‘King and I’ star Deborah Kerr dies at 86
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Her best-actress nominations were for “Edward, My Son” (1949), “From Here to Eternity” (1953), “The King and I” (1956), “Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison” (1957), “Separate Tables” (1958), and “The Sundowners” (1960).
Among her other movies is “An Affair to Remember” with Cary Grant.
Other notable roles were in “The Sundowners,” “Beloved Infidel,” “The Innocents” (an adaptation of the Henry James novella “Turn of the Screw”), “The Night of the Iguana” with Richard Burton and “The Arrangement” with Kirk Douglas.
“She was not only a fine actress but always a fine lady,” Douglas said Thursday.
After “The Arrangement” in 1968, she took what she called a “leave of absence” from acting, saying she felt she was “either too young or too old” for any role she was offered.
Kerr told The Associated Press that she turned down a number of scripts, either for being too explicit or because of excessive violence.
She refused to play a nude scene in “The Gypsy Moths,” released in 1968. “It was when they started that ‘Now everybody has got to take their clothes off,”’ she said. “My argument was that it was completely gratuitous. Had it been necessary for the dramatic content, I would have done it.”
In fact she undressed for “The Arrangement,” even though the scene was later cut. “There the nude scene was necessary, husband and wife in bed together,” Kerr said. “That was real.”
She returned to the stage, acting in Edward Albee’s “Seascape” on Broadway and “Long Day’s Journey Into Night” in Los Angeles.
Her Broadway debut came in 1953, when she was acclaimed as Laura Reynolds, a teacher’s wife who treats a sensitive student compassionately in “Tea and Sympathy.”
After a full season in New York, she took it on a national tour and recreated the role in a movie in 1956.
Kerr was active until the mid-1980s, with “The Assam Garden,” “Hold the Dream” and “Reunion at Fairborough” all in 1985.
She told the AP that TV reruns of her old movies have “kept me alive” for a new generation of film fans.
In 1945 Kerr married Anthony Charles Bartley, whom she had met when he was a squadron leader in the Royal Air Force. They had two daughters and were divorced in 1959. A year later she married novelist-screenwriter Peter Viertel with whom she lived on a large estate with two trout ponds in the Swiss Alpine resort of Klosters and in a villa in Marbella, Spain.
Kerr is survived by Viertel, two daughters and three grandchildren.
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