Sarah Miles (born 31 December 1941) is a retired English actress. She is known for her roles in films The Servant (1963), Blowup (1966), Ryan's Daughter (1970), The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing (1973), White Mischief (1987), and Hope and Glory (1987). For her performance in Ryan's Daughter, Miles received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress.
Early life
Sarah Miles was born in Ingatestone, Essex, in South East England; her brother was film director, producer, and screenwriter Christopher Miles. Miles's parents were Clarice Vera Remnant and John Miles, of a family of engineers; her father's inability to secure a divorce from his first wife meant Miles and her siblings were illegitimate. Per Miles's own account, her maternal grandfather, Frank Remnant, was the illegitimate son of Prince Francis of Teck (1870–1910), which would make Miles a second cousin, once removed, of Queen Elizabeth II. Unable to speak until the age of nine because of a stammer and dyslexia, she attended Roedean and three other schools, but was expelled from all of them.
Career
Early career
Shortly after finishing at RADA, Miles performed in an episode of the TV series Deadline Midnight titled "Manhunt". Her film debut was as Shirley Taylor, a "husky, wide-eyed nymphet" in Term of Trial (1962), which featured Laurence Olivier; she was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Newcomer.
Miles appeared in The Rehearsal (1963) for TV and then played Vera from Manchester in Joseph Losey's The Servant (1963), and in so doing she "thrust sexual appetite into British films" according to David Thomson.
She was in Time Lost and Time Remembered (1966), directed by Desmond Davis.
In 1966, Miles gained another BAFTA nomination, this time as Best Actress. She had a "peripheral" part in Michelangelo Antonioni's Blowup.
Robert Bolt
After acting in several plays from 1966 to 1969, Miles was cast as Rosy in the leading title role of David Lean's Ryan's Daughter (1970). It was critically savaged, which discouraged Lean from making a film for some years, despite Miles's performance gaining her an Oscar nomination and an Oscar win for John Mills, and the film making a substantial profit. In Terence Pettigrew's biography of Trevor Howard, Miles describes the filming of Ryan's Daughter in Ireland in 1969. She recalls, "My main memory is of sitting on a hilltop in a caravan at six in the morning in the rain. There was no other actor or member of the crew around me. I would sit there getting mad, waiting for either the rain to stop or someone to arrive. Film-acting is so horrifically belittling."
Miles married the film's screenwriter, Robert Bolt. He wrote and directed Lady Caroline Lamb (1972) starring Miles in the title role. She then appeared in The Hireling (1973).
On 11 February 1973, while filming The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing, aspiring screenwriter David Whiting, who was briefly one of her lovers, was found dead in her motel room. She was acquitted of culpability in his death. Miles later commented: "It went on for six months. Murder? Suicide? Murder! Suicide! Murder! Suicide! And, gradually, the truth came out, which I'm not going to speak about, but it certainly wasn't me. I had actually saved the man from three suicide attempts, so why would I want to murder him? I really can't imagine." He wrote and directed the film Lady Caroline Lamb, in which Miles played the eponymous heroine, and also wrote Ryan's Daughter. After his stroke, the couple reunited and Miles cared for him. "I would be dead without her", Bolt said in 1987, "When she's away, my life takes a nosedive. When she returns, my life soars." The couple had a son. Miles stated, in 2007, that she had been drinking her own urine for 30 years for health reasons.
Filmography
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%"
|- style="text-align:center;"
! style="background:#B0C4DE;" | Year
! style="background:#B0C4DE;" | Film
! style="background:#B0C4DE;" | Role
! style="background:#B0C4DE;" | Notes
|-
|1962
|Term of Trial
|Shirley Taylor
|Nominated – BAFTA Award for Best Newcomer
|-
|rowspan=2|1963
|The Servant
|Vera
|Nominated – BAFTA Award for Best British Actress
|-
|The Ceremony
|Catherine
|
|-
|rowspan=2|1965
|Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines
|Patricia Rawnsley
|
|-
|I Was Happy Here
|Cass Langdon
|Also known as Time Lost and Time Remembered
|-
|1966
|Blowup
|Patricia
|
|-
|1970
|Ryan's Daughter
|Rosy Ryan
|Nominated – Academy Award for Best Actress<br>Nominated – BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role<br>Nominated – Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
|-
|1972
|Lady Caroline Lamb
|Lady Caroline Lamb
|
|-
|rowspan=2|1973
|The Hireling
|Lady Franklin
|
|-
|The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing
|Catherine Crocker
|
|-
|1974
|Great Expectations
|Estella
|
|-
|1975
|Bride to Be
|Pepita Jiménez
|
|-
|1976
|The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea
|Anne Osborne
|Nominated – Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
|-
|1978
|The Big Sleep
|Charlotte Sternwood
|
|-
|rowspan=2|1981
|Priest of Love
|Film Star
|
|-
|Venom
|Dr. Marion Stowe
|
|-
|1984
|Ordeal by Innocence
|Mary Durant
|
|-
|1985
|Steaming
|Sarah
|
|-
|1986
|Harem (mini series)
|Lady Ashley
|
|-
|rowspan=2|1987
|Hope and Glory
|Grace Rowan
|Nominated – BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
|-
|White Mischief
|Alice de Janzé
|
|-
|1992
|'
|Helena
|
|-
|rowspan=2|2001
|Days of Grace
|Sissi, La Madre
|
|-
|Jurij
|Martina, directrice clinica
|
|-
|2003
|The Accidental Detective
|Smeralda Mazzi Tinghi
|
|}
Television
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%"
|- style="text-align:center;"
! style="background:#B0C4DE;" | Year
! style="background:#B0C4DE;" | Title
! style="background:#B0C4DE;" | Role
! style="background:#B0C4DE;" | Notes
|-
|1961
| Deadline Midnight
| Vi Vernon
|
|-
|1965
|Sunday Night At The London Palladium
|Herself
|
|-
|1974
|Great Expectations
|Estella
|
|-
| 1976
|Dynasty
|Jennifer Blackwood
|
|-
|1983
|Walter and June
|June
|
|-
|1987
|Queenie
|Lady Sybil
|
|-
|1990
|A Ghost in Monte Carlo
|Emilie/Mme. Bluet
|
|-
|1994
|Dandelion Dead
|Catherine Armstrong
|TV mini-series
|-
|2004
|Poirot: The Hollow
|Lady Angkatell
|
|}
Books
Sarah Miles has written the following books:
Other work
In 1995, Miles was one of the readers of Edward Lear poems on a specially made spoken word audio CD bringing together a collection of Lear's nonsense songs.
See also
- List of Academy Award winners and nominees from Great Britain
- List of actors with Academy Award nominations
- List of actors who have appeared in multiple Palme d'Or winners
References
External links
- Interview with Sarah Miles
