Versatile actress who conquered stage and screen
In a career spanning eight decades, Maggie Smith won two Oscars, five Baftas, four Emmys, a Tony and an honorary Olivier – among many other awards, said The Telegraph. Theatregoers were captivated by her performances, in everything from "Othello" to "Lettice and Lovage"; and though the stage was her natural home, she was also a film star. She came to Hollywood's attention in 1963, with a scene-stealing turn in "The V.I.P.s".
And yet, said The Times, when critics and admirers tried to define her qualities as an actress, they struggled. ''Very tall, very thin … with all this red hair," observed the playwright Beverley Cross, on seeing her Viola in a production of "Twelfth Night" in 1952, when he was 21. He fell in love with Smith and eventually became her second husband.
With her impeccable timing, she excelled at comic grandes dames; and yet could also be primly middle class. And as she got older, critics noted her ability to capture loneliness, anguish and fear, such as in Alan Bennett's "Bed Among the Lentils".
Margaret Smith was born in Ilford, Essex, and brought up in Oxford. Her mother was a secretary from Glasgow; her father was a lab technician. There were no actors in the family, but as a child, Margaret had read "The Swish of the Curtain", Pamela Brown's novel about the theatre, and she became convinced that acting was what she had to do. On leaving school at 16, she joined the Oxford Playhouse, and at 18 she made her debut in "Twelfth Night", under the auspices of the university's dramatic society. She appeared in numerous productions in Oxford in the early 1950s, said The Guardian. Ned Sherrin, in whose revues she starred, noted that "at that time in Oxford, if you wanted a show to be a success, you had to try and get Margaret Smith in it".
As Maggie Smith (Margaret was already taken), she made her Broadway debut in "New Faces of '56", and her West End one a year later, in Bamber Gascoigne's "Share My Lettuce". She then gravitated to more serious roles and, in 1963 – a year after she won the first of her six Evening Standard Awards – Laurence Olivier invited her to join his new National Theatre company. Olivier, wrote Michael Coveney, soon realised that in Smith, he had met his match. She starred opposite him in several productions, including "The Master Builder" and "Othello". She reprised the role of Desdemona for Olivier's 1965 film, which garnered her an Oscar nomination. She won her first Oscar for "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" (1969). Years later, the Edinburgh-based writer J.K. Rowling suggested she be cast as Professor McGonagall in the Harry Potter films; Smith referred to the part as "Jean Brodie in a witch's hat".
Following the collapse of her marriage to the actor Robert Stephens in 1974, she married Cross and moved to Canada, to spend four seasons with the Stratford Festival in Ontario. This brought her closer to Hollywood, and in 1979 she won her second Oscar, for "California Suite". In the UK, she was increasingly cast in period films, including 1984's "A Private Function".
Owing to periods of ill health, she did not act on stage for many years, but in 2019, at the age of 85, she made a triumphant final appearance in Christopher Hampton's one-hander "A German Life", about Goebbels's secretary.
Meanwhile, she kept busy with screen work, said The New York Times. Having excelled as a countess with a taste for lethal put-downs in Robert Altman's "Gosford Park" (2001), scripted by Julian Fellowes, she was a natural to play Lady Crawley in Fellowes's TV show "Downton Abbey". As the clan gathered at the dowager's death bed, she delivered a final glorious put-down: "Stop that noise. I can't hear myself die." Cross died in 1998. Her sons, the actors Chris Larkin and Toby Stephens, survive her.