Mary Ellen Ray Explained

Mary Ellen Ray (3 January 1931  - 10 September 2004) was an American-born actress who had a career in the United Kingdom.

Early life

She was born as Mary Ellen McPherson in Springfield, Missouri in 1931 to 17 year-old Hayzle McPherson and her husband Owen M. McPherson. Following her parents' divorce in 1937 and her mother's remarriage to Earl Ray, she assumed her stepfather's surname.

Career

Ray spent two years with the ACT Theatre after which she went to the American Shakespeare Festival Theatre at Stratford, Connecticut where she appeared in such plays as The Crucible, Endgame and Under Milk Wood. She made her début at the Stratford Festival at Stratford, Ontario in 1970 as Mariana in All's Well That Ends Well and Mrs William Dudgeon in The Devil's Disciple.[1] In September 1970 she opened in Othello at the American Shakespeare Festival Theatre and appeared with repertory companies in the United States and Britain.[2] The couple separated in 1972 and divorced in 1974.[3]

She made her first television appearance in Britain as Telephone Operator in Long Distance (1958) before acting in the 'Shadow of Heroes' episode of BBC Sunday-Night Theatre (1959). Next she was Waitress in 'The Out-of-Towners' episode of ITV Television Playhouse (1960). Ray progressed to the named role of Nora in 'The Closed Shop' episode of Somerset Maugham Hour (1962) and Miss Cleaver in 'The Night of the Horns' episode of Detective (1964). She was in Theatre 625 (1966), voiced Mrs Dilber in the Oscar-winning animated television special A Christmas Carol (1971) and was Mary Crane in the short Some Kind of Hero (1972). She was Sonia in the television film Artemis 81 (1981); Nursing Staff in the film The Sender (1982); Mrs Bear in the film The Lords of Discipline (1983), and American Wife in the film Invitation to the Wedding (1983).[4]

She was Mrs. Abrams in the television series Tender Is the Night (1985); Aunt Hannah in Back Home (1989); Lynn Nesbit in Selling Hitler (1991); Landlady in Jeeves and Wooster (1992); Teacher in the episode 'I Don't Do Cuddles' of Unnatural Pursuits (1992); Rose Whitfield in The Bill (1994); Marie in the episode 'First Impressions' of Holby City (2000), and Eleanor Forsyth in Doctors (2004).[4] In 1993 she played Mrs Pascal in The House of Yes at the Gate Theatre in London.

Personal life

In 1952, as a 21-year-old secretary, Ray sailed on the RMS Queen Mary from New York to Spain with her two younger siblings and her mother, Hayzle Ray.[5] There, she met the British poet Anthony Edkins (1927 - 2018) who was teaching English in Ibiza in Spain. The two returned to England until her visa expired leading to their marriage in 1955 in Madrid; the couple had two daughters, Sarah Edkins and Lucy Edkins, a stage manager and actress. In 1966 she and Edkins moved to the United States for three years to allow Ray to pursue her acting career.

Ray met the playwright David Pownall in 1973, with whom she had a son, Tom, in 1974. They collaborated together in the company ‘Paines Plough’ in Lancaster and London.

Ray died in Kensington in London in 2004 aged 73.[6]

Filmography

Film

!Year!Title!Role!Notes
1972Some Kind of HeroMary Crane
1982The SenderNursing Staff
1983The Lords of DisciplineMrs. Bear
1985Invitation to the WeddingAmerican Wife

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1958Long DistanceTelephone operatorTelevision film
1959Sunday Night TheatreEpisode: "Shadow of Heroes"
1960ITV Television PlayhouseWaitressEpisode: "The Out-of-Towners"
1962Somerset Maugham HourNoraEpisode: "The Closed Shop"
1964ThorndykeMiss CleaverEpisode: "The Night of the Horns"
1966Theatre 625Episode: "Focus"
1981Artemis 81SoniaTelevision film
1985Tender Is the NightMrs. AbramsEpisode: "1925"
1989Back HomeAunt HannahTelevision film
1991Selling HitlerLynn NesbitEpisode #1.3
1992Jeeves and WoosterLandladyEpisode: "Full House"
1992Unnatural PursuitsTeacherEpisode: "I Don't Do Cuddles"
1994The BillRose WhitfieldEpisode: "Mean Streak
2000Holby CityMarieEpisode: "First Impressions"
2004DoctorsEleanor ForsythEpisode: "Cross My Heart"

Notes and References

  1. Krensky Cooper, Roberta The American Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford 1955-1985, Folger Books (1986), Google Books, p. 299
  2. https://www.playbill.com/playbillpagegallery/inside-playbill?asset=00000150-aea3-d936-a7fd-eef7d7fb0000&type=InsidePlaybill&slide=5 Cast
  3. Edkins, Lucy Obituary for Anthony Edkins, The Guardian, 26 November 2018
  4. https://web.archive.org/web/20211027235803/https://www2.bfi.org.uk/films-tv-people/4ce2ba2543919 Filmography of Mary Ellen Ray
  5. https://www.ancestry.co.uk/imageviewer/collections/1518/images/30807_A001285-00688?treeid=&personid=&hintid=&queryId=418cf3be8cb614fd54031a489aaaf9dd&usePUB=true&_phsrc=GqB48&_phstart=successSource&usePUBJs=true&_ga=2.206025491.1010347071.1607285356-1388927399.1605732653&pId=4446730 UK and Ireland, Incoming Passenger Lists, 1878-1960 for Mary Ellen Ray, Southampton, England, 1952: Ancestry.com
  6. https://search.ancestry.co.uk/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=7579&h=12752372&tid=&pid=&queryId=787e3508771fc9f6ba125eab45273045&usePUB=true&_phsrc=GqB45&_phstart=successSource Mary Ellen Ray in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1916-2007: Ancestry.com