Masterful, scene-stealing actor Maggie Smith dead at 89
Tributes pour in for actor best-known for roles in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, Downton Abbey, Harry Potter
Maggie Smith, the masterful, scene-stealing actor who won an Oscar for The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie in 1969 and gained new fans in the 21st century as the Dowager Countess of Grantham in Downton Abbey and Professor Minerva McGonagall in the Harry Potter films, died Friday. She was 89.
Smith's sons, Chris Larkin and Toby Stephens, said in a statement that Smith died early Friday in a London hospital.
"She leaves two sons and five loving grandchildren who are devastated by the loss of their extraordinary mother and grandmother," they said in a statement issued through publicist Clair Dobbs.
Actors, collaborators and fans who worked with Smith paid tribute to the award-winning actor Friday.
It's a very sad day for the whole culture of theatre and cinema in England," said actor Helen Mirren in an interview with The Associated Press. "She was one of the greatest actresses of the past century, without a doubt."
Actor Daniel Radcliffe, star of the Harry Potter franchise, told The Associated Press he met Smith when he was nine years old and they were reading though scenes for David Copperfield, his first job.
"She was incredibly kind to me on that shoot, and then I was lucky enough to go on working with her for another 10 years on the Harry Potter films," Radcliffe said.
"She was a fierce intellect, a gloriously sharp tongue, could intimidate and charm in the same instant and was, as everyone will tell you, extremely funny. I will always consider myself amazingly lucky to have been able to work with her, and to spend time around her on set."
Smith was frequently rated the pre-eminent British female performer of a generation that included Vanessa Redgrave and Judi Dench, with a clutch of Academy Award nominations and a shelf full of acting trophies.
She remained in demand even in her later years, despite her lament that "when you get into the granny era, you're lucky to get anything."
Reputation for upstaging
Smith dryly summarized her later roles as "a gallery of grotesques," including Professor McGonagall. Asked why she took the role, she quipped: "Harry Potter is my pension."
Richard Eyre, who directed Smith in a television production of Suddenly Last Summer, said she was "intellectually the smartest actress I've ever worked with. You have to get up very, very early in the morning to outwit Maggie Smith."
Jean Brodie, in which she played a dangerously charismatic Edinburgh schoolteacher, brought her the Academy Award for best actress, and the British Academy Film Award (BAFTA) as well in 1969.
Smith added a supporting actress Oscar for California Suite in 1978, Golden Globes for California Suite and Room with a View, and BAFTAs for lead actress in A Private Function in 1984, A Room with a View in 1986, and The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne in 1988.
She also received Academy Award nominations as a supporting actress in Othello, Travels with My Aunt, Room with a View and Gosford Park, and a BAFTA award for supporting actress in Tea with Mussolini. On stage, she won a Tony in 1990 for Lettice and Lovage.
Her work in 2012 netted three Golden Globe nominations for the globally successful Downton Abbey TV series and the films The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel and Quartet.
Smith had a reputation for being difficult, and sometimes upstaging others.
Richard Burton remarked that Smith didn't just take over a scene in The V.I.P.s with him: "She commits grand larceny."
However, the director Peter Hall found that Smith wasn't "remotely difficult unless she's among idiots. She's very hard on herself, and I don't think she sees any reason why she shouldn't be hard on other people, too."
'I don't tolerate fools'
Smith conceded that she could be impatient at times.
"It's true I don't tolerate fools, but then they don't tolerate me, so I am spiky," Smith said. "Maybe that's why I'm quite good at playing spiky elderly ladies."
Critic Frank Rich, in a New York Times review of Lettice and Lovage, praised Smith as "the stylized classicist who can italicize a line as prosaic as 'Have you no marmalade?' until it sounds like a freshly minted epigram by Coward or Wilde."
Smith famously drew laughs from a prosaic line — "This haddock is disgusting" — in a 1964 revival of Noel Coward's Hay Fever.
"But unfortunately the critics mentioned it, and after that it never got a laugh," she recalled. "The moment you say something is funny it's gossamer. It's gone, really."
Margaret Natalie Smith was born in Ilford, on the eastern edge of London, on Dec. 28, 1934. She summed up her life briefly: "One went to school, one wanted to act, one started to act, one's still acting."
Her father was assigned in 1939 to wartime duty in Oxford, where her theatre studies at the Oxford Playhouse School led to a busy apprenticeship.
"I did so many things, you know, round the universities there … If you were kind of clever enough and I suppose quick enough, you could almost do weekly rep because all the colleges were doing different productions at different times," she said in a BBC interview.
Maggie was her stage name
She took Maggie as her stage name because another Margaret Smith was active in the theatre.
Laurence Olivier spotted her talent, invited her to be part of his original National Theatre company and cast her as his co-star in a 1965 film adaptation of Othello.
Smith said two directors, Ingmar Bergman and William Gaskill, both in National Theatre productions, were important influences.
Alan Bennett, preparing to film the monologue A Bed Among the Lentils, said he was wary of Smith's reputation for becoming bored. As the actor Jeremy Brett put it, "she starts divinely and then goes off, rather like a cheese."
"So the fact that we only just had enough time to do it was an absolute blessing really because she was so fresh and just so into it," said Bennett, who also wrote a starring role for Smith in The Lady in the Van.
Intensely private
However extravagant she may have been on stage or before the cameras, Smith was known to be intensely private.
Simon Callow, who acted with her in A Room with a View, said he ruined their first meeting by spouting compliments.
"I blurted out various kinds of rubbish about her and she kind of withdrew. She doesn't like that sort of thing very much at all," Callow said in a film portrait of the actress. "She never wanted to talk about acting. Acting was something she was terrified to talk about because if she did, it would disappear."
Smith was made a Dame Commander of the British Empire, the equivalent of a knight, in 1990.
She married fellow actor Robert Stephens in 1967. They had two sons, Christopher and Toby, and divorced in 1975. The same year she married the writer Beverley Cross, who died in 1998.