Constance Shotter
Constance Ada Shotter (5 October 1911 - 1989) was a British actress who appeared in several films in the 1930s.
Shotter was born in London, the daughter of Frederick Ernest and Harriet Payne Shotter.[1] She was the sister of actress Winifred Shotter. By 1926 she was a chorus dancer, appearing in The Midnight Follies a Dinner, Dancing and Review by A. P. Herbert, choreographed by Penelope Spencer.[2] Like her sister she moved from the chorus line and appeared in a series of British films in the 1930s.[3]
Shotter married firstly Adney Gibbons, son of Sir Walter Gibbons, in 1928. She married secondly Sir Charles Stuart Taylor Member of Parliament for Eastbourne on 20 May 1936. They had three sons and a daughter.[1]
Selected filmography
- For the Love of Mike (1932)
- Meet My Sister (1933)
- To Brighton with Gladys (1933)
- Brides to Be (1934)
- Borrowed Clothes (1934)
- Royal Cavalcade (1935)
- Off the Dole (1935)
gollark: A useful skill people seem to lack is any ability whatsoever to solve basic problems with computers, but that's hard to teach.
gollark: You can argue about physics being useful and english literature not or whatever, but it's outweighted by how much anyone involved actually cares.
gollark: Generally, things the students in question actually want to learn, instead of whatever random junk they don't.
gollark: So... minarchism?
gollark: Yes, I feel like big organizations mostly end up wildly inefficiently managed and just make up for it with economies of scale.
References
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.