Yootha Joyce Needham (20 August 1927 – 24 August 1980), known as Yootha Joyce, was a British actress best known for playing Mildred Roper opposite Brian Murphy in the sitcom Man About the House (1973–1976) and its spin-off George and Mildred (1976–1979). She had a large number of film and television credits to her name, and also made many appearances on stage.
Early life
Yootha Joyce Needham was born in Wandsworth, London, the only child of musical parents Percival "Hurst" Needham, a singer, and Jessie Maud (née Revitt), a concert pianist. She was named "Yootha" after a New Zealand dancer in her father's touring company, a name she would later say she "loathed and detested". Joyce's biography states that her heavily pregnant mother went for a walk on Wandsworth Common during an interval of one of her husband's performances and began feeling contractions; searching for a house to call an ambulance, she came across a nursing home, where she gave birth.
Career
Early roles and repertory theatre
Following her departure from RADA, Joyce toured with ENSA from 1946 to 1948. She then toured the UK in many repertory theatre groups, including the Harry Kendall Players, the Reginald Salberg Players, the Jack Rose Players and the Harry Hanson Players, and received many positive reviews of her performances. Joyce and Edwards would later divorce in 1969. Joyce appeared in two episodes of the comedy series Steptoe and Son, as the girlfriend of Harold Steptoe. She also appeared in the Hammer Horror film Fanatic (1965) as a villain, and then had a role in the films Catch Us If You Can (1965) - a vehicle for the Dave Clark Five - and A Man for All Seasons (1966). Joyce then had a role as brassy housekeeper Mrs Quayle in Clayton's next film Our Mother's House (1967), a dark drama starring Dirk Bogarde. Joyce also took a leading role opposite Robert Shaw in the television film Luther. Joyce played villains in the television series The Saint and The Avengers, and then followed this with a role in the sitcom George and the Dragon opposite Sid James. Joyce had a role in the film Charlie Bubbles (1968).
Joyce's first main recurring role was that of Miss Argyll, the frustrated girlfriend of the star Milo O'Shea, in three series of Me Mammy (1968–1971); most of the episodes of that series are lost. She had a role in the short film Twenty-Nine (1969) and appeared in five episodes of Dixon of Dock Green. Joyce appeared in the horror films The Night Digger (1971), and Burke & Hare (1972). She followed this with a role in Jason King as a villainous nurse.
Joyce then had roles in the TV spin-off films Nearest and Dearest (1972), Never Mind the Quality Feel the Width (1973) and Steptoe and Son Ride Again (1973), and then played a hospital matron in the television film Frankenstein: The True Story (1973) alongside Jane Seymour and David McCallum. She also appeared as customer Mrs. Scully in the pilot episode of Open All Hours, and as militant clippie Jessie Crawford in an episode of On the Buses (both 1973). In 1973, Joyce also appeared in a series of advertisements for the Yorkshire Post with Tommy Godfrey.
Man About the House and George and Mildred
It was not until 1973 that Joyce acquired a starring role, when she was cast as man-hungry Mildred Roper, wife of sub-letting landlord George, in the sitcom Man About the House. This series, which starred Richard O'Sullivan, Paula Wilcox, Sally Thomsett and Brian Murphy as George Roper, ran until 1976, deriving its comic narrative from two young women and a young man sharing the flat above the Ropers.
In 1975, Joyce began a relationship with Terry Lee Dixon, the tour manager of the play Boeing-Boeing in which she starred, who was twenty years her junior. The relationship drew much media attention due to their age gap; they separated in 1978 after Dixon began an affair with a younger woman.
A feature film version of George and Mildred (1980) was her last work. Friends noticed that Joyce had become increasingly withdrawn, lower in mood and had become thin and frail, weighing just under seven stone. Amidst growing concern over her health, she was admitted to hospital in the summer of 1980 after collapsing at home. Joyce died in hospital of liver failure shortly after her 53rd birthday on 24 August 1980. Her co-star and good friend Brian Murphy was at her bedside. Joyce's funeral took place on 3 September 1980 at Golders Green Crematorium, where she was cremated. Her ashes were scattered on the crocus lawn in the grounds of the crematorium. and that she had, in the words of her lawyer Mario Uziell-Hamilton, become a victim of her own success, and dreaded the thought of being typecast as Mildred Roper. He also went on to mention her in a later entry in his diary (9 April 1988, just days before his own death) that "there was a break in her voice when she got to [the line] tomorrow may never come... she was a lady who made so many people happy and a lady who never complained".
Legacy
In 1986, The Smiths used an image of Joyce on the sleeve of their UK single release "Ask" and the German release of "Some Girls Are Bigger Than Others", thereby adding her to what would become a significant set of musical releases, made iconic by their design (other Smiths 'cover stars' included Truman Capote, Alain Delon, Terence Stamp, Elvis Presley, Pat Phoenix, Viv Nicholson, Billie Whitelaw and Shelagh Delaney).
In October 2001, a tribute documentary entitled The Unforgettable Yootha Joyce was broadcast by ITV, which featured Glynn Edwards as well as many of her co-stars and friends, including Sally Thomsett, Brian Murphy, Nicholas Bond-Owen and Norman Eshley, talking about memories and their relationships with Joyce.
In 2014, a biography was written by Paul Curran, entitled Dear Yootha... The Life of Yootha Joyce, to which contributions were made by those who knew and worked with her, including Glynn Edwards, Murray Melvin and Barbara Windsor. Curran also published The Yootha Joyce Scrapbook, featuring rare and unseen photographs detailing events from Joyce's life in 2015. There was also a third book, entitled Yootha Joyce: Pieces of a Life, published in 2021.
In 2019, a one-woman play depicting Joyce's life, titled Testament of Yootha, was performed by Caroline Burns-Cooke at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.
Acting credits
Film
{| class= "wikitable"
! Year !! Title !! Role !!
|-
|rowspan=2|1963 || Sparrows Can't Sing || Yootha ||
|-
| A Place to Go || Woman in Wash House || Uncredited
|-
|1964 || The Pumpkin Eater || Woman at Hairdressers || Uncredited
|-
|rowspan=2|1965 ||Fanatic || Anna ||
|-
|Catch Us If You Can || Nan ||
|-
|rowspan=2|1966 || Kaleidoscope || Museum Receptionist ||
|-
|| A Man for All Seasons || Avril Machin ||
|-
|rowspan=2|1967 || Stranger in the House || Shooting Range Girl ||
|-
| Our Mother's House || Mrs. Quayle ||
|-
|rowspan=2|1968 || Charlie Bubbles || Woman in Cafe ||
|-
| Luther || Katharina Luther ||
|-
|1969 || Twenty-Nine || The Prostitute || Short film
|-
|1970 || Fragment of Fear || Miss Ward-Cadbury ||
|-
|rowspan=2|1971 || All the Right Noises || Mrs. Bird ||
|-
| The Road Builder || Mrs. Palafox ||
|-
|rowspan=2|1972 || Burke & Hare || Mrs. Hare ||
|-
| Nearest and Dearest || Rhoda Rowbottom ||
|-
|rowspan=3|1973 || Never Mind the Quality, Feel the Width || Mrs. Finch ||
|-
| Steptoe and Son Ride Again || Freda - Lennie's Wife ||
|-
| Frankenstein: The True Story || Hospital Matron ||
|-
|1974 || Man About the House || Mildred Roper ||
|-
|1980 || George and Mildred || Mildred Roper ||
|}
Television
{| class= "wikitable"
! Year !! Title !! Role !! Notes
|-
|rowspan=4|1962 || Brothers in Law || Mrs. Trench || Episode: "Separation Order"
|-
| Armchair Theatre || Cissy || Episode: "The Fishing Match"
|-
| Z-Cars || Clara Smales || Episode: "Full Remission"
|-
| Benny Hill || Bella || Episode: "Cry of Innocence"
|-
|rowspan=6|1963 || Corrigan Blake || Abigail || Episode: "The Removal Men"
|-
| Benny Hill || Elvira Crudd || Episode: "Mr. Apollo"
|-
| Z-Cars || Mrs. Gilroy || Episode: "The Main Chance"
|-
| Steptoe and Son || Delilah || Episode: "The Bath"
|-
| rowspan=2|Comedy Playhouse || Mrs. Wilson || Episode: "Impasse"
|-
| Rita || Episode: "A Clerical Error"
|-
|rowspan=9|1964 || The Wednesday Play || Rosalind Arnold || Episode: "The Confidence Course"
|-
| ITV Play of the Week || The Woman || Episode: "I Can Walk Where I Like Can't I?"
|-
| Dixon of Dock Green || Mrs. Gates || Episode: "Child Hunt"
|-
| ITV Play of the Week || Jane Willows || Episode: "A Tricycle Made for Two"
|-
| Story Parade || Ruth Cowley || Episode: "A Travelling Woman"
|-
| ITV Play of the Week || Vera Maine || Episode: "Gina"
|-
| Diary of a Young Man || Mrs. Baggerdagger || Episode: "Money"
|-
| Dixon of Dock Green || Mabel Davies || Episode: "The Night Man"
|-
| Redcap || Magda || Episode: "A Town Called Love"
|-
|rowspan=8|1965 || Frankie Howerd || Drunk Woman || Episode: #1.6
|-
| Dixon of Dock Green || Landlady || Episode: "Forsaking All Others"
|-
| Theatre 625 || Jane Matthews || Episode: "Try for White"
|-
| Cluff || Flo Darby || Episode: "The Convict"
|-
| The Wednesday Thriller || Mrs. Seam || Episode: "The Babysitter"
|-
| Six of the Best || Doris || Episode: "Charlie's Place"
|-
| Steptoe and Son || Avis || Episode: "A Box in Town"
|-
| Theatre 625 || Miss Binnington || Episode: "Portraits from the North: The Nutter"
|-
|rowspan=3|1966 || Dixon of Dock Green || Joyce Watson || Episode: "You Can't Buy a Miracle"
|-
| No Hiding Place || Hilda Myers || Episode: "Ask Me If I Killed Her"
|-
| The Saint || Jovanka Milanova || Episode: "The Russian Prisoner"
|-
|1966–1967 || The Wednesday Play || Miriam Green || 3 episodes
|-
|1966 || George and the Dragon || Irma || Episode: "Merry Christmas"
|-
|rowspan=6|1967 || Turn Out the Lights || Monica Nolan || Episode: "A Big Hand for a Little Lady"
|-
| Thirty-Minute Theatre || Agnes || Episode: "Teeth"
|-
| The Avengers || Miss Lister || Episode: "Something Nasty In The Nursery"
|-
| Market in Honey Lane || Kay Fowler || Episode: "The Birds and the Business"
|-
| This Way for Murder || Mrs. Dyberg || Episode: #1.3
|-
| Harry Worth || Ingrid || Episode: "Four's a Crush"
|-
|rowspan=2|1968 || City '68 || Hilda || Episode: "Love Thy Neighbour"
|-
| ITV Playhouse || Phoebe / Mrs. Bewley || Episode: "Your Name's Not God, It's Edgar"
|-
|1968–1971 || Me Mammy || Miss Eunice Argyll || All 22 episodes
|-
|rowspan=5|1969 || Armchair Theatre || Alice || Episode: "Go on... It'll Do You Good"
|-
| BBC Play of the Month || Mademoiselle Motte || Episode: "Maigret at Bay"
|-
| ITV Sunday Night Theatre || Erica Seydoux || Episode: "A Measure of Malice"
|-
| W. Somerset Maugham || Elvira || Episode: "Lord Mountdrago"
|-
| Dixon of Dock Green || Mrs. Harper || Episode: "Reluctant Witness"
|-
|rowspan=3|1970 || Manhunt || Denise || Episode: "Fare Forward, Voyagers"
|-
| The Misfit || Pamela || Episode: "On Reading the Small Print"
|-
| Conceptions of Murder || Maria Kurten || Episode: "Peter and Maria"
|-
|rowspan=3|1972 || Jason King || Sister Dryker || Episode: "If It's Got to Go - It's Got to Go"
|-
| Tales from the Lazy Acre || Mrs. Gaynor || Episode: "The Last Great Pint-Drinking Tournament"
|-
| The Fenn Street Gang || Glenda || Episode: "The Woman for Dennis"
|-
|rowspan=3|1973 || Comedy Playhouse || Lil Wilson || Episode: "Home from Home"
|-
| Seven of One || Mrs. Scully || Episode: "Open All Hours"
|-
| On the Buses || Jessie || Episode: "The Allowance"
|-
|1973–1976 || Man About the House || Mildred Roper || All 39 episodes
|-
|1973 || All Star Comedy Carnival || Mildred Roper || Man About the House Christmas sketch
|-
|rowspan=2|1974 || Comedy Playhouse || Unknown || Episode: "Bird Alone" (pilot not broadcast)
|-
| The Dick Emery Show || Amelia Chislett || Episode: #13.4
|-
|1976–1979 || George and Mildred || Mildred Roper || All 38 episodes
|}
Theatre
(incomplete)
{| class= "wikitable"
! Year !! Title !! Role !! Venue
|-
|1945 || Pride and Prejudice || Lydia Bennett ||
|-
|1945 || Henry V || Archbishop of Canterbury ||
|-
|1945 || This Happy Breed || Sylvia ||
|-
|1945 || Escape Me Never || Girl || Grand Theatre, Croydon
|-
|1945 || Autumn Crocus || The Young Lady Living in Sin || Grand Theatre, Croydon
|-
|1945 || Cymbeline || Imogen ||
|-
|1945 || Heartbreak House || Lady Utterwood ||
|-
|1946 || Pygmalion || Miss Eynsford-Hill || John Gay Theatre, Barnstaple
|-
|1946 || You Can't Take It with You || Essie ||
|-
|1946 || She Stoops to Conquer || Kate Hardcastle ||
|-
|1946 || They Walk Alone || Emmy Baudine || Butlins Holiday Camp Theatre, Skegness
|-
|1946 || While the Sun Shines || Unknown ||
|-
|1946 || The Merchant of Venice || Portia || The Athenaeum, Bury St Edmonds
|-
|1946–1948 || Various tours with ENSA || Various roles ||
|-
|1948 || Humoresque || Peony Barker ||
|-
|1949 || Hay Fever || Unknown || Preston Hippodrome, Preston
|-
|1950 || Flowers for the Living || Lily Holmes || Stanley Halls, Croydon
|-
|1951 || Peace Comes to Peckham || Grace ||
|-
|1951 || Nothing but the Truth || Unknown || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The Light of Heart || Unknown || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Mountain Air || Unknown || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Night Must Fall || Olivia Grayne || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Grand National Night || Babs || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || A Lady Mislaid || Esther || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The Perfect Woman || Joan Merrifield || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The Ten-Five Never Stops || Trixy Evans || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The Seventh Veil || Francesca Cunningham || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Mother of Men || Lissa || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The Paragon || Joan || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Charley's Aunt || Amy || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The Ghost Train || Unknown || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The Devil A Saint || Sarah Jane || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Black Chiffon || Unknown || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Bed of Roses || Jenny Pickersgill || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || While Parents Sleep || Nanny || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || But Once A Year || Olivia Meldon || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Pick-Up Girl || Ruby Lockwood || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Claudia || Claudia Naughton || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Blithe Spirit || Elvira || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Doctor Brent's Household || Claire Hutton || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Black Limelight || Lily James || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Bed, Board and Romance || Gladys Foster || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The Bird in Hand || Alice Greenleaf || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The Light of Heart || Fan || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The Shining Hour || Mariella Linden || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The Rotters || Winnie Clugston || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The Passing of the Third Floor Back || Stasia || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The Girl Who Couldn't Quite || Pam Taylor || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Ma's Bit of Brass || Lady Maydew || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Lets Have a Honeymoon || Lil || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Love from a Stranger || Cecily Harrington || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Rain || Mrs. Davidson || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Cardboard Castle || Annie || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Loophole || Mrs. Wilson || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Fly Away Peter || Myra Hapgood || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || What Anne Brought Home || Anne || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Treasure Island || Mrs. Hawkins || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The Two Mrs. Carrolls || Mrs. Latham || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Too Young to Marry || Elaine Bishop || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Third Time Lucky || Mrs. Scratton || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The First Mrs. Fraser || Janet Fraser || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The Family Upstairs || Mrs. Grant || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || The Chiltern Hundreds || June Farrell || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || A Streetcar Named Desire || A Strange Woman || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1951 || Separate Rooms || Linda || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1952 || The Young in Heart || Teenager || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1952 || Heaven and Charing Cross || Lily Norman || Theatre Royal, Ashton-under-Lyne
|-
|1952 || The Happy Marriage || Unknown ||
|-
|1953 || Wide Boy || Clara ||
|-
|1953 || Charlie's Uncle || Sylvia Chisholm || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || The Gift || Unknown || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || The Deep Blue Sea || Hester Collyer || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || The Happy Prisoner || Farm Girl || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Our Family || Elinor Winton || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Widows Are Dangerous || Angela Lawrence || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Autumn Crocus || The Lady in Spectacles || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Music for Murder || Priscilla Hunter || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Queen Elizabeth || Lettice, Dowager Countess of Essex || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Born Yesterday || Billie Dawn || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || The Outsider || Lalage Sturdee || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Smilin' Through || Unknown || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Worm's Eye View || Bella || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Maiden Ladies || Valerie Ward || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Murder Mistaken || Freda Jefferies || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Wild Horses || Iris Ingle || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Relative Values || Mrs. Moxton || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Waters of the Moon || Evelyn Daly || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || My Wife's Lodger || Maggie Ann Higginbotham || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || The Man || Ruth || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Red Letter Day || Jane Cooper || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || I Want to Get Married || Annie Worthington || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Daughter of My House || Anna || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Having A Wonderful Time || Phoebe Tootle || Palace Theatre, Westcliff-on-Sea
|-
|1953 || Glad Tidings || Celia Forester ||
|-
|1954 || Woman of the Year || Arlie Ames || Embassy Theatre, London
|-
|1955 || The Murder at the Vicarage || Anne Protheroe || Bristol Hippodrome, Bristol
|-
|1955 || The Call of the Flesh || Stella Loman || UK Tour
|-
|1956 || The Good Soldier Švejk || Unknown || Theatre Royal Stratford East
|-
|1957 || The Playboy of the Western World || Susan Brady || Theatre Royal Stratford East
|-
|1957 || The Duchess of Malfi || Julia || Theatre Royal Stratford East
|-
|1957 || By Candlelight || Unknown ||
|-
|1957 || The Rainmaker || Unknown || Theatre Royal, Bath
|-
|1958 || Black Chiffon ||Thea || Opera House, Cheltenham
|-
|1958 || The Murder at the Vicarage || Unknown || Opera House, Cheltenham
|-
|1958 || Rebecca || Mrs. Danvers || Opera House, Cheltenham
|-
|1958 || The Reluctant Debutante || Unknown || Opera House, Cheltenham
|-
|1958 || Paddle Your Own Canoe || Unknown || Opera House, Cheltenham
|-
|1958 || The Reluctant Debutante || Unknown || Opera House, Cheltenham
|-
|1958 || Celestina || Lucrezia || Theatre Royal Stratford East
|-
|1958 || The Respectful Prostitute || Lizzie || Theatre Royal Stratford East
|-
|1958 || A Christmas Carol || Mrs. Trossit<br>Ghost of Christmas Past || Theatre Royal Stratford East
|-
|1959 || Fings Ain't Wot They Used T'Be || The Brass Upstairs<br>Myrtle<br>Policewoman || Theatre Royal Stratford East
|-
|1959 || The Dutch Courtesan || Mistress Mulligrub || Theatre Royal Stratford East
|-
|1959 || The Hostage || Colette || Theatre Royal Stratford East
|-
|1960–1962 || Fings Ain't Wot They Used T'Be || The Brass Upstairs<br>Myrtle<br>Policewoman || West End and London Tour
|-
|1964 || Signpost to Murder || Sally Thomas || Castle Theatre, Farnham
|-
|1967 || The Man in the Glass Booth || Mrs. Rosen || St Martin's Theatre, West End, London
|-
|1972 || The Londoners || Bridgie Judd || Theatre Royal Stratford East
|-
|1975 || Boeing-Boeing || Bertha || UK Tour
|-
|1976–1977 || Cinderella || Mildred Hardup || Pantomime; London Palladium
|-
|1977–1978 || George and Mildred || Mildred Roper || UK Tour
|-
|1979 || George and Mildred || Mildred Roper || Australia and New Zealand Tour
|}
