
Sally Gray
Acting • Born 1916-02-14 – Died 2006-09-24
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Constance Vera Browne, Baroness Oranmore and Browne (14 February 1916 – 24 September 2006), commonly known as Sally Gray, was an English movie actress of the 1930s and 1940s. Born Constance Vera Stevens in Holloway, London, Gray trained at Fay Compton’s School of Dramatic Art and became well established in the theatre before embarking on a series of light comedies, musicals and thrillers in the 1930s. Gray began in films in her teens with a bit part in School for Scandal (1930) and returned in 1935, making nearly twenty films, culminating in her sensitive role in Brian Desmond Hurst’s romantic melodrama Dangerous Moonlight (1941). She was off the screen for several years owing to an alleged nervous breakdown and then returned in 1946 to make her strongest bid for stardom. This latter involved a series of melodramas. They include the hospital thriller Green for Danger (1946), Carnival (1946), and The Mark of Cain (1948). She made two films that, in different ways, capture some of the essence of postwar Britain: Alberto Cavalcanti's They Made Me a Fugitive (1947) (as a gangster's moll) and the stagebound Silent Dust (1948). She also appeared in Edward Dmytryk's film noir piece Obsession (1949), in which she plays Robert Newton’s faithless wife. Her final film was the spy yarn Escape Route (1952). RKO Executives, impressed with Gray, authorized producer William Sistrom to offer her a long-term contract if she would move to the United States. John Paddy Carstairs, director of The Saint in London, also thought she could be a star. However, she declined the offer and instead retired in 1952 after secretly marrying Dominick Browne, 4th Baron Oranmore and Browne and lived in County Mayo, Ireland. In the early 1960s, they returned to England and settled in a flat in Eaton Place, Belgravia, in London. They had no children. Description above from the Wikipedia article Sally Gray, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Filmography
28 credits
Café Colette
Movie • 1937
Jill Manning

Obsession
Movie • 1949
Storm Riordan

Green for Danger
Movie • 1946
Nurse Freddi Linley

They Made Me a Fugitive
Movie • 1947
Sally Connor

Dangerous Moonlight
Movie • 1941
Carol Peters Radetzky

The Saint in London
Movie • 1939
Penny Parker

Cheer Up
Movie • 1936
Sally Gray

Silent Dust
Movie • 1949
Angela Rawley

A Window in London
Movie • 1940
Vivian Zoltini

Olympic Honeymoon
Movie • 1940
Miss America

Over She Goes
Movie • 1937
Kitty

Carnival
Movie • 1946
Jenny Pearl

Saturday Night Revue
Movie • 1937
Mary Dorland

Calling the Tune
Movie • 1936
Margaret Gordon

Q Planes
Movie • 1939
Minor Role

Sword of Honour
Movie • 1939
Lady Moira Talmadge

Escape Route
Movie • 1952
Joan Miller

Checkmate
Movie • 1935
Jean Nicholls

Hold My Hand
Movie • 1938
Helen Milchester

The Mark of Cain
Movie • 1947
Sarah Bonheur

The Saint's Vacation
Movie • 1941
Mary Langdon

The Dictator
Movie • 1935
Minor Role (uncredited)

Cross Currents
Movie • 1935
Sally Croker

The School for Scandal
Movie • 1930
Woman (uncredited)

The Lambeth Walk
Movie • 1939
Sally

Mr. Reeder in Room 13
Movie • 1938
Claire Kent

Lucky Days
Movie • 1935
Alice

The Really Useful Show
TV • 1996