Maggie Smith dies: | Tributes pour in for acting great who starred in Harry Potter | and Downton Abbey


 The Oscar-winning actress has died in hospital aged 89, with her sons saying they are "devastated by the loss of their extraordinary mother"


Dame Maggie Smith started out in the theatre as a prompt girl and understudy at the Oxford Repertory. She once claimed that she never got onto the stage there as not one of the company ever fell ill.

Her company moved to a small theatre in London in 1955 where she attracted the attention of an American producer, Leonard Stillman, who cast her in New Faces, a revue that opened on Broadway in June 1956.

She stood out among the cast of unknowns and, on her return to London, was offered a six month stint in the revue Share My Lettuce opposite Kenneth Williams.

Her first film role was an uncredited part in the 1956 production Child in the House.

Two years later she was nominated for a Bafta as best newcomer in the 1958 melodrama, Nowhere to Go, in which she played a girl who shelters an escaped convict.

She nearly stole the show from Richard Burton in the film The VIPs when she appeared in a pivotal scene with the Welsh star.

One critic noted that "when Maggie Smith is on the screen, the picture moves," and Burton afterwards teasingly described her upstaging of him as "grand larceny."

Later in 1963, Laurence Olivier offered her the part of Desdemona opposite his Othello, at the National Theatre. The production, with the original cast, was made into a film two years later, with Smith being nominated for an Academy Award.

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