Jane Mallett

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Jane Mallett (April 17, 1899 – April 14, 1984) was a Canadian actress.[1] She was born as Jean Dawson Keenleyside in London, Ontario, Canada.

Career

Her films included Love at First Sight with Dan Aykroyd, The Sweet and the Bitter, The Yellow Leaf, Nothing Personal, and Improper Channels. She was a stalwart on CBC Radio from the 1940s to the 1970s, working with such notables as Andrew Allan, John Drainie, and Barry Morse. She was most noted for Travels with Aunt Jane, a 1974 CBC Radio comedy series in which she portrayed the character of "Aunt Jane", an unmarried woman who travelled across Canada to visit her relatives.[2] Television producer Jack Humphrey also created a pilot for a television version of Aunt Jane in 1977,[3] but the show was not picked up to series.

Mallett's stage career included performances with the

Stratford Festival of Canada
.

She was named a

Member of the Order of Canada in 1975.[4] In 1976, she was a recipient of ACTRA's John Drainie Award.[5]

Following her death in 1984, she was posthumously celebrated in Toronto by the naming of a theatre in her honour at the St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts.[6] The Jane Mallett Theatre is a 498-seat venue, an intimate environment with superior sight lines and exceptional acoustics. Staffed by professional technicians and equipped with a lighting grid and unique fly system, the semi-circular thrust stage is ideal for concerts, theatrical productions as well as the most demanding high-tech audiovisual presentations.

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1967 The Sweet and the Bitter Mrs. MacDonald
1971 The Megantic Outlaw Morrison's mother
1974 Sweet Movie Mrs. Alplanalpe
1977 Love at First Sight Grandma
1980 Nothing Personal Little Old Lady
1981 Improper Channels Burger King Lady
1983 Utilities Dr. Martha (final film role)

References

  1. ^ "Jane Mallett dies". Calgary Herald, April 16, 1984.
  2. ^ "Radio's a laugh with Aunty Jane Mallett". Windsor Star, July 6, 1974.
  3. Saskatoon Star-Phoenix
    , February 25, 1977.
  4. ^ "62 named to Order of Canada". Edmonton Journal, June 28, 1975.
  5. ^ "It's a clean sweep for CBC shows in ACTRA Awards". Calgary Herald, April 22, 1976.
  6. ^ "Theatre named after Jane Mallett". The Globe and Mail, November 8, 1984.

External links