Edana Romney

Edana Romney
Born 15 March 1919
Johannesburg, South Africa
Died 17 December 2002
Santa Maria, California, United States
Other names Edana Rubenstein
Occupation Actress, Writer

Edana Romney (15 March 1919 – 17 December 2002) was a South African actress, writer, and television presenter, based in England and later in Southern California.

Early life

Edana Rubenstein was born in Johannesburg to Jewish parents. She trained as a dancer in South Africa, then attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts from 1935 to 1936.[1]

Career

Romney became a noted stage performer after moving to Britain. She also made sporadic film and television appearances. She played the role of Sadie Jones, a murder victim, in the 1941 thriller East of Piccadilly. She played the female lead role, Mifanwy Conway, in the 1948 film Corridor of Mirrors[2] as well as co-authoring the screenplay.[3]

She left unfinished a screenplay about the life of Sir Richard Burton.[1]

On television, she presented Is This Your Problem? (1955-1957),[4] a BBC panel discussion program about "delicate" women's issues, such as unexpected pregnancy, and unhappiness as housewives.[5] She also wrote a weekly newspaper advice column as a tie-in to the television show. She also hosted a radio show, "Edana Romney's World" and gave talks at women's groups based on her role as a "lovelorn counselor".[6]

Personal life

She was the second wife of the film producer John Woolf;[7] they were divorced by 1955, and she eventually moved to California. Later in life, while living in Beverly Hills, she became known for her "Twelfth Night" parties.[8] Edana Romney died in 2002, aged 83 years, in Santa Maria, California. There's a collection of Edana Romney's papers archived at the University of Southern California.[1]

Selected filmography

References

  1. 1 2 3 Sue Luftschein, "Finding aid for the Edana Romney papers" USC Libraries Special Collections.
  2. Tom Johnson and Mark A. Miller, The Christopher Lee Filmography (McFarland 2004): 5-7. ISBN 9780786446919
  3. Michael F. Keaney. British Film Noir Guide(McFarland 2008): 38.
  4. "Is This Your Problem?" BBC Television (26 April 1956).
  5. Su Holmes, Entertaining Television: The BBC and Popular Television Culture in the 1950s (Oxford University Press 2008): 128. ISBN 9780719077913
  6. "Lovelorn Counselor to Address Officers' Wives" San Bernardino County Sun (6 November 1966): 52. via Newspapers.com
  7. Tom Vallance, "Obituary: Sir John Woolf" Independent (30 June 1999).
  8. "Dorothy Manners' Hollywood" Evening Herald (17 January 1977): 10. via Newspapers.com

External links

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