her influence on other actors (from Susan Sarandon to Kathryn Hahn) and even musicians (Iâd argue she paved the way for Florence Welch) canât be overstated. To tweak a line of dialogue from one of Smithâs most famous films (as beleaguered Scottish schoolmistress Jean Brodie), if intelligence is to your taste, this woman will give you a feast.
She was funny and intense from the off. Born in Essex, she moved with her family to Oxford when she was four years old, and was cast as Viola in an OUDS production of Twelfth Night (apparently, even when she was at Oxford High School, she knew this was a role she was born to play). Theatre directors like Peter Hall loved her. Before long, she was getting meaty roles at the Old Vic, working alongside Kenneth Williams (a lifelong friend), wowing audiences as Desdemona opposite Laurence Olivierâs Othello, and hanging out with husband-to-be Robert Stephens.
Understandably, Hollywood wanted a piece of her, and she wasnât the least bit overshadowed by Richard Burton and Liz Taylor in The VIPs. Sheâs just as good in Jack Claytonâs sublime kitchen-sink drama The Pumpkin Eater. As the semi-gormless Philpot, Smith does full justice to Penelope Mortimerâs jolting novel about delusion, domesticity and infidelity (Philpotâs a thoroughly modern narcissist who, when not bending the ear of the hero, Jo, is secretly shagging Joâs husband). Smith ensures that the character of Philpot is both chilling and an absolute hoot.
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