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Constance Collier (born Laura Constance Hardie in Windsor, Berkshire) was the only child of Auguste
Cheetham Hardie (1853-1939) and Eliza Georgina Collier (1854-1914). Both were professional actors, although, certainly
later in their careers, neither of them was very successful. According to J P Wearing's The London Stage, 1890-1899,
he appeared, during that nine-year period, in but three plays, while his wife as in only two.
Constance made her stage debut at the age of three, when she played Fairy Peasblossom in A Midsummer's Night Dream.
In 1893, at the age of fifteen, she joined the Gaiety Girls, the famous dance troupe based at the Gaiety Theatre in London.
She was very beautiful and soon became so tall that she towered over all the other dancers. In addition, she had enormous
personality and considerable determination. She naturally attracted considerable attention.
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Constance
Collier as Cleopatra, 1906
Click photo for enlargement
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In 1901, Sir Henry Beerbohm Tree, who was also very tall, invited her to join his company at His Majesty's
Theatre, London. She was soon playing leading roles. In Tree's production of Comyns Carr’s dramatization of Charles
Dickens’s Oliver Twist, which opened on July 10, 1905, she played Nancy to Tree's Fagin. Her performance
was much acclaimed. The same year, she married the Irish actor, Julian L'Estrange.
On December 27, 1906, Beerbohm Tree's extravagant revival of Antony and Cleopatra opened at His Majesty's Theatre
with Tree as Marc Antony and Constance Collier as Cleopatra, a performance for which she received much critical praise.
Famed for his realistic productions, Tree and his designer, Percy Macquoid, dressed Cleopatra is a range of spectacular
costumes. Later, Constance Collier commented: 'There is only a mention in the play of Cleopatra appearing as the goddess
Isis. Tree elaborated this into a great tableau... Cleopatra, robed in silver, crowned in silver, carrying a golden scepter
and the symbol of the sacred golden calf in her hand, went in procession through the streets of Alexandria, the ragged,
screaming populace acclaiming the Queen, half in hate, half in superstitious fear and joy as she made her sacrilegious
ascent to her high throne in the market-place.'
Constance Collier was now established as a popular and distinguished actress. In January 1908, she starred with Beerbohm
Tree at His Majesty's Theatre in J. Comyn's new play The Mystery of Edwin Drood, based on Charles Dickens's unfinished
novel of the same name. Later that year, she made the first of several tours of the United States. During the second,
made with Beerbohm Tree in 1916, she made four silent films, including an uncredited appearance in D W Griffith's Intolerance
and as Lady Macbeth in Tree's first and disastrous film interpretation of Macbeth. 'His face at the window,'
she later recalled, 'had a look of supreme relief as the train began to pull out of Los Angeles station.'
Tragically, on October 22, 1918, her husband, Julian L'Estrange, died in New York, aged only 40 - one of the multitudinous
victims of the influenza epidemic that reaped such world-wide havoc immediately after the end of the First World War.
Back in London, Constance Collier continued to be one of the brightest and most influential stars of the West End. She
took the lead part in the record-breaking, 548 performances of W Somerset Maugham's Our Betters. In 1920,
she starred with Basil Rathbone in Peter Ibbetson, John Raphael's adaptation of the George DuMaurier novel. The
following year she wrote the film script for Forever, the first film version of the novel. (Later, in 1931,
she produced with Deems Taylor the libretto for his lyric-opera of Peter Ibbetson that had been commissioned by
the Metropolitan Opera.)
In the early 1920s, she established a close friendship with Ivor Novello, who was then a young, handsome actor. His first
play, The Rat, was written in collaboration with her in 1924. She also appeared in several plays with him,
including the British version of the American success, The Firebrand by Edwin Justus Mayer.
With the advent of talking films, Hollywood had a desperate need for vocal coaches who could train their silent box-office
successes to speak. The studio bosses summoned Constance Collier, the famed interpreter of both classical and modern plays.
Among her first clients was Colleen More, who in 1928 had starred in several hugely successful silent films, including
Lilac Time, playing opposite the young Gary Cooper. In the documentary Hollywood, Colleen More hilariously
recalled that it took Constance Collier a complete day to teach her how to say 'mother' another to teach her 'father'.
'Cheer up, dollink,' one of the studio bosses said. 'Tomorrow maybe you'll learn a sentence.'
Constance Collier quickly became Hollywood's most famous drama and voice coach. Her many clients included some of the
greatest stars, including those who were moving from the stage into films. One of these was Eva Le Gallienne, who in her
autobiography, At 33, recalls:
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...
Constance Collier tried to make me see the values in the
beautiful speeches, to bring out the music without losing sight
of the meaning. She explained to me the two chief dangers in
reading Shakespeare's verse: the one, to intone in a stilted
fashion losing all feeling or reality; the other, precisely the
opposite, in the effort to be natural, the complete disregard of
poetic metre. She was a ruthlessly honest teacher...
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Although Constance Collier made fewer and fewer stage appearances (her last in New York was in the
1939 production of Aries is Rising), she played many supporting roles in films between 1935 (when she was put on
contract by M-G-M) and 1949. Her best-known appearance was in the classic Stage Door (1937) where, among an all-star
cast she played (not surprisingly) a drama coach. Her other films included The Perils of Pauline (1947) and
Rope (1948).
It is, however, for her coaching of actors that she is most remembered during the latter part of her career. Although
often working in Hollywood, she also worked in the 1930s at the American Academy of Dramatic Art, with an impressive group
of instructors that included Lee Strasberg, Uta Hagan and Michale Chekov.
She gave acting lessons to many future stars including Marilyn Monroe about whom she said:
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I don't think she is an
actress at all, not in any traditional sense. What she has -
this presence, this luminosity, this flickering intelligence -
could never surface on the stage. It's so fragile and subtle, it
can only be caught by the camera. It's like a hummingbird in
flight; only a camera can freeze the poetry of it. But anyone
who thinks this girl is simply another Harlow or harlot or
whatever is mad. I hope, I really pray, that she survives long
enough to free the strange, lovely talent that's wandering
through her like a jailed spirit.
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Constance Collier was presented with the American Shakespeare Festival
Theatre Award for distinguished service in training and guiding actors
in Shakespearean roles. |