Diana rigg is gone forever at the age of 82


 Diana Rigg, Game of Thrones actor died today the 10/09/2020 

The actor of the game of thrones has died today in London, the star was diagnosed with cancer this year.

the statement of death was published by her daughter STARLING.

Diana was a sun shining actor in the past century  1960 in British TV, GAME OF THRONES WAS one of the best shows ever in her life.

ON TWITTER: the official page of GOT tweet: BE A DRAGON YOU WILL BE ALWAYS REMEMBERED.


she was also in avengers and a lot of other TV SHOWS 

the lady of the year in 1960 s the most attractive actor in the UK 

Diana played a lot of roles in her career we can talk about some of them :

* DIANA

*DETECTORISTS

*REBECCA

*MYSTERY

*VICTORIA

A STAR IS GONE TODAY FOREVER 

Rigg was originally a stage actor who worked with the Royal Shakespeare Company. She told NPR in a 1991 interview that she loved seeing the faces of the audience when acting.

"They're my inspiration. I absolutely adore it," she said. "Obviously, sometimes they aren't when they're scratching themselves or falling asleep, but largely, I think you can't beat a live audience."

Her on-screen credits were many and varied. She played the only woman to get James Bond to the altar in 1969's On Her Majesty's Secret Service. She took on the role of Lady Holiday in The Great Muppet Caper specifically for her daughter Rachael. ("If you're an artist, you draw pictures for your children. If you're a writer, you write the odd little story for them. If you're an actress, you can read bedtime stories brilliantly. As far as she was concerned, it was the best thing that ever happened, to see her mother ... with Miss Piggy," she said in the NPR interview.) And she won an Emmy for her role as Mrs. Danvers on the PBS Masterpiece miniseries Rebecca.

But as her film and television roles grew, she always returned to the theater.

"Diana Rigg's combination of force of personality, beauty, courage and sheer emotional power, made her a great classical actress," theater director Jonathan Kent said. "Her dazzling wit and that inimitable voice made her an unforgettable leading figure in British theater."

And in a statement Rigg's agent provided to NPR, playwright David Hare wrote this:

"Diana Rigg had a dazzling change of direction in middle age as a great classical actor. When Emma Peel played Euripides' Medea, Albee's Martha, and Brecht's Mother Courage she swept all before her."

Diana Rigg, the Tony and Emmy winner who splashed into the world of television with her commanding turn as intelligence agent Emma Peel on “The Avengers” in the 1960s and played Lady Olenna Tyrell on “Game of Thrones” decades later, died Thursday at her home in England. She was 82.

Rigg was a venerable figure in Britain’s entertainment industry who worked incessantly on stage, TV and film. She famously thumbed her nose at convention in her private life and in later years seemed to enjoy her status as a grande dame.

“She was a beautiful kind and generous human being that enhanced the lives of all that knew her as well as a great actress. She leaves a great void in my heart,” said Lionel Larner, Rigg’s longtime friend and talent agent.

Having a key role in the biggest TV series of the past decade was a fitting career capper for Rigg. On HBO’s “Game of Thrones,” Rigg recurred as Olenna Tyrell, also known as the Queen of Thorns, beginning with the third season in 2013. She was Emmy nominated for guest actress in a drama for her work on the show in 2013, 2014 and 2015.

Rigg also made a number of notable appearances on the big screen. She played a significant role in the history of the James Bond film franchise by portraying, with great élan, Tracy Di Vicenzo, the woman whom Bond, played by George Lazenby, marries with great joy in 1969’s “On Her Majesty’s Secret Service,” only to see her murdered by the minions of arch villain Ernst Stavro Blofeld.

On ITV’s “The Avengers,” the British espionage series that blended sci-fi, fantasy and surreal elements with caper stories and offbeat humor, Rigg’s intelligent, witty and catsuit-wearing Mrs. Peel was by far the most memorable. In the TV show — which starred Patrick Macnee from 1961-1969 as bowler hat-bedecked John Steed — the actress appeared in 51 episodes of the series from 1965-68, and was twice Emmy nominated for her work, in 1967 and 1968. In 2000, she shared a special BAFTA Award with Honor Blackman, Joanna Lumley and Linda Thorson, who had all appeared opposite Macnee’s Steed in “The Avengers.” A feature adaptation of the series, starring Ralph Fiennes as Steed and Uma Thurman as Mrs. Peel, was released in 1998. Macnee died in June 2015.

More recently Rigg also appeared in BSkyB and NBC’s “You, Me and the Apocalypse ” in 2016 and guested on the BBC/HBO’s “Extras” in 2006 and on “Dr. Who” in 2013. She played Mrs. Higgins in the 2018 Broadway production of “My Fair Lady.”

In between, she won an Emmy for playing Mrs. Danvers in a TV adaptation of “Rebecca” in 1997. She also received an Emmy nomination in 1975 for lead actress in a special program for “In This House of Brede,” in which she played a London businesswoman who opts to become a nun, and in 2002 for supporting actress in a miniseries or movie for “Victoria & Albert.”

Enid Diana Elizabeth Rigg was born in Doncaster, Yorkshire, England; she spent her early childhood in India. She did her training as an actress at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art from 1955-57, and made her professional stage debut in Brecht’s “The Caucasian Chalk Circle” in 1957.

Rigg was a member of the Royal Shakespeare Company from 1959-64, touring Europe and the U.S. as Cordelia in a RSC production of “King Lear” (she revisited the play in 1983, when she was Regan to Laurence Olivier’s Lear); she was also Viola in a 1966 RSC staging of “Twelfth Night.”

Rigg appeared on Broadway four times, starring in “Abelard and Heloise” in 1971 (her nude scene in the play and critic John Simon’s tart assessment of her body generated publicity); Moliere’s “The Misanthrope” in 1975; “Medea” in 1994; and playing  Mrs. Higgins in the production of “My Fair Lady.” She earned a Tony nomination each time, winning for “Medea.”

Reviewing “Medea,” the New York Times said, “Unlike Zoe Caldwell, who emphasized the sexuality of the character (and won a Tony Award in 1982 for her efforts), Ms. Rigg sees Medea as a woman of restless intellect. An orgiastic fervor informed Ms. Caldwell’s performance; she had a savage growl in her voice. A passionate sense of injustice propels Ms. Rigg, whose voice never entirely loses its intrinsic musicality.”

The actress also starred with George C. Scott in the Arthur Hiller-directed, Paddy Chayefsky-penned satire “The Hospital” (1971); the classic Vincent Price horror film “Theatre of Blood” (1973); the 1982 Agatha Christie adaptation “Evil Under the Sun,” in which she played the despised and thus dispatched Arlena Marshall; and most recently 2006’s “The Painted Veil,” in which she played the Mother Superior.

Other film credits include “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” (1968), “The Assassination Bureau” (1969), “Julius Caesar,” starring Charlton Heston (1970), “A Little Night Music,” with Elizabeth Taylor (1977), “The Great Muppet Caper” (1981), “Snow White,” as the Evil Queen (1987), Bruce Beresford’s “A Good Man in Africa,” starring Sean Connery (1994), “Parting Shots” (1998) and “Heidi.”

Rigg had her own sitcom vehicle, NBC’s “Diana,” in 1973-74 and later hosted PBS’ “Masterpiece Mystery” from 1989-2004.

She starred as Clytemnestra in a BBC miniseries adaptation of Aeschylus’s “Oresteia” in 1979, and she starred in an adaptation of “Hedda Gabler” for English television in 1981. The following year she starred in a Hallmark Hall of Fame remake of “Witness for the Prosecution,” in which she took the part played by Marlene Dietrich in the 1957 Billy Wilder film (others in the cast included Ralph Richardson and Deborah Kerr).

The actress starred with David MacCallum in the excellent 1989 BBC/PBS miniseries “Mother Love”; starred with Angela Lansbury in the 1992 CBS telepic “Mrs. ‘Arris Goes to Paris”; co-starred in the excellent “The Fortunes and Misfortunes of Moll Flanders,” starring Alex Kingston; and starred in the BBC/PBS series “The Mrs Bradley Mysteries”  in 1998.



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