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  1. Margaret Mary Day Lockwood, CBE (15 September 1916 – 15 July 1990), was an English actress. One of Britain's most popular film stars of the 1930s and 1940s, her film appearances included The Lady Vanishes (1938), Night Train to Munich (1940), The Man in Grey (1943), and The Wicked Lady (1945).

  2. Margaret Lockwood. Actress: The Lady Vanishes. Karachi-born Margaret Lockwood, daughter of a British colonial railway clerk, was educated in London and studied to be an actress at the Italia Conti Drama School.

  3. Margaret Lockwood. Actress: The Lady Vanishes. Karachi-born Margaret Lockwood, daughter of a British colonial railway clerk, was educated in London and studied to be an actress at the Italia Conti Drama School.

  4. Margaret Lockwood (born Sept. 15, 1916, Karachi, India [now Pak.]—died July 15, 1990, London, Eng.) was a British actress noted for her versatility and craftsmanship, who became Britain’s most popular leading lady in the late 1940s.

  5. Jul 17, 1990 · Margaret Lockwood, an actress who became one of the most popular figures in British films of the late 1940's, died on Sunday. She was 73 years old. Miss Lockwood's family would not...

  6. British stage and film actress. Born on September 15, 1916, in Karachi, India (now Pakistan); died in 1990; only daughter and one of two children of Henry Lockwood (a British civil servant) and Margaret Evelyn (Waugh) Lockwood; attended Sydenham Girls' High School; studied acting at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art; married Rupert W. Leon (a ...

  7. Feb 20, 2019 · Lockwood was considered one of Britain's most popular film stars of the 1930s and 1940s. She was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best British Actress for the 1955 film Cast a Dark Shadow. The actress died at the Cromwell Hospital, Kensington, London, from cirrhosis of the liver in 1990, aged 73.

  8. Jul 15, 1990 · Lockwood's role as the feisty Harriet Peterson won her Best Actress Awards from the TV Times (1971) and The Sun (1973). Her last professional appearance was as Queen Alexandra in Royce Ryton's stage play, Motherdear (Ambassadors Theatre, 1980).

  9. Aug 23, 2016 · Lockwood’s lips and upper chin tense Joan Crawford-style when her more heinous characters’ covers are blown, but not at the cost of audience empathy. Her likeable core personality made her characters, whether good or evil, easy for women to identify with.

  10. Jul 17, 1990 · Margaret Lockwood, the calculatingly beautiful vixen featured in a variety of British films and who was named England’s favorite movie star for three successive years in the mid-1940s, died...

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