Wendy Craig was born in 1934 in Durham. Her feature films include “The Servant” with Dirk Bogarde and Sarah Miles and “The Nanny” with Bette Davis. She is known primarily for her many television series including “Butterflies”, “And Mother Makes Three” and “The Royal”. BFI page on Wendy Craig here.
“Wikipedia” entry:
Anne Gwendolyn Craig was born in Sacriston, County Durham the daughter of farmer George Craig and his wife Anne (née Lindsay).[2] She attended Durham High School for Girls, initially as a day pupil and later as a boarder,[ which she revisited on 13 October 2007 to open a new building that had been named after her. She passed theEleven Plus examination and went to Darlington High School.[3] When she was twelve years old the family moved to Picton and she attended nearby Yarm Grammar School.[2]She trained as an actress at the Central School of Dramatic Art.
From the mid-1950s Craig appeared in British films such as The Servant (1963) and The Nanny (1965) with Bette Davis, but it was her appearances in British sitcoms of the late 1960s/1970s which led to her becoming a household name, usually playing a scatty middle class housewife. She went from the BBC‘s Not in Front of the Children (1967) to ITV‘s…And Mother Makes Three (1971) (in which she played a single parent), which later evolved into …And Mother Makes Five. Then came Butterflies (1978), a comedy on BBC2.
Craig returned to drama with the series Nanny (1981–83), a series she created, and wrote some episodes herself as Jonathan Marr,] a pseudonym she had used before when writing episodes of …And Mother Makes Five. Twenty years later, she played a hospital matron in ITV’s The Royal (2003–11). However, she has continued to be associated with comedy, having taken one of the leading roles as Annie in Brighton Belles (1993–94), the UK’s short-lived version of The Golden Girls. She appeared as Reggie’s mother in the BBC1 comedy Reggie Perrin (2009, Series 1 and 2010, Series 2), an update of the 1970s’ series The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin.
In 2012 Craig appeared as a guest in Episode 12 of the Series Masterchef, along with many other 1970s sitcom stars. In January 2014 she appeared in an episode of the BBCpopular drama Waterloo Road.
In 2016 she appeared as Mary Goodman in the BBC TV series Death in Paradise episode