Campbell was born in Grantham, Lincolnshire, on 31 May 1916, daughter of John Arthur Gamble and his wife Mary (née Fulton). She was educated briefly at Kesteven and Grantham Girls' School, then at St Michael's Convent, East Grinstead, Sussex.[2][3] Both her parents were on the stage; her father was also the author of several plays under his professional name of J.A. Campbell.
Judy Campbell (age 26), photographed by her husband Lt Cdr David Birkin at Dartmouth
Campbell made her stage debut in 1935 as a "Guest" in The Last of Mrs. Cheyney at the Theatre Royal, Grantham, and entered films in 1940 in the London-based thriller Saloon Bar.[1][5]
Campbell also appeared with him in twice-weekly troop concerts. In 1943 at the Theatre Royal, Haymarket, she performed in Present Laughter and This Happy Breed on alternate nights under the umbrella title of Play Parade, before playing Elvira in the West End presentation of Blithe Spirit at the Duchess Theatre in 1943. During one performance on tour, she was surprised to feel Coward stroking her shoulder in an affectionate way that was not called-for in the script, and she began to wonder "Have I succeeded where so many women have failed?" In fact, he was just trying to keep his hands warm in an unheated theatre during fuel rationing.[1]
In 1981, Campbell appeared in Andrew Birkin's BAFTA-winning and Academy Award-nominated short film Sredni Vashtar (1981), playing the fearsome Aunt Augusta.[6][7] It was her last major film role, although she appeared regularly on British television throughout the remainder of her career.[5]
In 1995 she appeared as Laura’s mother Caroline’s grand mother in ITV’s The Upper Hand
In 2002, Campbell lent her patrician presence to a television remake of The Forsyte Saga.[8]
In December 2002, at the end of a 67-year career as a boulevard actress and chanteuse, Campbell gave her farewell London performances at the King's Head Theatre with Where Are the Songs We Sung?, a nostalgic garland of songs, memories, and scenes from plays, accompanied by Stefan Bednarczyk at the piano, a programme they finally reprised at the Jermyn Street Theatre. The evening recalled her Grantham childhood, the 1950s with Sandy Wilson, by way of the Liverpool rep with Robert Helpmann, wintry tours and troop concerts with Noël Coward and cheering up West End audiences during the Blitz on London, including her unique renderings of "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square", the Eric Maschwitz standard that made her a star in the New Faces revue at the Comedy Theatre in 1940.[citation needed]
In September 2003, Campbell finally recorded "Nightingale" (and Coward's "If Love Were All"), as part of a cabaret performance with Sheridan Morley and Michael Law at Pizza on the Park. She had previously appeared as guest star with Morley and Law for several Jermyn Street cabaret performances as well as with Law's Piccadilly Dance Orchestra, most memorably for a Coward centenary concert at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in 1999, where she had regaled the audience with anecdotes about her work with Coward during the 1940s (and sang "her" Nightingale song).[9]
Personal life and death
She was married to Lieutenant-Commander David Birkin, DSC RNVR, until his death in 1991. The couple had three children.
They bought the oldest house in Old Church Street, Chelsea, which was once a pub, "a few steps from the Chelsea Arts Club", in 1974, and Campbell lived there until her death in 2004.[10]
Campbell died in London on 6 June 2004, aged 88. After her death, her name was commemorated on the actresses' dressing-room door at the Jermyn Street Theatre.[citation needed]
Touring with Noêl Coward (September 1942-March 1943), creating the roles of Joanna in Present Laughter and Ethel in This Happy Breed, also playing Elvira in Blithe Spirit, "as well as appearing with Noël in twice-weekly troop concerts".
Play Parade: alternate nights in Present Laughter and This Happy Breed, Theatre Royal Haymarket (April 1943)
^ a b c"Obituary: Judy Campbell". The Independent. 10 June 2004. Archived from the original on 8 February 2015. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
^Grantham Journal Friday 26 April 1940, page 7
^Shorter, Eric (9 June 2004). "Judy Campbell". The Guardian. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
^Thatcher, Margaret (1995). The Path to Power. HarperCollins. p. 14. ISBN 0-06-017270-3.
^ a b"Judy Campbell". BFI. Archived from the original on 26 April 2017.
^"1981 Film Short Film | BAFTA Awards". awards.bafta.org.
^"Sredni Vashtar (1981)". BFI. Archived from the original on 11 August 2020.
^"The Forsyte Saga[07/04/2002] (2002)". BFI. Archived from the original on 23 October 2020.
^"Store". Piccadilly Dance Orchestra. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
^Tyzack, Anna (11 July 2008). "Judy Campbell: The £4m house where a nightingale sang". The Telegraph. Retrieved 29 September 2018.
^"Council officially launches film celebrating 'Inspirational Women' from Grantham and South Kesteven on International Women's Day". Grantham Journal. Retrieved 1 April 2023.
Sources
"Obituary: Judy Campbell". The Daily Telegraph. 9 June 2004.
Judy Campbell's CV in Who's Who in the Theatre, 17th Edition (Vol 1), editor Ian Herbert, Gale Research (1981); ISBN 0-8103-0235-7
John Thaxter's review of Where Are The Songs We Sung?, What's on in London, published 18 December 2002 (this and other reviews archived in Theatre Record 2002)
External links
Judy Campbell at IMDb
Performances listed in Theatre Archive University of Bristol