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Joyce Barbour

Joyce Barbour (27 March 1901 – 16 March 1977) was an English actress. She was the wife of the actor Richard Bird.[1]

Joyce Barbour

(1901-03-27)27 March 1901

Birmingham, Warwickshire, England

16 March 1977(1977-03-16) (aged 75)

Northwood, Middlesex, England

British

Film and Stage Actress

Barbour was born in Birmingham on 27 March 1901 the daughter of Horace and Miriam Barbour, her father was an assurance clerk and later a hotel manager. She made her first stage appearance in Birmingham as a pantomime fairy in 1914.[2] She first appeared on the London stage in 1915 at the Gaiety Theatre in the chorus.[1] She appeared at the Duke of York's Theatre in December 1923 in London Calling!.[1] She went to America in August 1924, and appeared on Broadway as Violet Dering in Havoc and Florence Horridge in Sky-High.[1]


Her later theatre work included the original productions of Rodgers and Hart's Present Arms (1928), and Spring is Here (1929) on Broadway; and the musical Ever Green (1930) in the West End.[3][4] She also played in the original production of Noël Coward's Words and Music at the Adelphi Theatre, London, in 1932.[5] In September 1945 she took over as Madame Arcati in Blithe Spirit.[1] At the Apollo Theatre in March 1949 she succeeded Margaret Rutherford as Miss Whitchurch in The Happiest Days of Your Life.[1] In 1950 she appeared in Esther McCracken's Cry Liberty.[1]


Barbour married the actor Richard Bird in 1931 in London.[6] She died on 16 March 1977 in Hospital at Northwood, Middlesex, aged 75.[2]

(1920) - Sophie Desmond

Enchantment

(1932)

Diamond Cut Diamond

(1936) - Renee

Sabotage

(1937) - Barmaid

For Valour

(1938) - Barbara Fane

Housemaster

(1940) - Sally

Saloon Bar

(1944) - Harriet

Don't Take It to Heart

(1949) - Aunt Mab

Stop Press Girl

(1952) - Lady Burridge

It Started in Paradise

(1953) - Mrs. Reid (housekeeper)

The Captain's Paradise

(1964) - Madame. Rozanne

The Main Chance

Herbert, Ian, ed. (1972). Who's Who in the Theatre (fifteenth ed.). London: Sir Isaac Pitman and Sons.  978-0-273-31528-5.

ISBN

at IMDb

Joyce Barbour

at the Internet Broadway Database

Joyce Barbour