- Born
- Died
- Birth nameSylvia May Laura Syms
- Height5′ 5″ (1.65 m)
- London-born Sylvia May Laura Syms hit major film appeal at a relatively young age. Born on January 6, 1934, she was educated at convent schools before receiving dramatic training at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. She made her stage debut in a production of "The Apple Cart" in 1954.
A repertory player by the time she was discovered for films by the British star Anna Neagle and her director/husband Herbert Wilcox, the lovely demure blonde started out auspiciously enough in the delinquent film Teenage Bad Girl (1956) in which she played Neagle's troubled daughter. This was followed by a second Neagle/Wilcox collaboration with No Time for Tears (1957).
Excelling whether cast in stark melodrama, spirited adventure or harmless comedy fluff, Syms' film list grew impressive in the late 1950s and early 1960s working alongside the likes of John Mills and Anthony Quayle in Ice Cold in Alex (1958), Curd Jürgens and Orson Welles in Ferry to Hong Kong (1959), Lilli Palmer and Yvonne Mitchell in Conspiracy of Hearts (1960), Laurence Harvey in Expresso Bongo (1959), William Holden in The World of Suzie Wong (1960), and Dirk Bogarde in the landmark gay-themed Victim (1961), playing the unsuspecting wife of Bogarde's closeted male. After nearly a decade's absence, Sylvia returned briefly to the London theatre lights in 1964 to play the title role in "Peter Pan."
Ably portraying innocent love interests throughout the years, she graced a number of pictures without ever nabbing that one role that would truly put her over the top. She was nominated, however, three times for British Film Academy Awards--twice for best actress in Woman in a Dressing Gown (1957) and No Trees in the Street (1959) and once for supporting actress in The Tamarind Seed (1974) that starred Julie Andrews and Omar Sharif.
The 1970s saw quite a bit of TV series work and she played British prime minister Margaret Thatcher at one point on both stage and TV. She grew plumper with middle age and found herself immersed in character roles, offering support in such films as Absolute Beginners (1986), Shirley Valentine (1989) and Shining Through (1992).
The stage once again beckoned in the mid-to-late 1980's with touring performances, among many others, in "The Heiress," "The Beaux Stratagem," "The Ideal Husband," "A Doll's House," "Ghosts," "The Vortex," "Hamlet," "Anthony and Cleopatra" and "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" She portrayed the Queen and Margaret Thatcher in a production of "Ugly Rumours" and was among the cast in a musical presentation of "On the Town" in 2005.
Into the millennium, Sylvia has continued to have remarkable agility. American audiences have recently seen her as the dog-doting "Princess Charlotte" in the light teen comedy What a Girl Wants (2003) with Amanda Bynes and Colin Firth, and treading water as the Shelley Winters character in the TV-remake of The Poseidon Adventure (2005). Other movies have included the role of the Queen Mum in The Queen (2006) starring Oscar-winning Helen Mirren as Queen Elizabeth II, as well as featured roles in Is Anybody There? (2008) starring Michael Caine and Booked Out (2012). She also co-starred opposite Peter Bowles in the heart-warming senior character study Together (2018).
Married once and divorced in the 1980s from Alvin Edney, daughter Beatie Edney (aka Beatrice) is a highly prolific actress in her own right, and her son, Benjamin Edney, was briefly an actor while young and appeared with his mother as her son in the western The Desperados (1969). Ms. Syms is sometimes confused with Brooklyn-born jazz/cabaret performer and recording artist Sylvia Syms (1917-1992) (née Sylvia Blagman).- IMDb Mini Biography By: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net
- SpouseAlan Edney(June 9, 1956 - 1989) (divorced, 4 children)
- Children
- RelativesNicholas Webb(Niece or Nephew)
- Became a Member of the RADA Council.
- She was awarded the OBE (Officer of the Order of the British Empire) in the 2007 Queen's Birthday Honours List for her services to drama and to charity.
- Is just 11 years older than Helen Mirren, who played her daughter in The Queen (2006).
- Although she played Margaret Thatcher on both stage and television, she was, in private life, a lifelong supporter of the Labour Party.
- She replaced Billie Whitelaw in The Punch and Judy Man (1963).
- How do they justify paying all these millions to Jonathan Ross? I mean, did he invent radium or something?
- I'm horrified when I look at pictures now and see a fat old lady with a bulging face. I was extraordinarily beautiful back then but I didn't know it.
- Joan Sims was always theoretically my sister, though she wasn't. Sheila Sim was married to Dickie Attenborough and because they often saw the Queen I suspected Her Majesty thought I was married to Dickie. She was always extra nice, as if she knew me, which she didn't except as an actress. I suppose it was a bit confusing but Sylvia Syms is my own name and it would have upset my father if I'd changed it.
- [speaking in 2018] I can't announce my retirement because I don't work enough. If someone offers me a job and I can still do it, I'll do it.
- [on 'the casting couch'] It did not happen to me, partly because a lot of the men I worked with had come up a different way. You can't imagine Anthony Quayle, war hero, groping. Or John Mills who had been acting since he was a boy. Orson Welles would not have bothered. I was very naive but I was also a respectable married woman.
- Shining Through (1992) - £50,000 .00
- Ice Cold in Alex (1958) - £30 p.w.
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