
Actor
Jane Baxter
Born 1909 · Bremen, Germany
A distinguished stage and film actress Jane Baxter was one of the most glamorous performers on the London stage. Winston Churchill, an ardent fan, once described her as, "that charming lady who grace personifies all that is best in British womanhood". Her stage career spanned half a century and she is best remembered for her role in "Dial M For Murder", in which she co-starred with Michael Redgrave. Redgrave said that she was "every undergraduate's ideal of an English rose". Born Fedora Kathleen Alice Forde in Germany, she came to London as a child and studied acting at the Italia Conti Stage School. She made her West End debut at the age of 13 in the musical comedy "Love's Prisoner". On the advice of the playwright J.M. Barrie, she changed her name to Jane Baxter and, in 1938, played the lead in the hit comedy "A Damsel in Distress". Several other West End shows followed as well as films such as We Live Again (1934), with Fredric March and The Clairvoyant (1935), with Claude Rains and, in 1935, she joined the repertory company at the Liverpool Playhouse where the leading actor was Michael Redgrave. He viewed her arrival "with some alarm", expecting "a spoilt and temperamental film star". Instead, he found "a delightful actress". Baxter eventually became godmother to Redgrave's daughter, the future actress Vanessa Redgrave. She had success again in London in 1937 with "George and Margaret", which ran for two years and, on Broadway, she co-starred with John Gielgud and Margaret Rutherford in "The Importance of Being Earnest", in which she played "Cicely Cardew". She continued to make films and appear on stage throughout the 1960s and her final London stage role was in John Mortimer's "A Voyage Round My Father", in which she starred opposite Michael Redgrave. Her last stage role was at the Churchill Theatre, Bromley in 1978 in the thriller "Assault", in which she appeared with Richard Todd. In 1992, she made a guest appearance - to a standing ovation - at the London Palladium in "A Tribute to Evelyn Laye". In her will, she requested that there be no memorial service for her but just a gathering of friends at her local church in Wimbledon, South London. Film director Bryan Forbes gave the address
Acting

Upstairs, Downstairs
Dowager Lady Newbury · 1971

Bed and Breakfast
Audrey Corteline · 1930
All Hallowe'en
Lady DeVille · 1953

Down River
Hilary Gordon · 1931
The Constant Nymph
Antonia Sanger · 1933
Flat No. 9
Eileen Merridew · 1932
Second Best Bed
Patricia Lynton · 1938

The Clairvoyant
Christine · 1935

The Little Minister
Maid Helping with Wedding Dress · 1934

We Live Again
Missy Kortchagin · 1934

Drake of England
Elizabeth Sydenham · 1935

Death of an Angel
Mary Welling · 1952

Orson Welles' Great Mysteries
Harriet Faulkner · 1973

The Ware Case
Lady Margaret 'Meg' Ware · 1938

The Flemish Farm
Tresha · 1943

Two White Arms
Alison Drury · 1932

The Briggs Family
Sylvia Briggs · 1940

Bed Rock
Rosie · 1930

Dusty Ermine
Linda Kent · 1936

The Night of the Party
Peggy Studholme Kennion · 1934

Ships with Wings
Celia Wetherby · 1941

Blossom Time
Vicki Wimpassinger · 1934
Confidential Lady
Jill Trevor · 1939

The Man Behind the Mask
Lady June Slade · 1936