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  1. Joyce Carey. Actor. Born March 30, 1898 in Kensington, London, England, UK. Genteel London-born actress Joyce Carey came from a distinguished theatrical family. Her own lengthy career on the stage began in 1916 when she played Princess Katherine in an all-female ensemble of "Henry V". She made her debut on the legitimate stage in a small part ...

  2. Brief Encounter is a 1945 British romantic drama film directed by David Lean from a screenplay by Noël Coward, based on his 1936 one-act play Still Life.. Starring Celia Johnson, Trevor Howard, Stanley Holloway, and Joyce Carey, the film follows a passionate extramarital relationship in England shortly before World War II.The protagonist is Laura, a married woman with children, whose ...

  3. 21 de dic. de 2017 · But Laura seems to like Myrtle Bagot (Joyce Carey), the working-class owner of the teashop where she first meets Alec. The film seems to be hinting that Laura might be happier if she were less trapped by her middle-class suburban milieu, and this is particularly evident in the way Johnson smiles when she sees stationmaster Albert Godby (Stanley Holloway) give Myrtle a good-natured smack on the ...

  4. The daughter of actress Lilian Braithwaite, Joyce Carey was born in London on 30 March 1898, was on stage from 1918 and stayed there for nearly 70 years, at 86 playing Peter O'Toole 's mother in Pygmalion (1984). She made three silent films, but her screen career really began when she played Bernard Miles 's wife in In Which We Serve (1942), by ...

  5. Joyce Cary (born Dec. 7, 1888, Londonderry, Ire.—died March 29, 1957, Oxford, Eng.) was an English novelist who developed a trilogy form in which each volume is narrated by one of three protagonists.. Cary was born into an old Anglo-Irish family, and at age 16 he studied painting in Edinburgh and then in Paris. From 1909 to 1912 he was at Trinity College, Oxford, where he read law.

  6. Born. in Derry, Ireland. December 07, 1888. Died. March 29, 1957. edit data. Cary now undertook his great works examining historical and social change in England during his own lifetime. The First Trilogy (1941–44) finally provided Cary with a reasonable income, and The Horse's Mouth (1944) remains his most popular novel.

  7. Joyce Cary. , The Art of Fiction No. 7. Joyce Cary, 1954. Joyce Cary, a sprightly man with an impish crown of gray hair set at a jaunty angle on the back of his head, lives in a high and rather gloomy house in North Oxford. Extremely animated, Mr. Cary’s movements are decisive, uncompromising, and retain some of the brisk alertness of his ...