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Sylvia Syms obituary

Although Sylvia Syms, who has died aged 89, emerged as an actor during the decade from 1956 to 1966 that saw British cinema changing radically, she seemed to belong to an earlier stiff-upper-lip tradition of British films rather than “kitchen sink” drama. Nevertheless, the ethereal Syms starred in a wide variety of films during that period before she developed in later years into a fine supporting actor.

She was nominated for a Bafta for her performance in J Lee Thompson’s Woman in a Dressing Gown (1957), which had Syms playing the “other woman” for whom Anthony Quayle wants to leave his wife (Yvonne Mitchell). Based on a play by Ted Willis, this candid social drama heralded a new dawn in gritty British film-making. However, the same director-writer team’s No Trees in the Street (1959) was a distinctly old-fashioned melodrama set in the London slums between the wars. It starred Syms as a girl hoping to escape her environment and a local hoodlum (Herbert Lom).

Roy Ward Baker’s Flame in the Streets (1961), another screenplay by Willis, was a well-intentioned plea for racial harmony, in which Syms played the daughter of a trade union leader (John Mills), whose intention to marry a West Indian man puts her father’s liberal views to the test. Equally worthy, but just as reflective of the mores of the time in England, was Basil Dearden’s Victim (1961) in which Syms gave a beautifully understated performance as the wife of an in-the-closet barrister (played by Dirk Bogarde), especially notable in the scene when she reacts painfully to her husband’s confession of his desire for a young man.

Sylvia Syms with Dirk Bogarde in Basil Dearden’s 1961 film Victim.
Sylvia Syms with Dirk Bogarde in Basil Dearden’s 1961 film Victim. Photograph: ITV/Rex/Shutterstock

Syms was a plucky nurse in Thompson’s Ice Cold in Alex (1958), in dusty khaki on a trek through the north African desert from Tobruk to Alexandria in 1942. In the same year, she was decorative in The Moonraker, a swashbuckling period piece set during the English civil war, and radiant in Bachelor of Hearts as an undergraduate helping a German student, Hardy Krüger, negotiate and understand the rituals of Cambridge University.

Sylvia Syms in The Punch and Judy Man, 1963, with Tony Hancock, in which she showed a penchant for comedy.
Sylvia Syms in The Punch and Judy Man, 1963, with Tony Hancock, in which she showed a penchant for comedy. Photograph: Studio Canal/Rex/Shutterstock

For the following decade, Syms was very active in British cinema, managing to belie her reputation as a sweet-tempered English rose by taking roles such as a stripper, Maisie King, in Expresso Bongo (1959). In one scene, as the girlfriend of a sleazy agent (Laurence Harvey), she just throws a coat over her skimpy costume after her performance at the strip joint, returning with him to his pad. “Well, there’s not much point in putting my things on at the theatre if I’m going to take them all off again here,” she explains.

In complete contrast was her novice nun helping other nuns to smuggle Jewish children escaping the Nazis in war-torn Italy, and confronting her feelings towards an Italian major (Ronald Lewis) in the moving drama Conspiracy of Hearts (1960). In The World of Suzie Wong (1960), Syms was a British expat in Hong Kong, hopelessly competing for William Holden’s affections over a Chinese sex worker, and in The Quare Fellow (1962), based on Brendan Behan’s play, she stood out as the lonely and alcoholic wife of a man about to be hanged at Mountjoy prison.

When given the chance, Syms showed a penchant for comedy as in The Punch and Judy Man (1963), in which she played Tony Hancock’s socially ambitious wife, with an accent just off posh, and as the girlfriend of an inept bank robber (Sid James) in the Carry-On-Style The Big Job (1965).

Syms was born in Woolwich, London, the daughter of a trade unionist, Edwin Syms, and his wife, Daisy (nee Hale). She was evacuated from the capital aged four with her brother and sister at the outbreak of the second world war. Her mother died of a brain tumour when she was 12, and her father remarried two years later. Syms suffered from depression for most of her life, which she put down to her unsettled childhood. “Everyone thinks I’m very strong and together,” she explained. “I have always had this ability to put on a very powerful exterior, but in reality I’m a great mess inside. I’ve just had to learn to cope with it.”

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She was educated at convent schools, before studying at Rada in London at the same time as Albert Finney, Alan Bates and Peter O’Toole. After graduating in 1954, aged 20, Syms went into weekly rep in Eastbourne and Bath. She was seen by Anna Neagle and Neagle’s producer-director husband, Herbert Wilcox, who cast her in the title role of My Teenage Daughter (1956), the couple’s first film, in which they attempted to get “with it”, hoping to appeal to both parents and teenagers. In it, Syms, revealing a touching vulnerability beneath outward defiance, played the regal Neagle’s rebel daughter, who drops out of school, links up with a teddy boy, goes to wild parties, drinks booze and does the jive. Needless to say, in a typically moralistic ending, she sees the error of her ways and is reunited with her mother.

In the 1970s and 80s, when the film roles began to dwindle, Syms took on more television and theatre work. Among the theatre work was Beatrice in Much Ado About Nothing at the 1984 Edinburgh festival; and Martha in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1989) and Cleopatra in Antony and Cleopatra (1991), both at Birmingham Rep.

Sylvia Syms as Margaret Thatcher on stage in Half the Picture at the Tricycle theatre in London in 1994.
Sylvia Syms as Margaret Thatcher on stage in Half the Picture at the Tricycle theatre in London in 1994. Photograph: Tristram Kenton/The Guardian

In 1994, the left-leaning Syms appeared at the Tricycle theatre, London, in Half the Picture, a dramatisation of the Scott inquiry into arms to Iraq. Four years later, at the same theatre, she played both Queen Elizabeth and Margaret Thatcher in Howard Brenton and Tariq Ali’s Ugly Rumours, a political satire on New Labour. As Thatcher, Syms was brilliant as a madwoman in the cellar of No 10. Her triple-stringed pearls intact but her twin-set suit covered in cobwebs, she carried about her person a “Thatcher extractor”, a sort of portable vacuum cleaner designed to suck socialism out of the body, which has worked on Tony Blair.

Syms had already portrayed Thatcher slightly more realistically in Thatcher: The Final Days (1991) for Granada television. Also on television, she was seen in six episodes of Ruth Rendell Mysteries (1989-98), 10 episodes of the blackly comic At Home With the Braithwates (2000-03), four episodes of EastEnders (2007-10, as Olive Woodhouse), and a host of other series, including Gentleman Jack (2019). She was the narrator of the BBC Two series Talking Pictures from 2013 until 2019.

Sylvia Syms with Helen Mirren in The Queen (2006).
Sylvia Syms as the Queen Mother with Helen Mirren in The Queen (2006). Photograph: Maximum Film/Alamy

In her mid-70s, Syms commented: “I never valued my looks when I was young. But I remember a brilliant director, Lewis Gilbert, saying: ‘Don’t ever get your face done because you’ll always work. We’ll always need some old people.’ And he was absolutely right.”

She transmogrified into Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother in Stephen Frears’s film The Queen in 2006. As a tipsy Queen Mum, mainly upset that Diana’s funeral will ruin the plans made for her own interment, Syms delivered her lines with wit and relish, telling her daughter (Helen Mirren in the title role): “Reassert your authority. You sit on the most powerful throne in Europe, head of an unbroken line that goes back more than a thousand years. Do you think any of your predecessors would have dropped everything and gone up to London because a bunch of hysterics carrying candles needed help with their grief?”

Syms was appointed OBE in 2007.

In 1989, Syms divorced Alan Edney, her husband since 1956. She is survived by her children, Ben and Beatie.

• Sylvia Syms, actor, born 6 January 1934; died 27 January 2023

Ronald Bergan died in 2020