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June Ritchie

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
British actress (born 1941)

June Ritchie
Born
June Rose Ritchie

(1941-05-31)31 May 1941 (age 84)
OccupationActress
Years active1962–1988
Spouse(s)
Marcus Turnbull
(m. 1962; div. 1976)
[2][3]
David Drew
(m. 1985; died 2015)
Children1[3]
Likeness of June Ritchie shown at top of rocket in advertisement forThe Mouse on the Moon

June Rose Ritchie (born 31 May 1941)[4] is a British actress.[5]

Early life

[edit]

She attendedStretford Children's Theatre from the age of nine. She left school in Manchester, aged 16, to train as a secretary,[6] working for the Manchester Ship Canal Company. Her parents lived in Shrewsbury Street[7] and King’s Crescent in Old Trafford.[8]

Ritchie trained atRADA,[9] where she graduated in 1961, having won the Emile Littler Award for Most Promising Actress and the Ronson Award for the outstanding female student.

Biography

[edit]

She came to prominence after starring in the role of Ingrid Rothwell oppositeAlan Bates in the 1962 film adaptation ofA Kind of Loving.[10]

In 1963, she starred withMargaret Rutherford in the comedyThe Mouse on the Moon and appeared as a 'dance hostess' withSylvia Syms inThe World Ten Times Over.[11] She also made two movies withIan Hendry at around the same time,Live Now, Pay Later andThis is My Street.[12]

After marrying and starting a family, she cut back on her acting roles, but later made a successful comeback on stage (most memorably in a high-profile musical adaptation ofGone with the Wind in London), and appeared in many British television dramas includingThe Mallens,The Saint,The Baron,[13]Minder,Tales of the Unexpected, andPère Goriot.[14]

In 1966 Ritchie starred inThe Saint (S5,E10 'Little Girl Lost') as Mildred, a fake hostage attempting and failing to get the better of Simon Templar (The Saint).

In 1975, Ritchie joinedRay Davies andthe Kinks on their album,Soap Opera, having played the same role in the 1974 single drama,Starmaker, on which the album was based.[15] She sang the role of "Andrea" ("Norman"'s wife).[16][17][18]

Filmography

[edit]

Film

[edit]
YearTitleRoleNotes
1962A Kind of LovingIngrid Rothwell
1962Live Now, Pay LaterTreasure
1963Three Penny Opera [de]Polly Peachum
1963The Mouse on the MoonCynthia
1963The World Ten Times OverGinnie
1964This Is My StreetMargery Graham
1968The SyndicateMari Brant
1972HuntedMargaret LordShort

Television

[edit]
YearTitleRoleNotes
1965Heiress of GarthJosina GriffinMiniseries
1966The SaintMildred"Little Girl Lost"
1967Thirty-Minute TheatreJean Charnock"Later a Man Was Questioned"
1967The BaronJeanne Varda"Roundabout"
1967Champion HouseDella Chevalier"Sonata for a Solo Fiddle"
1968City '68Trixie"Love Thy Neighbor"
1968Père GoriotDelphineMiniseries
1971The Ten CommandmentsJan Lee"Be Lucky"
1971The Persuaders!Charlie"Element of Risk"
1974SamJean Tufton"A New World", "Legacy"
1974Armchair CinemaSusan Carter"Sea Song"
1974Late Night DramaWife"Starmaker"
1975You're On Your OwnKathy"No One Wants Any Trouble", "Assault", "Contract to Kill"
1977The Sunday DramaSheila Quince"The Cuckoo Calls"
1978Crown CourtAlison Freeman"The Change"
1979KidsJanie Snell"Harry"
1979BloomersDiana"1.1", "1.2"
1979MinderJo"The Bounty Hunter"
1980The MallensConstance RadletRegular role
1982Tales of the UnexpectedJenny Morrissey"Operation Safecrack"
1982All for LoveEsme Fanshow"A Bit of Singing and Dancing"
1983A Brother's TaleLucy Browning"1.1", "1.3"
1984December FlowerMargaret GreyTV film
1985Summer SeasonSheila"Picture Friend"
1988The Ruth Rendell MysteriesNancy Lake"Shake Hands Forever: Parts 1–3"

References

[edit]
  1. ^'Lancashire BMD Website'
  2. ^"June Ritchie Biography ((?)-)".filmreference.com. Retrieved21 June 2019.
  3. ^ab'‘Callan's not so lonely now"', Daily Mirror, Saturday 8 January 1972
  4. ^"June Ritchie – Pages dedicated to the actress June Ritchie".JuneRitchie.co.uk. Retrieved8 June 2025.
  5. ^"June Ritchie – Theatricalia".theatricalia.com.
  6. ^Peterborough Evening Telegraph Tuesday 29 May 1962, page 4
  7. ^Manchester Evening News Thursday 17 February 1955, page 4
  8. ^Manchester Evening News Tuesday 31 October 1961, page 6
  9. ^Fabrique."June Ritchie – RADA".rada.ac.uk. Retrieved21 June 2019.
  10. ^McFarlane, Brian (16 May 2016).The Encyclopedia of British Film: Fourth edition. Oxford University Press.ISBN 9781526111968 – via Google Books.
  11. ^"June Ritchie".BFI. Archived fromthe original on 24 August 2017.
  12. ^Vagg, Stephen (21 January 2025)."Forgotten British Moguls: Nat Cohen – Part Three (1962-68)".Filmink. Retrieved21 January 2025.
  13. ^Episode No. 27 'Roundabout'
  14. ^"Masterpiece".TV Guide.
  15. ^"From the archive, 4 September 1974: Kinks' Ray Davies turns playwright".The Guardian. 4 September 2015.
  16. ^"The Kinks Present a Soap Opera – The Kinks – Credits". AllMusic.
  17. ^"Revisiting Another of the Kinks' Theatrical Concept Albums, 'Soap Opera'".Ultimate Classic Rock. 16 May 2015.
  18. ^"The Kinks – Soap Opera".Discogs. 1975.

External links

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