Doreen Hawkins

Doreen Hawkins appearing as Doreen Lawrence and born Doreen Mary Beadle (13 July 1919 – 15 June 2013) was a British actor who volunteered to tour during the war to entertain the troops. She appeared in the film Hamlet in 1948 but gave up her career just after she married the film star Jack Hawkins.

Doreen Hawkins
Born
Doreen Mary Beadle

13 July 1919
Died15 June 2013
NationalityUK
Other namesDoreen Lawrence
Occupationactor
Spouse(s)Jack Hawkins
ChildrenCaroline, Andrew, and Nicholas Hawkins

Life

Hawkins was born in Southampton in 1919 and by the time she was four she had appeared on the stage. At the age of fifteen she was touring with an acting troupe where she was cast as the flirty teenager. She appeared under the name Doreen Lawrence. This was the start of her time in Repertory theatre where she would learn new parts and get regular work.[1] When she was eighteen she was engaged to fellow actor Peter Cushing, but she decided not to marry him. She said that she broke off the engagement because he would bring his parents on dates and he was too easily moved to tears.[2]

Acting in "rep" occupied her time until war broke out.[3] As war broke out she wanted to help and the best opportunity was to join the Entertainments National Service Association (ENSA). She appeared in show to entertain the troops in West Africa, South Africa and Egypt. She was then sent to Bombay in India in 1944.[4]

She belonged to an ENSA unit that was headed by Colonel Jack Hawkins.[2]

The war ended in 1945 and she married Jack Hawkins. He was a leading man who was frequent cast as an army or navy person. Doreen is said to have given up her acting career after she married and devoted her time to her family, but she did appear in the 1948 film Hamlet.[3]

Her husband died in 1973.[5] She wrote an autobiography titled Drury Lane to Dinapur[6] and died in 2013.[2]

Personal life

In 1947, she married Jack Hawkins who had a teenage daughter named Susan. Doreen was his second wife as he had married actress Jessica Tandy in 1932, and they divorced in 1940.[7] and they remained married until his death in 1973.[8][9] Together they had three children, Caroline (b. 1955),[10] Andrew, and Nicholas Hawkins.

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gollark: Enough minor conveniences stacked together gives a useful product. And you can fit smartphone SoCs into slightly bulky glasses - there are already AR devkits doing this. The main limitation is that the displays aren't very good and it is hard to fit sufficient batteries.
gollark: Also, you could sort of gain extra senses of some possible value by mapping things like LIDAR output (AR glasses will probably have something like that for object recognition) and the local wireless environment onto the display.
gollark: Oh, and there's the obvious probably-leading-to-terrible-consequences thing of being able to conveniently see the social media profiles of anyone you meet.
gollark: Some uses: if you are going shopping in a real-world shop you could get reviews displayed on the items you look at; it could be a more convenient interface for navigation apps; you could have an instructional video open while learning to do something (which is already doable on a phone, yes, but then you have to either hold or or stand it up somewhere, which is somewhat less convenient), and with some extra design work it could interactively highlight the things you're using; you could implement a real-world adblocker if there's some way to dim/opacify/draw attention away from certain bits of the display.

References

  1. "Doreen Hawkins | Dovecote Press". Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  2. "Doreen Hawkins". 28 June 2013. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  3. "Doreen Hawkins". www.bafta.org. 1 August 2013. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  4. "Doreen Hawkins". ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  5. "Search Results for jack hawkins". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  6. Hawkins, Doreen. "Drury Lane to Dimapur". Amazon.
  7. "Life After Jessie : For 52 years, Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy shared the love story of the century". Los Angeles Times. 18 June 1995. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  8. "BFI Screenonline: Hawkins, Jack (1910-1973) Biography". screenonline.org.uk.
  9. "Widow of Jack Hawkins dies aged 94". Telegraph.co.uk. 17 June 2013.
  10. De Young, Jim; Miller, John (2003). London Theatre Walks: Thirteen Dramatic Tours Through Four Centuries of History and Legend. ISBN 9781557835161.
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