Encyclopedia > Diana Rigg

  Article Content

Diana Rigg

Dame Diana Rigg (born July 20, 1938) is a famous British actress.

She is particularly known for her role in the British 1960s television series The Avengers, where she played the sexy secret agent Emma Peel. Her career in film, television and the theatre has been wide-ranging, including roles in the Royal Shakespeare Company between 1959 and 1964. Her professional debut was in The Caucasian Chalk Circle[?] in 1955.

After The Avengers ended she returned to the stage, including playing two Stoppard leads, Ruth Carson in Night and Day and Dorothy Moore in Jumpers[?]. A nude scene with Keith Michell[?] in Abelard and Heloise[?] led to a notorious description of her as 'built like a brick basilica with too few flying buttresses'. In 1986, she took a leading role in the West End production of Stephen Sondheim's musical, Follies.

On the big screen, she became a Bond girl[?] in On Her Majesty's Secret Service[?] (1969). Her other films include A Little Night Music (1977).

In the 1990s she had triumphs with roles at the Almeida Theatre[?] in Islington (north London), including Medea in 1993, Mother Courage[?] in 1995, and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? in 1996. On television, she has appeared as Mrs Danvers in Rebecca and as the amateur detective Mrs Bradley in a series of mysteries.

She was created CBE in 1987 and knighted in 1994. Dame Diana was born in Doncaster in Yorkshire and lived in India between the ages of two and eight. She was married to Menahem Gueffen in 1973-76 and Archibald Stirling of Keir 1982-90, by whom she has a daughter Rachael (b. 1977) who is also now an actor.

External Links



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Thomas a Kempis

... it acceptable to all Christians is the supreme stress it lays upon Christ and the possibility of immediate communion with him and God. The references to medieval ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 23.7 ms