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{{short description|English stage actress, singer and dancer}}
{{Short description|English stage actress, singer and dancer (1921–2007)}}
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{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2021}}
{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
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| image = Actress_Pat_Kirkwood.jpg<!-- NOTE TO EDITORS: Do not replace the header image unless it is with a photo under a public domain or free license (NOT the same as fair use). Any fair use photos (i.e. promotional photos, album covers) are copyright violations and will be deleted. Also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Non-free content use criteria -->
| image = Actress_Pat_Kirkwood.jpg<!-- NOTE TO EDITORS: Do not replace the header image unless it is with a photo under a public domain or free license (NOT the same as fair use). Any fair use photos (i.e. promotional photos, album covers) are copyright violations and will be deleted. Also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Non-free content use criteria -->
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| caption = photo by J C A Redhead, during the [[Second World War]]
| caption = photo by J C A Redhead, during the [[Second World War]]
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| occupation = Actress, singer, dancer, pantomimist
| occupation = Actress, singer, dancer, pantomimist
| title =
| title =
| spouse = {{ubl|{{Marriage|Jack Lister|1940|1950|end=divorced}}|{{Marriage|Spiro de Spero Gabriele|1952|1954|end=died}}|{{Marriage|[[Hubert Gregg]]|1956|1979|end=divorced}}|{{Marriage|Peter Knight<br />|1981}}}}
| salary =
| spouse = {{ubl|{{Marriage|Jack Lister|1940|1946|end=divorced}}|{{Marriage|Spiro de Spero Gabriele|1952|1954|end=died}}|{{Marriage|[[Hubert Gregg]]|1956|1979|end=divorced}}|{{Marriage|Peter Knight<br />|1981}}}}
| partner =
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}}
}}
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==Early life==
==Early life==
Kirkwood was born in [[Pendleton, Greater Manchester|Pendleton]], [[County Borough of Salford|Salford]], [[Lancashire]]{{efn|name="Greater Manchester 1974"}} to William and Norah Carr Kirkwood.<ref name=george/> Her father was a Scottish shipping clerk.<ref name=ind>{{cite news|last=Leigh|first=Spencer|title=Pat Kirkwood: 'Britain's Betty Grable'|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/pat-kirkwood-britains-betty-grable-766892.html|work=The Independent|date=27 December 2007|access-date=1 January 2008}}</ref> She was educated at [[Levenshulme High School]] in [[Manchester]].<ref name=Timesobit/> At the age of 14, she entered a talent contest at [[Ramsey, Isle of Man|Ramsey]], [[Isle of Man]] and was asked to sing on the BBC's ''[[Children's Hour]]''.<ref name=ind/> A few months later, in April 1936, she took part in a sketch, ''The Schoolgirl Songstress'' at the Hippodrome in [[County Borough of Salford|Salford]].<ref name=Timesobit/> Throughout 1936, Kirkwood appeared in local variety shows including the [[pantomime]], ''[[Jack and the Beanstalk]]'', in which she played Princess Dorothy.<ref name=Timesobit>{{cite news|url=https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/patricia-kirkwood-vhrr7qhz992|title=Patricia Kirkwood|work=The Times|date=27 December 2007|access-date=13 May 2021}} {{subscription required}}</ref> During Christmas 1937, she took the roll of Dandini at Shaftesbury Theatre, in the pantomime "Cinderella", along with [[Stanley Lupino]].<ref name=Timesobit/><ref name=george>[http://www.georgeformby.co.uk/ladies/kirkwood/report.htm Kirkwood at GeorgeFormby.co.uk] Retrieved 28 December 2007.</ref> Over the next two years, she worked in cabaret, variety shows, and pantomimes.
Kirkwood was born in [[Pendleton, Greater Manchester|Pendleton]], [[County Borough of Salford|Salford]], [[Lancashire]]{{efn|name="Greater Manchester 1974"}} to William and Norah Carr Kirkwood.<ref name=george/> Her father was a Scottish shipping clerk.<ref name=ind>{{cite news|last=Leigh|first=Spencer|title=Pat Kirkwood: 'Britain's Betty Grable'|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/pat-kirkwood-britains-betty-grable-766892.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220525/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/pat-kirkwood-britains-betty-grable-766892.html |archive-date=25 May 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live|work=The Independent|date=27 December 2007|access-date=1 January 2008}}</ref> She was educated at [[Levenshulme High School]] in [[Manchester]].<ref name=Timesobit/> At the age of 14, she entered a talent contest at [[Ramsey, Isle of Man|Ramsey]], [[Isle of Man]] and was asked to sing on the BBC's ''[[Children's Hour]]''.<ref name=ind/> A few months later, in April 1936, she took part in a sketch, ''The Schoolgirl Songstress'' at the Hippodrome in [[County Borough of Salford|Salford]].<ref name=Timesobit/> Throughout 1936, Kirkwood appeared in local variety shows including the [[pantomime]], ''[[Jack and the Beanstalk]]'', in which she played Princess Dorothy.<ref name=Timesobit>{{cite news|url=https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/patricia-kirkwood-vhrr7qhz992|title=Patricia Kirkwood|work=The Times|date=27 December 2007|access-date=13 May 2021}} {{subscription required}}</ref> During Christmas 1937, she took the role of Dandini at Shaftesbury Theatre, in the pantomime "Cinderella", along with [[Stanley Lupino]].<ref name=Timesobit/><ref name=george>{{cite web|last=Dugan|first=Eleanor|url=http://www.georgeformby.co.uk/ladies/kirkwood/report.htm|title=George's Leading Ladies:Pat Kirkwood|work=George Formby Society|access-date=13 May 2021}}</ref> Over the next two years, she worked in cabaret, variety shows, and pantomimes.


==Stardom and war==
==Stardom and the war years==
During 1938–39, Kirkwood appeared in two films, ''[[Save a Little Sunshine]]'' and ''[[Me and My Pal (1939 film)|Me and My Pal]]'' along with the Scottish comedian [[Dave Willis (comedian)|Dave Willis]] where she sang 2 musical numbers.<ref name=george/> This led to her first recording success, "Hurry Home".<ref name=george/><ref name=ind/> However, it was at the start of the [[Second World War]] when her career started to take off. Just as the war started, Kirkwood, aged 18, played in ''[[Black Velvet (revue)|Black Velvet]]'' at the [[London Hippodrome]] where she became famous for her rendition of [[Cole Porter]]'s song "[[My Heart Belongs to Daddy]]".<ref name=Timesobit/> This led to her being dubbed 'Britain's first wartime star'.<ref name=bbc />
During 1938–39, Kirkwood appeared in two films, ''[[Save a Little Sunshine]]'' and ''[[Me and My Pal (1939 film)|Me and My Pal]]'' along with the Scottish comedian [[Dave Willis (comedian)|Dave Willis]] where she sang 2 musical numbers.<ref name=george/> This led to her first recording success, "Hurry Home".<ref name=george/><ref name=ind/> However, it was at the start of the [[Second World War]] when her career started to take off. Just as the war started, Kirkwood, aged 18, played in ''[[Black Velvet (revue)|Black Velvet]]'' at the [[London Hippodrome]] where she became famous for her rendition of [[Cole Porter]]'s song "[[My Heart Belongs to Daddy]]".<ref name=Timesobit/> This led to her being dubbed 'Britain's first wartime star'.<ref name=bbc />


In 1940, Kirkwood performed in ''Top of the World'' at the [[London Palladium]] while [[The Blitz|German bombs rained down on London]].<ref name=ind/> "[T]he sky was bright with searchlights", she later recalled in a 1945 ''[[Boston Globe]]'' interview. "[W]hen bombs fell near the theatre, the show went on. No one left, all stayed in their seats because the theatre was safer than the streets. The cast would make bets on who would be onstage when the bombs began to fall."<ref name=george/> Sometime during the show's run she went up to the roof of the London Palladium and watched the city burning. She later recalled: "My weirdest [war] experience was standing on my roof one night with my mother. On all sides of us, buildings were burning. We looked around--a sea of fire. Oddly, our building didn't burn, but we were marooned. No way out."<ref name=george/>
In 1940, Kirkwood performed in ''Top of the World'' at the [[London Palladium]] while [[The Blitz|German bombs rained down on London]].<ref name=ind/> "[T]he sky was bright with searchlights", she later recalled in a 1945 ''[[Boston Globe]]'' interview. "[W]hen bombs fell near the theatre, the show went on. No one left, all stayed in their seats because the theatre was safer than the streets. The cast would make bets on who would be onstage when the bombs began to fall."<ref name=george/> Sometime during the show's run she went up to the roof of the London Palladium and watched the city burning. She later recalled: "My weirdest [war] experience was standing on my roof one night with my mother. On all sides of us, buildings were burning. We looked around--a sea of fire. Oddly, our building didn't burn, but we were marooned. No way out."<ref name=george/>


Kirkwood was cast in ''[[Band Waggon (film)|Band Waggon]]'' (1939) and ''[[Come on George!]]'' (1940). It was her appearance in ''Band Waggon'' that led to comparisons being first made between she and [[Betty Grable]].<ref name=ind/> Star [[Arthur Askey]] was reportedly friendly on the set of ''Band Waggon'', but Kirkwood and [[George Formby]] reportedly loathed each other from the beginning, and working on ''Come on George!'' was a much more difficult experience.<ref name="Telobit">{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1573895/Pat-Kirkwood.html|title=Pat Kirkwood|work=The Telegraph|date=29 December 2007|access-date=13 May 2021}}</ref> She continued to perform throughout the rest of the war in West End pantomimes and shows. She played in ''[[Lady Behave (musical)|Lady Behave]]'' (1941), ''[[Let's Face It!]]'' (1942), as Robin Goodfellow in ''Goody Two Shoes'' ([[London Coliseum|Coliseum Theatre]], [[London]], 1944), as the Princess in ''Aladdin'' ([[Theatre Royal, Nottingham|Theatre Royal]], [[Nottingham]]) and was featured on radio in ''A Date with Pat Kirkwood''.
Kirkwood was cast in ''[[Band Waggon (film)|Band Waggon]]'' (1939) and ''[[Come on George!]]'' (1940). It was her appearance in ''Band Waggon'' that led to comparisons being first made between her and [[Betty Grable]].<ref name=ind/> Star [[Arthur Askey]] was reportedly friendly on the set of ''Band Waggon'', but Kirkwood and [[George Formby]] reportedly loathed each other from the beginning, and working on ''Come on George!'' was a much more difficult experience.<ref name="Telobit">{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1573895/Pat-Kirkwood.html|title=Pat Kirkwood|work=The Telegraph|date=29 December 2007|access-date=13 May 2021}}</ref> She continued to perform throughout the rest of the war in West End pantomimes and shows. She played in ''[[Lady Behave (musical)|Lady Behave]]'' (1941), ''[[Let's Face It!]]'' (1942), as Robin Goodfellow in ''Goody Two Shoes'' ([[London Coliseum|Coliseum Theatre]], [[London]], 1944), as the Princess in ''Aladdin'' ([[Theatre Royal, Nottingham|Theatre Royal]], [[Nottingham]]) and was featured on radio in ''A Date with Pat Kirkwood''.


==American venture and breakdown==
==American venture and breakdown==
Towards the end of the war in 1944, Kirkwood received competing 7-year contract offers from both [[Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer]] and [[20th Century Fox]], allegedly for [[pound sterling|£]]250,000.<ref name=george/> She accepted the MGM contract but had to wait till the war was over to travel to America to start work on a feature film.<ref name=george/> During this time she featured in another film ''[[Flight from Folly]]''.<ref name=BBCobit>{{cite news|title=Obituary: Pat Kirkwood|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7160161.stm|access-date=9 October 2016|publisher=BBC News|date=26 December 2007}}</ref> Three days after [[V-E Day]], Kirkwood went to the United States.<ref name=george/>
Towards the end of the war in 1944, Kirkwood received competing 7-year contract offers from both [[Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer]] and [[20th Century Fox]], allegedly for [[pound sterling|£]]250,000.<ref name=george/> She accepted the MGM contract but had to wait till the war was over to travel to America to start work on a feature film.<ref name=george/> During this time she featured in another film ''[[Flight from Folly]]'' (1945).<ref name=BBCobit>{{cite news|title=Obituary: Pat Kirkwood|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7160161.stm|access-date=9 October 2016|publisher=BBC News|date=26 December 2007}}</ref> Three days after [[V-E Day]], Kirkwood journeyed to the United States.<ref name=george/>


Once in the U.S., Kirkwood spent a number of months waiting for MGM to start production on a film. The film that she was to act in, ''[[No Leave, No Love]]'', co-starring [[Van Johnson]], required her to lose weight. The studio doctors reportedly had her on [[thyroid]] and [[pituitary]] capsules as well as a strict diet.<ref name=george/> The film was a disappointment and the production took a toll on the actress' health. She spent eight months in a New York [[sanatorium]] due to a nervous breakdown after the film's unsuccessful release.<ref name=ind/> The breakdown cost her the title role in a London stage production of the musical ''[[Annie Get Your Gun (musical)|Annie Get Your Gun]]''.<ref name=george/>
Once in the U.S., Kirkwood spent months waiting for MGM to start production on a film. The film that she was to act in, ''[[No Leave, No Love]]'' (1946), co-starring [[Van Johnson]], required her to lose weight. The studio doctors reportedly had her on [[thyroid]] and [[pituitary]] capsules as well as a strict diet.<ref name=george/> The film was a disappointment and the production took a toll on the actress' health. She spent eight months in a New York [[sanatorium]] due to a nervous breakdown after the film's unsuccessful release.<ref name=ind/> The breakdown cost her the title role in a London stage production of the musical ''[[Annie Get Your Gun (musical)|Annie Get Your Gun]]''.<ref name=BBCobit />

The stress also took its toll on her relationship as she separated from her first husband Jack Lister and returned to the UK.<ref name="prince">{{Cite web|last=Edge|first=Simon|date=27 December 2007|title=The prince and the showgirl|url=https://www.express.co.uk/expressyourself/29605/The-prince-and-the-showgirl|access-date=10 April 2021|website=Express.co.uk|language=en}}</ref>{{better source|date=May 2021}}


==Revival and television==
==Revival and television==
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During a performance at the [[Hippodrome, London]] in 1948, after her return to Britain, the [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh|Duke of Edinburgh]] was introduced to Kirkwood in her dressing room.<ref name=royal>[http://www.theroyalist.net/content/view/3162/2/1/1/ The Royalist - Prince's 'Showgirl' Pat Kirkwood Dies<!-- Bot generated title -->] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080102123826/http://www.theroyalist.net/content/view/3162/2/1/1/ |date=2 January 2008 }}.</ref> Later that evening, they went to dinner at [[Les Ambassadeurs Club|Les Ambassadeurs]] restaurant in [[Mayfair]].<ref name=royal/> Kirkwood reported afterwards: "He was so full of life and energy. I suspect he felt trapped and rarely got a chance to be himself. I think I got off on the right foot because I made him laugh".<ref name=Timesobit/> It was reported the pair danced and had breakfast together the next day.<ref name=bbc />
During a performance at the [[Hippodrome, London]] in 1948, after her return to Britain, the [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh|Duke of Edinburgh]] was introduced to Kirkwood in her dressing room.<ref name=royal>[http://www.theroyalist.net/content/view/3162/2/1/1/ The Royalist - Prince's 'Showgirl' Pat Kirkwood Dies<!-- Bot generated title -->] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080102123826/http://www.theroyalist.net/content/view/3162/2/1/1/ |date=2 January 2008 }}.</ref> Later that evening, they went to dinner at [[Les Ambassadeurs Club|Les Ambassadeurs]] restaurant in [[Mayfair]].<ref name=royal/> Kirkwood reported afterwards: "He was so full of life and energy. I suspect he felt trapped and rarely got a chance to be himself. I think I got off on the right foot because I made him laugh".<ref name=Timesobit/> It was reported the pair danced and had breakfast together the next day.<ref name=bbc />


Peter Knight, later married to Kirkwood, recalled in a private memoir: "At the amazing spectacle of the royal consort escorting the leading musical star of the epoch, and in the palpable hush that had descended upon the restaurant, the rumour mills began to grind".<ref name=prince/>{{better source|date=May 2021}} Rumours of an affair between Prince Philip and Kirkwood were printed in the daily newspapers. [[George VI of the United Kingdom|King George VI]] was said by courtiers to be furious when he was told about the circulating gossip.<ref name=royal/>
Peter Knight, later married to Kirkwood, recalled in a private memoir: "At the amazing spectacle of the royal consort escorting the leading musical star of the epoch, and in the palpable hush that had descended upon the restaurant, the rumour mills began to grind".<ref>{{Cite web|last=Edge|first=Simon|date=27 December 2007|title=The prince and the showgirl|url=https://www.express.co.uk/expressyourself/29605/The-prince-and-the-showgirl|access-date=10 April 2021|work=Daily Express}}</ref>{{better source needed|date=May 2021}}Rumours of an affair between Prince Philip and Kirkwood were printed in the daily newspapers. [[George VI of the United Kingdom|King George VI]] was said by courtiers to be furious when he was told about the circulating gossip.<ref name=royal/>


Rumour had it that there was an invitation to go to the 'Sweethearts' and Wives' Ball' with the Prince at the [[Royal Naval College, Greenwich]], as well as talk of her receiving a Rolls Royce.<ref name=royal/> Such rumours of an affair with the Prince continued for many years.
Rumour had it that there was an invitation to go to the 'Sweethearts' and Wives' Ball' with the Prince at the [[Royal Naval College, Greenwich]], as well as talk of her receiving a [[Rolls-Royce Limited|Rolls-Royce]].<ref name=royal/> Such rumours of an affair with the Prince continued for many years.


Kirkwood always denied that there was any affair. In 1994, she and Knight met Prince Philip's aide, Brian McGrath, and asked to send a message to the Queen that she was upset about the continuing rumours, and stating that they were untrue. Philip later stated in a personal letter that the allegations were the "mythology of the press".<ref name=royal/> Kirkwood told one reporter: "A lady is not normally expected to defend her honour. It is the gentleman who should do that. I would have had a happier and easier life if Prince Philip, instead of coming uninvited to my dressing room, had gone home to his pregnant wife on the night in question."<ref>{{cite news|last=Thornton|first=Michael|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/theroyalfamily/9562833/Prince-Philip-and-the-angry-showgirl.html|title=Prince Philip and the angry 'showgirl'|work=The Telegraph|date=24 September 2012|access-date=13 May 2021}}</ref>
Kirkwood always denied that there was any affair. In 1994, she and Knight met Prince Philip's aide, Brian McGrath, and asked to send a message to the Queen that she was upset about the continuing rumours, and stating that they were untrue. Philip later stated in a personal letter that the allegations were the "mythology of the press".<ref name=royal/> Kirkwood told one reporter: "A lady is not normally expected to defend her honour. It is the gentleman who should do that. I would have had a happier and easier life if Prince Philip, instead of coming uninvited to my dressing room, had gone home to his pregnant wife on the night in question."<ref>{{cite news|last=Thornton|first=Michael|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/theroyalfamily/9562833/Prince-Philip-and-the-angry-showgirl.html|title=Prince Philip and the angry 'showgirl'|work=The Telegraph|date=24 September 2012|access-date=13 May 2021}}</ref>


==Retirement==
==Retirement==
From 1970 to 1973, Kirkwood came out of her declared retirement to Portugal to perform again in a number of venues and tours including taking the part of Judith Bliss in [[Noël Coward]]'s ''[[Hay Fever (play)|Hay Fever]]'' (1970), ''[[Lady Frederick]]'' (1971), ''Babes in the Woods'' (1971 - pantomime), ''A Chorus Murder'' (1972), ''Move Over Mrs. Markham'' (in the title role, 1973). Her last pantomime performance was in ''Aladdin'' in [[Newcastle upon Tyne|Newcastle]] (pantomime).<ref name=Timesobit/><ref name=george/> In 1976 she played Mrs. Gay Lustre in Pinero’s ''[[The Cabinet Minister]]''.
From 1970 to 1973, Kirkwood came out of her declared retirement to Portugal to perform again in a number of venues and tours including taking the part of Judith Bliss in [[Noël Coward]]'s ''[[Hay Fever (play)|Hay Fever]]'' (1970), ''[[Lady Frederick]]'' (1971), ''Babes in the Woods'' (1971 - pantomime), ''A Chorus Murder'' (1972), ''Move Over Mrs. Markham'' (in the title role, 1973). Her last pantomime performance was in ''Aladdin'' in [[Newcastle upon Tyne|Newcastle]] (pantomime).<ref name=Timesobit/><ref name=george/> In 1976 she played Mrs. Gay Lustre in Pinero's ''[[The Cabinet Minister]]''.


During this time she separated from Gregg in 1979 and remarried in 1981 to retired lawyer Peter Knight, her last husband, who was president of the [[Bradford & Bingley]] building society.<ref name="Telobit" /> She would appeared sporadically in the 1980s. In the early 1990s, Kirkwood decided to perform once again. In 1992, she sang "[[There's No Business Like Show Business]]" at the [[London Palladium]] in ''A Glamorous Night with [[Evelyn Laye]] and Friends''. In 1993, she performed to sold-out crowds at [[New Wimbledon Theatre|Wimbledon Theatre]] in ''Glamorous Nights of Music''.
During this time she separated from Gregg in 1979 and remarried in 1981 to retired lawyer Peter Knight, her last husband, who was president of the [[Bradford & Bingley]] building society.<ref name="Telobit" /> She would appear sporadically in the 1980s. In the early 1990s, Kirkwood decided to perform once again. In 1992, she sang "[[There's No Business Like Show Business]]" at the [[London Palladium]] in ''A Glamorous Night with [[Evelyn Laye]] and Friends''. In 1993, she performed to sold-out crowds at [[New Wimbledon Theatre|Wimbledon Theatre]] in ''Glamorous Nights of Music''.


Her last public appearance was in ''Noel/Cole: Let's Do It'' at the [[Chichester Festival Theatre]] in 1994. Earlier that year she had been a subject of ''[[This Is Your Life (UK TV series)|This Is Your Life]]'', when she was surprised by [[Michael Aspel]] at London's [[Prince of Wales Theatre]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bigredbook.info/pat_kirkwood.html |title=Pat Kirkwood |publisher=Bigredbook.info |access-date=6 December 2020}}</ref>
Her last public appearance was in ''Noel/Cole: Let's Do It'' at the [[Chichester Festival Theatre]] in 1994. Earlier that year she had been a subject of ''[[This Is Your Life (UK TV series)|This Is Your Life]]'', when she was surprised by [[Michael Aspel]] at London's [[Prince of Wales Theatre]].{{Citation needed|date=September 2021}}


Kirkwood's autobiography, ''The Time of My Life'', was published in 1999.<ref name=BBCobit/>
Kirkwood's autobiography, ''The Time of My Life'', was published in 1999.<ref name=BBCobit/>


==Death==
==Death==
Kirkwood was diagnosed with [[Alzheimer's disease]]. There was a family history of the disease as her mother Norah had suffered from the same illness.<ref name=royal/> She died at Kitwood House nursing home in [[Ilkley]], [[West Yorkshire]]<ref name=royal/> on Christmas Day 2007, aged 86.<ref name=Timesobit/><ref name=royal/> She and her husband Peter Knight had no children.<ref name=BBCobit/>
Kirkwood was diagnosed with [[Alzheimer's disease]]. There was a family history of the disease, with her mother Norah having suffered from the same illness.<ref name=royal/> Pat Kirkwood died in [[Ilkley]], [[West Yorkshire]]<ref name="ODNB">{{Cite ODNB|id=99293|title=Kirkwood, Patricia [Pat] (1921–2007)}}</ref> on Christmas Day 2007, aged 86.<ref name=Timesobit/><ref name=royal/> She and her husband Peter Knight had no children.<ref name=BBCobit/>


==Filmography==
==Filmography==
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| 1946 || ''[[No Leave, No Love]]'' || Susan Malby Duncan || || <ref name=ind/>
| 1946 || ''[[No Leave, No Love]]'' || Susan Malby Duncan || || <ref name=ind/>
|-
|-
| 1950 || ''[[Once a Sinner]]'' || Irene James || ||
| 1950 || ''[[Once a Sinner (1950 film)|Once a Sinner]]'' || Irene James || ||
|-
|-
| 1956 || ''[[Stars in Your Eyes]]'' || Sally Bishop || ||
| 1956 || ''[[Stars in Your Eyes]]'' || Sally Bishop || ||
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==External links==
==External links==
*{{IMDb name|0456815}}
*{{IMDb name|0456815}}
* [http://www.bigredbook.info/pat_kirkwood.html Pat Kirkwood's appearance on This Is Your Life]


{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}
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[[Category:1921 births]]
[[Category:1921 births]]
[[Category:2007 deaths]]
[[Category:2007 deaths]]
[[Category:English female singers]]
[[Category:English film actresses]]
[[Category:English film actresses]]
[[Category:English musical theatre actresses]]
[[Category:English musical theatre actresses]]
[[Category:English stage actresses]]
[[Category:English stage actresses]]
[[Category:English television actresses]]
[[Category:English television actresses]]
[[Category:Deaths from Alzheimer's disease]]
[[Category:Deaths from dementia in England]]
[[Category:Deaths from Alzheimer's disease in England]]
[[Category:People from Pendleton, Greater Manchester]]
[[Category:People from Pendleton, Greater Manchester]]
[[Category:Actresses from Salford]]
[[Category:Actresses from Salford]]
[[Category:20th-century English singers]]
[[Category:20th-century English women singers]]
[[Category:20th-century English women singers]]
[[Category:20th-century English singers]]
[[Category:20th-century English actresses]]
[[Category:20th-century English actresses]]

Latest revision as of 14:09, 5 July 2024

Pat Kirkwood
photo by J C A Redhead, during the Second World War
Born(1921-02-24)24 February 1921
Died25 December 2007(2007-12-25) (aged 86)
Occupation(s)Actress, singer, dancer, pantomimist
Spouses
  • Jack Lister
    (m. 1940; div. 1950)
  • Spiro de Spero Gabriele
    (m. 1952; died 1954)
  • (m. 1956; div. 1979)
  • Peter Knight
    (m. 1981)

Patricia Kirkwood (24 February 1921 – 25 December 2007) was a British stage actress, singer and dancer who appeared in numerous performances of dramas, cabaret, revues, music hall, variety and pantomimes. She also performed on radio, television and films. In 1954, BBC Television broadcast The Pat Kirkwood Show; she was the first woman appearing on British television to have her own series.[1]

Early life

[edit]

Kirkwood was born in Pendleton, Salford, Lancashire[a] to William and Norah Carr Kirkwood.[2] Her father was a Scottish shipping clerk.[3] She was educated at Levenshulme High School in Manchester.[4] At the age of 14, she entered a talent contest at Ramsey, Isle of Man and was asked to sing on the BBC's Children's Hour.[3] A few months later, in April 1936, she took part in a sketch, The Schoolgirl Songstress at the Hippodrome in Salford.[4] Throughout 1936, Kirkwood appeared in local variety shows including the pantomime, Jack and the Beanstalk, in which she played Princess Dorothy.[4] During Christmas 1937, she took the role of Dandini at Shaftesbury Theatre, in the pantomime "Cinderella", along with Stanley Lupino.[4][2] Over the next two years, she worked in cabaret, variety shows, and pantomimes.

Stardom and the war years

[edit]

During 1938–39, Kirkwood appeared in two films, Save a Little Sunshine and Me and My Pal along with the Scottish comedian Dave Willis where she sang 2 musical numbers.[2] This led to her first recording success, "Hurry Home".[2][3] However, it was at the start of the Second World War when her career started to take off. Just as the war started, Kirkwood, aged 18, played in Black Velvet at the London Hippodrome where she became famous for her rendition of Cole Porter's song "My Heart Belongs to Daddy".[4] This led to her being dubbed 'Britain's first wartime star'.[1]

In 1940, Kirkwood performed in Top of the World at the London Palladium while German bombs rained down on London.[3] "[T]he sky was bright with searchlights", she later recalled in a 1945 Boston Globe interview. "[W]hen bombs fell near the theatre, the show went on. No one left, all stayed in their seats because the theatre was safer than the streets. The cast would make bets on who would be onstage when the bombs began to fall."[2] Sometime during the show's run she went up to the roof of the London Palladium and watched the city burning. She later recalled: "My weirdest [war] experience was standing on my roof one night with my mother. On all sides of us, buildings were burning. We looked around--a sea of fire. Oddly, our building didn't burn, but we were marooned. No way out."[2]

Kirkwood was cast in Band Waggon (1939) and Come on George! (1940). It was her appearance in Band Waggon that led to comparisons being first made between her and Betty Grable.[3] Star Arthur Askey was reportedly friendly on the set of Band Waggon, but Kirkwood and George Formby reportedly loathed each other from the beginning, and working on Come on George! was a much more difficult experience.[5] She continued to perform throughout the rest of the war in West End pantomimes and shows. She played in Lady Behave (1941), Let's Face It! (1942), as Robin Goodfellow in Goody Two Shoes (Coliseum Theatre, London, 1944), as the Princess in Aladdin (Theatre Royal, Nottingham) and was featured on radio in A Date with Pat Kirkwood.

American venture and breakdown

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Towards the end of the war in 1944, Kirkwood received competing 7-year contract offers from both Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and 20th Century Fox, allegedly for £250,000.[2] She accepted the MGM contract but had to wait till the war was over to travel to America to start work on a feature film.[2] During this time she featured in another film Flight from Folly (1945).[6] Three days after V-E Day, Kirkwood journeyed to the United States.[2]

Once in the U.S., Kirkwood spent months waiting for MGM to start production on a film. The film that she was to act in, No Leave, No Love (1946), co-starring Van Johnson, required her to lose weight. The studio doctors reportedly had her on thyroid and pituitary capsules as well as a strict diet.[2] The film was a disappointment and the production took a toll on the actress' health. She spent eight months in a New York sanatorium due to a nervous breakdown after the film's unsuccessful release.[3] The breakdown cost her the title role in a London stage production of the musical Annie Get Your Gun.[6]

Revival and television

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After returning to Britain, Kirkwood picked up where she left off with the revue Starlight Roof at the Hippodrome, London (1947).[4] She had some recording success with "Make Mine Allegro"[3] during this period and continued to act in West End theatres in pantomimes and venues such as Little Miss Muffet (1949)[2] and Austin Melford's Roundabout (1949). It was Noël Coward's casting of her as Pinkie Leroy in Ace of Clubs (Cambridge Theatre, 1950), written specifically for her, that put her back in the spotlight.

It was around this time that Kirkwood married for a second time to Greek shipowner, Spiro "Sparky" de Spero Gabriele, in 1952. However, he died two years later.[7]

Starting in 1953, Kirkwood began her work on television, appearing in Our Marie (as music hall star Marie Lloyd - 1953) and as a panelist on What's My Line? (1953). In 1954, The Pat Kirkwood Show began on BBC Television; the first female star to be so honoured on British television.[1] She would start to take greater roles in television from this time, taking part in My Patricia (1956), Pygmalion (1956) and From Me to You (1957). Many of these roles included her new husband actor, playwright and composer Hubert Gregg.[7] In 1954, Kirkwood travelled back to the US for a three-month tour in Las Vegas performing cabaret at the Desert Inn.[4][1]

By the late 1950s, Kirkwood had returned to the stage, performing in Chrysanthemum (Prince of Wales and Apollo), Jack and the Beanstalk (a pantomime), Philip King's Pools Paradise (1961), Villa Sleep Four (1961) and Robin Hood (Aberdeen, a pantomime).[4][2]

After Robin Hood, Pat Kirkwood retired temporarily with her third husband, Hubert Gregg, and moved to Portugal.[4]

Association with Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh

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During a performance at the Hippodrome, London in 1948, after her return to Britain, the Duke of Edinburgh was introduced to Kirkwood in her dressing room.[8] Later that evening, they went to dinner at Les Ambassadeurs restaurant in Mayfair.[8] Kirkwood reported afterwards: "He was so full of life and energy. I suspect he felt trapped and rarely got a chance to be himself. I think I got off on the right foot because I made him laugh".[4] It was reported the pair danced and had breakfast together the next day.[1]

Peter Knight, later married to Kirkwood, recalled in a private memoir: "At the amazing spectacle of the royal consort escorting the leading musical star of the epoch, and in the palpable hush that had descended upon the restaurant, the rumour mills began to grind".[9][better source needed]Rumours of an affair between Prince Philip and Kirkwood were printed in the daily newspapers. King George VI was said by courtiers to be furious when he was told about the circulating gossip.[8]

Rumour had it that there was an invitation to go to the 'Sweethearts' and Wives' Ball' with the Prince at the Royal Naval College, Greenwich, as well as talk of her receiving a Rolls-Royce.[8] Such rumours of an affair with the Prince continued for many years.

Kirkwood always denied that there was any affair. In 1994, she and Knight met Prince Philip's aide, Brian McGrath, and asked to send a message to the Queen that she was upset about the continuing rumours, and stating that they were untrue. Philip later stated in a personal letter that the allegations were the "mythology of the press".[8] Kirkwood told one reporter: "A lady is not normally expected to defend her honour. It is the gentleman who should do that. I would have had a happier and easier life if Prince Philip, instead of coming uninvited to my dressing room, had gone home to his pregnant wife on the night in question."[10]

Retirement

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From 1970 to 1973, Kirkwood came out of her declared retirement to Portugal to perform again in a number of venues and tours including taking the part of Judith Bliss in Noël Coward's Hay Fever (1970), Lady Frederick (1971), Babes in the Woods (1971 - pantomime), A Chorus Murder (1972), Move Over Mrs. Markham (in the title role, 1973). Her last pantomime performance was in Aladdin in Newcastle (pantomime).[4][2] In 1976 she played Mrs. Gay Lustre in Pinero's The Cabinet Minister.

During this time she separated from Gregg in 1979 and remarried in 1981 to retired lawyer Peter Knight, her last husband, who was president of the Bradford & Bingley building society.[5] She would appear sporadically in the 1980s. In the early 1990s, Kirkwood decided to perform once again. In 1992, she sang "There's No Business Like Show Business" at the London Palladium in A Glamorous Night with Evelyn Laye and Friends. In 1993, she performed to sold-out crowds at Wimbledon Theatre in Glamorous Nights of Music.

Her last public appearance was in Noel/Cole: Let's Do It at the Chichester Festival Theatre in 1994. Earlier that year she had been a subject of This Is Your Life, when she was surprised by Michael Aspel at London's Prince of Wales Theatre.[citation needed]

Kirkwood's autobiography, The Time of My Life, was published in 1999.[6]

Death

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Kirkwood was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. There was a family history of the disease, with her mother Norah having suffered from the same illness.[8] Pat Kirkwood died in Ilkley, West Yorkshire[11] on Christmas Day 2007, aged 86.[4][8] She and her husband Peter Knight had no children.[6]

Filmography

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Film

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Year Title Role Notes Ref.
1938 Save a Little Sunshine Pat [3]
1939 Come On George! Ann Johnson [3]
1940 Band Waggon Pat [3]
1945 Flight from Folly Sue Brown [6]
1946 No Leave, No Love Susan Malby Duncan [3]
1950 Once a Sinner Irene James
1956 Stars in Your Eyes Sally Bishop
1957 After the Ball Vesta Tilley [3]

Notes

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  1. ^ a b 'Greater Manchester' did not exist before 1 April 1974. Therefore, 'Salford, Lancashire' is correct.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "Actress Pat Kirkwood dies at 86". BBC News. 26 December 2007. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Dugan, Eleanor. "George's Leading Ladies:Pat Kirkwood". George Formby Society. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Leigh, Spencer (27 December 2007). "Pat Kirkwood: 'Britain's Betty Grable'". The Independent. Archived from the original on 25 May 2022. Retrieved 1 January 2008.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Patricia Kirkwood". The Times. 27 December 2007. Retrieved 13 May 2021. (subscription required)
  5. ^ a b "Pat Kirkwood". The Telegraph. 29 December 2007. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d e "Obituary: Pat Kirkwood". BBC News. 26 December 2007. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  7. ^ a b Shorter, Eric (29 December 2007). "Pat Kirkwood". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g The Royalist - Prince's 'Showgirl' Pat Kirkwood Dies Archived 2 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
  9. ^ Edge, Simon (27 December 2007). "The prince and the showgirl". Daily Express. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  10. ^ Thornton, Michael (24 September 2012). "Prince Philip and the angry 'showgirl'". The Telegraph. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  11. ^ "Kirkwood, Patricia [Pat] (1921–2007)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/99293. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
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