Margaret Rutherford was without a doubt one of Britain's best-loved comic actresses. But behind the kindly serene front Rutherford presented to the world lay a life of trauma & repeated nervous breakdown
- the legacy of the legacy of family tragedy that saw her father murder her grandfather during a bout of mental illness & her depressive mother later kill herself. Andy Merriman's acclaimed biography intrigued & shocked readers with these revelations when it was published in hardback. Now out in paperback it is also a portrait of one of our most individual actresses. Rutherford appeared in such thoroughly English classics as Blithe Spirit The importance of Being Earnest Passport to Pimlico & I'm All Right Jack! But above all she was Miss Marple in four films
- & entirely created for the screen the role of Agatha Christie's elderly & fearless private detective that subsequent actresses like Joan Hickson & Geraldine Mc Ewan have continued. Rutherford first played Miss Marple at the age of 70 & insisted on wearing her own clothes to feel right in the part. Above all this was a vulnerable woman whom no-one failed to like & respect notable again & again for quiet acts of kindness whose life story has great appeal to everyone who appreciates both classic English comedy & simple human decency.