Joan Kemp-Welch
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Joan_Kemp-Welch an entity of type: Thing
Joan Kemp-Welch (23 September 1906 – 5 July 1999) was a British stage and film actress, who later went on to become a television director. After making her stage debut in 1926 at the Q Theatre, Kemp-Welch made her film debut in 1933 and appeared in fifteen films over the next decade largely in supporting or minor roles. Occasionally she played more substantial parts as in Hard Steel and They Flew Alone (both 1942).
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Joan Kemp-Welch
rdf:langString
Joan Kemp-Welch
rdf:langString
Joan Kemp-Welch
rdf:langString
London, England
xsd:date
1999-07-05
xsd:date
1906-09-23
xsd:integer
42547231
xsd:integer
1097248901
xsd:date
1906-09-23
xsd:date
1999-07-05
rdf:langString
Director
rdf:langString
Producer
rdf:langString
Actress
xsd:integer
1926
rdf:langString
Joan Kemp-Welch (23 September 1906 – 5 July 1999) was a British stage and film actress, who later went on to become a television director. After making her stage debut in 1926 at the Q Theatre, Kemp-Welch made her film debut in 1933 and appeared in fifteen films over the next decade largely in supporting or minor roles. Occasionally she played more substantial parts as in Hard Steel and They Flew Alone (both 1942). Post-Second World War, she moved into television working as both a producer and director of television plays and episodes of television series. In 1959 she was one of the winners at the Society of Film and Television Arts Television Awards. She also won the Prix Italia for her TV version of Harold Pinter's The Lover in 1963; and in the same year was the first woman to receive the Desmond Davis BAFTA for creative work in television. In 1964 she directed A Midsummer Night's Dream for ITV's Play of the Week. The same year she directed four Noël Coward adaptations for A Choice of Coward. Other work included directing episodes of Upstairs, Downstairs and Armchair Theatre.
rdf:langString
Glory Vincent Green
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
5565
xsd:gYear
1981
xsd:gYear
1926
rdf:langString
Glory Vincent Green
xsd:gYear
1906
xsd:gYear
1999