Deborah Kerr and Yul Brynner in a scene from "The King and I." Photo: The Associated Press
SUFFOLK, England
(International Herald Tribune - Associated Press),
October 18, 2007:
Deborah Kerr, a versatile actress who long projected the quintessential image of the proper, tea-sipping Englishwoman but who was also indelible in one of the most sexually provocative scenes of the 1950's, with Burt Lancaster in "From Here to Eternity," died on October 16 in Suffolk, England. She was 86 and had Parkinson's disease.
Miss Kerr was nominated for six Academy awards, without winning any, over more than four decades and finally received an honorary Oscar for her lifetime of work in 1994. Mostly in retirement since the mid-1980's, she lived for many years in Switzerland, with her husband, Peter Viertel, the novelist and screenwriter.
Time magazine, in a 1947 feature article, predicted she would be one of the great movie stars because "while she could act like Ingrid Bergman, she was really a kind of converted Greer Garson, womanly enough to show up nicely in those womanly roles."
She was believable as a steadfast nun in Black Narcissus; as the love-hungry wife of an empty-headed army captain stationed at Pearl Harbor in "From Here to Eternity"; as a headmaster's spouse who sleeps with an 18-year-old student to prove to him that he is a man in "Tea and Sympathy"; as a spunky schoolmarm not afraid to joust and dance with the King of Siam in "The King and I"; as a Salvation Army lass in "Major Barbara"; and even as Portia, the Roman matron married to Brutus, in Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar."
The high point came in 1956, when in "The King and I," she played opposite Yul Brynner.
Deborah Jane Kerr Trimmer was born in Helensburgh, Scotland, on Sept. 30, 1921, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kerr Trimmer. Her father, who was called Jack, was an architect and civil engineer who had been wounded in World War I and who died when Deborah was in her early teens. Deborah was attracted to the ballet but concluded that she was too tall, at 5 feet 6 inches. She began her acting career by playing small parts with a group that performed Shakespeare's plays in the Open Air Theatre in Regents Park, London. She got her first movie contract in 1939 after Gabriel Pascal, the producer and director, spotted her in a restaurant.
Miss Kerr was married to Anthony Bartley, an Englishman who had been a decorated fighter pilot during World War II, for 13 years. They were separated in 1959 and their divorce became final the next year. They had two children, Melanie and Francesca. In 1969, she married Peter Viertel, who survives her, along with her daughters and three grandchildren, according to The Associated Press.
By Richard Severo
Copyright © 2007 the International Herald Tribune.