SARAH MILES GENUINE HAND SIGNED 12" x 8" MAGAZINE COVER SIGNATURE AUTOGRAPH & C.O.A, RARE!

Grab a Bargain from me while you can. ICONIC MAGAZINE 'BRITISH NEW WAVE' THE MOVIE COVER

Bought at Auction. Wonderful condition. Comes with C.O.A. Pictures are scans of the actual item. See photos.

*IDEAL GIFT FOR ANY FAN OF THIS INCREDIBLE ACTRESS AND HER GREAT CAREER*

PHOTO SIZE: 12" X 8"

Dispatched 2nd class large letter. 

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Sarah Miles



Sarah Miles
Miles in 1980
Born31 December 1941 (age 84)
Ingatestone, Essex, England
OccupationActress
Years active1961–2004
Spouses
(m. 1967; div. 1976)
(m. 1988; died 1995)
Children1
RelativesChristopher Miles (brother)

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.[1] 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.[2][3] Unable to speak until the age of nine because of a stammer[4] and dyslexia,[5] she attended Roedean and three other schools, but was expelled from all of them.[4] Miles enrolled at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA), graduating in 1960 with an acting diploma.[6]

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"[7] 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.[7]

Miles was in a short film directed by her brother, The Six-Sided Triangle (1963), and a feature film directed by and starring Laurence Harvey, The Ceremony (1963). She did Ring Round the Moon (1964) for television.

On 16 June 1965, Ken Annakin's Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines, a British period comedy film revolving around the craze of early aviation circa 1910, was released. A pompous newspaper magnate (Robert Morley) is convinced by his daughter (Miles) and her fiancé (James Fox) to organise an air race from London to Paris. A large sum of money is offered to the winner, and hence it attracts a variety of characters to participate. The film received positive reviews, described as funny, colourful, and clever, capturing the early enthusiasm for aviation.[8][9][10]

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.[7] At Antonioni's death in 2007, she referred to him as "a rogue and a tyrant and a brilliant man".[11]

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."[12]

Miles married the film's screenwriter, Robert Bolt. He wrote and directed Lady Caroline Lamb (1972) starring Miles in the title role.[13] 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,[14] was found dead in her motel room. She was acquitted of culpability in his death.[4][15] 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."[4] This led to the end of her first marriage to Bolt.

Television

Miles starred in some TV movies: Great Expectations (1974), Requiem for a Nun (1975), and Dynasty (1976) as well as the Spanish film Bride to Be (1975).

Her performance as Anne Osborne in The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea (1976) was nominated for a Golden Globe.

Miles appeared in The Big Sleep (1978), Venom (1981), Walter and June (1983), Ordeal by Innocence (1984), Steaming (1985), Harem (1986) and Queenie (1987).

She received great acclaim for Hope and Glory. Interviewer Lynn Barber wrote of Miles' appearances in Hope and Glory, White Mischief, and her two earliest films that she "has that Vanessa Redgrave quality of seeming to have one skin fewer than normal people, so that the emotion comes over unmuffled and bare."[5]

Filming White Mischief on location in Kenya in 1987, Miles worked for the second and last time with Trevor Howard, who had a supporting role, but was by then seriously ill from alcoholism. The company wanted to fire him, but Miles was determined that Howard's distinguished film career would not end that way. In an interview with Terence Pettigrew for his biography of Howard, she describes how she gave an ultimatum to the executives, threatening to quit the production if they got rid of him. The gamble worked, and Howard was kept on. It was his last major film; he died the following January.

Later career

She appeared in A Ghost in Monte Carlo (1990), The Silent Touch (1992), Dandelion Dead (1994), Jurij (2001) and The Accidental Detective (2004).

She most recently (2008) appeared in Well at the Trafalgar Studios and the Apollo Theatre opposite Natalie Casey.[citation needed]

Personal life

Miles was married twice to the British playwright Robert Bolt, 1967–1975 and 1988–1995.[16] 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."[17] The couple had a son.[18] Miles stated, in 2007, that she had been drinking her own urine for 30 years for health reasons.[4] In 2016, she reported that she had written a sequel to Ryan's Daughter.[19]

Filmography

YearFilmRoleNotes
1962Term of TrialShirley TaylorNominated – BAFTA Award for Best Newcomer
1963The ServantVeraNominated – BAFTA Award for Best British Actress
The CeremonyCatherine
1965Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying MachinesPatricia Rawnsley
I Was Happy HereCass LangdonAlso known as Time Lost and Time Remembered
1966BlowupPatricia
1970Ryan's DaughterRosy RyanNominated – Academy Award for Best Actress
Nominated – BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
Nominated – Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
1972Lady Caroline LambLady Caroline Lamb
1973The HirelingLady Franklin
The Man Who Loved Cat DancingCatherine Crocker
1974Great ExpectationsEstella
1975Bride to BePepita Jiménez
1976The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the SeaAnne OsborneNominated – Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
1978The Big SleepCharlotte Sternwood
1981Priest of LoveFilm Star
VenomDr. Marion Stowe
1984Ordeal by InnocenceMary Durant
1985SteamingSarah
1986Harem (mini series)Lady Ashley[20]
1987Hope and GloryGrace RowanNominated – BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
White MischiefAlice de Janzé
1992The Silent Touch [pl]Helena
2001Days of GraceSissi, La Madre
JurijMartina, directrice clinica
2003The Accidental DetectiveSmeralda Mazzi Tinghi

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1961Deadline MidnightVi Vernon
1965Sunday Night At The London PalladiumHerself
1974Great ExpectationsEstella
1976DynastyJennifer Blackwood
1983Walter and JuneJune
1987QueenieLady Sybil
1990A Ghost in Monte CarloEmilie/Mme. Bluet
1994Dandelion DeadCatherine ArmstrongTV mini-series
2004Poirot: The HollowLady 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.[21]


The Ceremony (1963 film)



The Ceremony
Theatrical release poster
Directed byLaurence Harvey
Written byAlun Falconer (Addl dial)
Screenplay byBen Barzman
Based on
La cérémonie
1951 novel
by Frédéric Grendel
Produced byLaurence Harvey
StarringLaurence Harvey
Sarah Miles
Robert Walker Jr.
John Ireland
Ross Martin
Lee Patterson
Jack MacGowran
Murray Melvin
Noel Purcell
CinematographyOswald Morris
Edited byRalph Kemplen
Music byGerard Schurmann,
Carlo Martelli
Production
company
Magla
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release date
  • December 18, 1963
Running time
105 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The Ceremony is a 1963 American neo-noir crime film directed by Laurence Harvey and written by Ben Barzman. The film stars Laurence Harvey, Sarah Miles, Robert Walker Jr., John Ireland, Ross Martin, Lee Patterson, Jack MacGowran, Murray Melvin and Noel Purcell. The film was released on December 18, 1963, by United Artists.[1][2]

Plot

The story is set in Tangier when it was an internationally controlled territory separate from Morocco during the years leading towards Morocco regaining its independence. Sean (Harvey) is held in a castle prison awaiting execution after a bank guard has been killed during a robbery. The robbery may have political implications. Various administrative officials want Sean to say where the money is and the execution is politically important to show that the administration is upholding the law. Sean, an atheist, refuses to see a priest, Fr O’Brien. Outside Sean’s girlfriend, Catherine, is drawn into an escape plot and intimacy with Sean’s brother, Dominic. Catherine visits Sean and tells him to see a priest. Dominic arrives at the prison impersonating a priest and with the help of a guard they escape. Sean and Dominic are reunited with Catherine but they are traced by armed forces. Dominic gets to a car and leads the police away from the others as a decoy. He is chased until he is forced off the road and engulfed in his flaming car. Disfigured and thought to be Sean, he is brought back to prison for execution. Fr O’Brien finds Sean and reveals Dominic is awaiting execution telling Sean that his sacrifice is proof that God exists. Most of the firing squad are disgusted at the execution and fire into the sky but Dominic is executed just before Sean arrives. Sean lifts up his body and declares to the other prisoners that his brother has died to save him.

Cast