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  1. Directed by Anthony Asquith • 1952 • United Kingdom. Starring Michael Redgrave, Joan Greenwood, Dame Edith Evans. Oscar Wilde’s comic jewel sparkles in Anthony Asquith’s film adaptation of THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST. Featuring brilliantly polished performances by Michael Redgrave, Joan Greenwood, and Dame Edith Evans, the ...

  2. Dame Edith Evans died at her country home in Goud-hurst, Kent, some 40 miles southeast of London, England, on October 14, 1976, at age 88, from respiratory complications following a head cold. She had been an actress for over 60 years. Her death occurred a few weeks after that of her great contemporary, Dame Sybil Thorndike; together, they were ...

  3. Dame Edith Evans (Dame Edith Mary Booth) Evans's career as an actor spanned almost seventy years and over 150 characters. She achieved widespread fame for her stage performances in the 1920s, and was particularly noted for her interpretation of the plays of Shakespeare. She also originated several roles for the playwright George Bernard Shaw.

  4. Fast überscharf pointiert ist Edith Evans als energische, auf Anstand und Vermögenszuwachs gleichermaßen bedachte strenge Lady, die die Seifenblase zum Platzen bringt.“ [1] Das Lexikon des internationalen Films hält die „verzwickte gesellschaftskritische Komödie von Oscar Wilde“ ebenfalls für „mehr verfilmtes Theater als Kino, trotzdem intelligente und amüsante Unterhaltung.“

  5. 9. Juli 2003 · Edith Evans sets the standard for Lady Bracknell in The Importance of Being Earnest, January 31 1939. Samantha Ellis. Wed 9 Jul 2003 08.08 EDT. Share "A flashback to Grannie's youthful heyday in ...

  6. Edith Evans (8. února 1888 – 14. října 1976) byla anglická herečka. Narodila se v londýnské čtvrti Pimlico . Své první herecké zkušenosti měla s amatérskou skupinou Streatham Shakespeare Players, debutovala v roce 1910 coby Viola v Shakespearově Večeru tříkrálovém .

  7. Evans, Edith (1888-1976) Actor Justly celebrated stage star (from 1912) of classic and modern roles (at Stratford, the Old Vic, the West End, Broadway), made DBE in 1946 and loaded with honorary doctorates (London, Oxford, Cambridge), Edith Evans went on to accrue almost comparable honours as a screen character actress.