Hilary Dwyer

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Birth Date:
06.05.1945
Death date:
10.04.2020
Length of life:
74
Days since birth:
28856
Years since birth:
79
Days since death:
1487
Years since death:
4
Person's maiden name:
Hilary Heath
Categories:
Actor, COVID-19
Nationality:
 english
Cemetery:
Set cemetery

Hilary Dwyer (6 May 1945 – April 2020), also known as Hilary Heath, was an English actress, businessperson, and film producer.

She is best known for her acting roles in films such as Witchfinder General (1968) and Wuthering Heights (1970). She also performed on the London stage. In 1974 she married the talent agent Duncan Heath, with whom she had two children, and helped to found Duncan Heath Associates, which later became the Independent Talent Group. They divorced in 1989. Later in her career, under her married name, "Hilary Heath", she produced the successful feature film An Awfully Big Adventure (1995), as well as TV remakes of Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca (1997) and Tennessee Williams's The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone (2003). Her final producing role was the 2014 miniseries Jamaica Inn.

Early life

Dwyer was the daughter of an orthopaedic surgeon. As a youth, she practised ballet and became a talented pianist. She trained in repertory theatres and appeared on stage at the Bristol Old Vic.

Acting career

Dwyer is best known for appearing in several horror films distributed by American International Pictures in the late 1960s and early 1970s, most notably her first feature film, Michael Reeves' Witchfinder General (1968), starring Vincent Price, in which she played Sara Lowes, and gave a "sensitive performance...intelligent and articulate." Of the role, Dwyer later recalled "I don't think that I realised I was the star".  Dwyer enjoyed working with Reeves, describing him as "terrific, we became really good friends". In a 2010 interview at the Southend Film Festival, Dwyer described her interview for Witchfinder General as her "first casting call", in which she was "absolutely terrified" because she "knew no-one". 

Dwyer also appeared in The Oblong Box (1969) and Cry of the Banshee (1970), both again featuring Price. Of working with Price, she said "I adored Vincent...I played his mistress, his daughter and his wife. And he said, 'if you ever play my mother, I'll marry you'." 

Dwyer also performed in Robert Fuest's Wuthering Heights (1970). Banshee was her final feature film appearance. Her many television roles included The PrisonerThe AvengersHadleigh and Van der Valk. Her last TV appearance was in a 1976 episode of Space: 1999.

Dwyer also had a successful career on the stage. In 1970 she appeared in The Importance of Being Earnest and in Arms and the Man at the Theatre Royal, Bath, and later on tour with the Bristol Old Vic. 

In 1978 Dwyer performed in the play Whose Life Is It Anyway? alongside Tom Conti at the Mermaid Theatre in London.

Producing career

She began a career as a producer in the mid-1980s under her married name Hilary Heath. In 1988 she won a CableAce Award for the TV movie The Worst Witch (1986). Heath is credited as either Producer or Executive Producer for several films, including feature films Criminal Law (1988) and An Awfully Big Adventure (1995), starring Hugh Grant and Alan Rickman. She also produced TV-remakes of Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca (1997) and Tennessee Williams's The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone (2003). In 2014 she executive produced the miniseries Jamaica Inn.

Personal life

In 1973, Dwyer set up the talent agency Duncan Heath Associates with her then husband-to-be, Duncan Heath, who is now the co-chairman of the Independent Talent Group Ltd. In a 2002 interview in the Financial Times, Heath said of Dwyer "She introduced me to a lot of people – if it wasn't for her it wouldn't have happened."

Dwyer married Heath in 1974 and they divorced in 1989. They had two children, Laura and Daniel.

Dwyer died around 3 April 2020 from complications related to COVID-19, according to her godson.

Source: wikipedia.org

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