Deborah Kerr
Born Deborah Jane Kerr-Trimmer in Scotland in 1921, she was the daughter of a soldier who had been gassed in World War I. A shy, insecure child, she found an outlet for expressing her feelings in acting. Her aunt, a radio star, got her some stage work when she was a teenager, and she came to the attention of British film producer Gabriel Pascal, who cast her in his film of George Bernard Shaw's "Major Barbara" (Major Barbara (1941)) and Love on the Dole (1941). She quickly became a star of the British cinema, playing such diverse roles as the three women in The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943) and the nun in Black Narcissus (1947). In 1947 she "crossed the pond" and came to MGM, where she found success in films like The Hucksters (1947), Edward, My Son (1949) and Quo Vadis (1951). After a while, however, she tired of playing prim-and-proper English ladies, so she made the most of the role of the adulteress who romps on the beach with Burt Lancaster in From Here to Eternity (1953). The film was a success, and Kerr received her second Oscar nomination. She also achieved success on the Broadway stage in "Tea and Sympathy," reprising her role in the 1956 film version (Tea and Sympathy (1956)). That same year she played one of her best-remembered screen roles, "Mrs. Anna" in The King and I (1956). More success followed in Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison (1957), An Affair to Remember (1957), Separate Tables (1958), The Sundowners (1960), The Innocents (1961) and The Night of the Iguana (1964). Then in 1968 she suddenly quit movies, appalled by the explicit sex and violence of the day. After some stage and TV work in the 1970s and 1980s and swan song performances in The Assam Garden (1985) and Hold the Dream (1986), she retired from acting altogether. Kerr holds the record for the most Academy Award nominations for Best Actress without a win (six), but that was made up for in 1994, when she was given an Honorary Oscar for her screen achievements.
Filme mit Deborah Kerr (65)
(Archive Footage)
Self (Archive Footage)
Self - Actress (Archive Footage)
Sister Clodagh (Archive Footage) (Uncredited)
Self (Archive Footage)
Self (Archive Footage)
Self (Archive Footage)
Sally Wells Grant
Nurse Plimsoll
Carlotta Gray
Florence Anderson
Elizabeth Brandon
Prudence Hardcastle
Agent Mimi / Lady Fiona Mctarry
Catherine De Montfaucon
Valerie Edwards
(Archive Footage)
Hannah Jelkes
Miss Madrigal
Miss Giddens
Martha Radcliffe
Hilary Rhyall
Ida Carmody
Sheilah Graham
Grace Allingham
Diana Ashmore
Sibyl Railton-Bell
Anne Larson
Terry Mckay
Sister Angela
Laura Reynolds
Anna Leonowens
Lee Ashley
Sarah Miles
Karen Holmes
Portia
Catherine Parr
Joan Willoughby
Princess Flavia
Lygia
Herself (Archival Footage)
Elizabeth Curtis
Alison Kirbe
Evelyn Boult
Nona Tybar
Kay Dorrance
Sister Clodagh
Bridie Quilty
Catherine Wilson
Edith Hunter / Barbara Wynne / Angela "Johnny" Cannon
Kari Alstad
Mary Brodie
Gulielma Maria Springett
Jenny Hill









