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3 - Carol White: The Bardot of Battersea
- Edited by Duncan Petrie, University of York, Melanie Williams, University of East Anglia, Laura Mayne, University of York
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- Book:
- Sixties British Cinema Reconsidered
- Published by:
- Edinburgh University Press
- Published online:
- 22 September 2020
- Print publication:
- 31 March 2020, pp 47-62
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- Chapter
- Export citation
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Summary
Although her career spanned the 1940s through to the 1980s, Carol White is best remembered for her television and film roles of the 1960s. Hailed at the time as ‘the Battersea Bardot’ in the British press, White's nickname not only suggested an analogy to the continental sex symbol but also gestured towards the actress's working-class London provenance. These two elements of her star persona sat in uneasy alliance but also exemplified some of the recurrent concerns of 1960s British culture, which in turn made her a very meaningful star of the era.
Born in 1943 and named after film star Carole Lombard (but dropping the ‘e’), Carol White came from an aspirational working-class background. Her father, a scrap metal dealer and former boxer, enrolled her at the Corona Stage Academy near to their West London home, and exercised a controlling influence over White's life. She played many minor uncredited roles as a child in a range of successful British films. These include Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949), The Belles of St Tinian's (1954), Doctor in the House (1954), Moby Dick (1956) and The Thirty-Nine Steps (1959), before the supporting role of Sheila Dale in Carry on Teacher (1959) gained White her first public recognition. The following year, she played the lead in the B-movie Linda (1960), now a lost film, and was also cast as the girlfriend of Peter Sellers's ruthless gangster in Never Let Go (1960). Continuing to build a profile for her work across British television and film in the early 1960s, White was nonetheless back in the territory of uncredited bit parts when she appeared briefly in the Beatles’ first film A Hard Day’s Night (1964).
But it was a series of roles between 1965 and 1967 that saw Carol White catapulted into stardom. This began with the part of Sylvie in Up the Junction (1965), one of a trio of young working-class women whose lives were explored in the iconic Wednesday Play. This was followed by the central role of the eponymous protagonist in another BBC single drama, Cathy Come Home (1966), before a transition to the big screen (albeit with a higher profile than before) as Joy in Poor Cow (1967).
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