Marie De Becker Explained

Marie De Becker
Birth Name:Marie Kathleen De Becker
Birth Date:13 June 1880
Birth Place:London, England
Death Place:Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Occupation:Actress
Years Active:1899–1946

Marie Kathleen De Becker (13 June 1880 – 23 March 1946) was an English-American stage and screen actress.

Family

She was born in Islington, London, the daughter of Benevenuto Nicola de Becker, a shipping clerk, and his wife Catherine (or Kate) Elizabeth de Becker (née Kerin).[1] Two of her siblings were also actors: her sister Ernestine, known as Nesta (mother of actress Ernestine Barrier) and her brother Harold.

Career

Marie De Becker was best known for playing mature character parts, notably in the 1940s films Mrs. Miniver, Random Harvest and Devotion.

De Becker's first stage acting roles were when her family were living in Camberwell, South London. At the age of 19, she played "Joyce" in the 1899 production by J. Pitt Hardacre's Company of East Lynne at the Theatre Metropole in Camberwell, when her young brother Harold had a juvenile part as "Little Willie".[2] In 1900 she played "Humpty Dumpty" (the Nurse) in several Provincial productions (in England and Scotland) of the stage adaptation of John Strange Winter's novel, Bootle's Baby, alongside her sister Nesta as "Mignon", the eponymous baby.[3] In 1902 she appeared as "Jane" in Uncles and Aunts at Dover, Coventry and Cardiff.[4]

Filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1942Mrs. Miniver Ada
1942Random Harvest Vicar's wife
1943Two Tickets to London Barmaid Uncredited
1943The Chance of a Lifetime Miss Bailey Uncredited
1944The Hour Before the Dawn Amelia Uncredited
1944The Doughgirls Maid Uncredited
1944The Spider Woman Charwoman (scenes deleted)
1944None but the Lonely Heart Madame La Vaka Uncredited
1945Confidential Agent Miner's Wife Uncredited
1946Devotion Tabby Uncredited, (final film role)

Notes and References

  1. England and Wales Census, 1881
  2. The Era, 26 August 1899
  3. The Era, 12 May 1900, 26 May 1900, 9 June 1900, 16 June 1900, etc.
  4. The Era, 19 July 1902