Maggie d'Abo

Maggie d'Abo (born Margaret Evelyn Lyndon, 1937) is an English model and actress, primarily active in the 1960s.

Maggie d'Abo
Born
Margaret Evelyn Lyndon

1937 (age 8283)
England
OccupationModel and actress
Years active1962–1970
Spouse(s)Mike d'Abo (divorced)
ChildrenOlivia d'Abo
Benjamin Byron (Ben) d'Abo
RelativesMaryam d'Abo (niece)

Biography

Born Margaret Evelyn Lyndon in England in 1937, d'Abo took the professional pseudonym "Maggie London". She later changed her name to "Maggie d'Abo" after marriage with musician Mike d'Abo, a member of the rock band Manfred Mann. She worked mainly as a model but in the course of her career, which took place mainly during the 1960s, acted in some television series and a few films. During her marriage, which ended in divorce, she had two children, Olivia d'Abo and Benjamin Byron (Ben) d'Abo, both of whom went on to become actors. Actress Maryam d'Abo is her niece.

Career as a model

In the mid-1960s, d'Abo appeared in the catalog for fashion agency Jane Bell. Her entry indicated that she was 5 feet 6 inches (1.68 m) tall, with blue eyes and red hair. Her measurements were 34-23-36 (inches), or 86-58-91 (cm.). She specialized in hair and leg modeling.

Filmography

Television

Date Title Episode Character
20 October 1968 The Saint The Desperate Diplomat Julie
12 July 1969 Paul Temple There must be a Mr X Sandra Leighton
3 June 1970 Randall and Hopkirk You can Always Find a Fall Guy Nurse

Films

Year Title Director Character
1964 A Hard Day's Night Richard Lester Disco Girl
1964 Hide and Seek Cy Endfield Party Girl
1967 Maroc 7 Gerry O'Hara Suzie
1968 2001: A Space Odyssey Stanley Kubrick Hostess in the space station elevator (uncredited)

Career as an actress

d'Abo's film career consisted primarily of small supporting roles. In the Beatles movie A Hard Day's Night, for example, she played a blonde girl dancing with George Harrison and with Ringo Starr at a nightclub.

In 2001: A Space Odyssey by Stanley Kubrick, she played a hostess in the space station. Her appearance was uncredited and limited to a few moments and a couple of lines.[1] It was, however, the first spoken lines of the film, the first act, The Dawn of Man, having had no dialogue.

Bibliography

In 2011, d'Abo had plans to publish an autobiography by the title A Girl in the Right Place at the Right Time. To date, however, the book is still unpublished. However, her participation in "2001: A Space Odyssey" is quoted in an essay by F. Ordway, technical consultant for the film.[2]

gollark: That'd be a problem for lots of stuff, actually.
gollark: ```edited so that every hyperlink forwards to a relay link```
gollark: No, they forward at a lower level.
gollark: Sooooo basically a proxy.
gollark: ```Trying 2a00:23c5:2d01:4a00:a2b3:ccff:feea:e38b...Connected to osmarks.tk.Escape character is '^]'.GET / HTTP/1.0HTTP/1.1 404 Not FoundServer: nginxDate: Wed, 24 Oct 2018 19:52:39 GMTContent-Type: text/htmlContent-Length: 162Connection: close<html><head><title>404 Not Found</title></head><body bgcolor="white"><center><h1>404 Not Found</h1></center><hr><center>nginx</center></body></html>Connection closed by foreign host.```

References

  1. Dialogue occurred in the DVD version of the film.
  2. Eugene M. Emme, (eds.) Science fiction and space futures – past and present. AAS History Series, Volume 5; Univelt, San Diego, 1982 p. 64
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.