Maggie Smith has died

(variety.com)

398 points | by asix66 3 days ago ago

44 comments

  • jimbokun 3 days ago ago

    Maggie Smith and Michelle Dockery were brilliant in Downton Abbey. Their characters always seemed two to three steps ahead of everyone with their wit. And were hilarious to boot.

    Robert Crawley was nominally in charge of everything. But it was clear that Violet and Mary were pulling all the strings through their understanding of how the social contracts really worked. And it was fitting that in the finale Violet hands over the future of the estate to Mary.

    • astr0n0m3r 3 days ago ago

      In Downton Abbey, Maggie Smith is playing a toned-down version of the character she played in Gosford Park.

      • ttepasse 3 days ago ago

        One of my favourite movies. As an ensemble movie it get’s better with multiple viewings.

      • kitd 3 days ago ago

        Written by the same person, so kind of expected.

      • jimbokun 3 days ago ago

        Well maybe I'll have to watch that now.

        • raffraffraff 3 days ago ago

          Gosford Park? Omg, that's the only one worth watching! It has a plot. I period drama but couldn't get past two episodes of Downton Abbey. Too sugary and boring.

    • piltdownman 3 days ago ago

      If you haven't already make sure you watch Brideshead revisited.

      You have Phoebe Nicholls (who played Lady Rose's mother) and Diana Quick (Polina Molotova in The Death of Stalin and the Queen in the eponymous BBC series) doing some similar social machinations in the background of an absolutely stacked period-drama with a cast including Jeremy Irons, Laurence Olivier, and John Gielgud.

    • wrboyce 2 days ago ago

      W… what is a weekend?

  • piltdownman 3 days ago ago

    A towering presence of British stage and screen, with Dame Judi Dench being about the last of that golden generation since the passing of Diana Riggs (Olenna Tyrell).

    Time for a rewatch of Gosford Park while archly sipping gin out of a china teacup with a raised pinkie.

    • jszymborski 3 days ago ago

      I didn't know Diana Riggs died :( She really brought the Queen of Thorns to life.

      • Angostura 3 days ago ago

        One of her last pieces of work was in the excellent BBC series The Detectorists, where she played a character who was mother to her real-life daughter

      • piltdownman 3 days ago ago

        Yeah she was a big loss, a 60s bond girl and all-round sex symbol who went on to completely transcend that label and developed into a serious thespian and RSC/Old Vic stalwart. She absolutely holds her own as the Wife of Olivier's Lear.

        I'm delighted she got to work with Edgar Wright before her death and put in a great turn in Last Night in Soho; I'd a big fear she'd peter out with a few Dr.Who episodes in a fairly unceremonious end to a glittering and exremely accomplished career.

        • kitd 3 days ago ago

          One of her last roles was in the fantastic BBC comedy "Detectorists" where she played the mother of Rachael Stirling, her daughter in real life.

          There was definitely a big hole when series 2 came out without her.

  • dmd 3 days ago ago

    I saw a black cat this morning I'm pretty sure was her.

  • dcuthbertson 3 days ago ago

    She was an absolutely wonderful actress. The Washington Post also has an article announcing her death [0]. It goes into a lot of depth about her work and who she was.

    [0]: https://www.washingtonpost.com/obituaries/2024/09/27/maggie-...

  • simonbarker87 3 days ago ago

    For her passing to make the front page of HN when she has no presence in the tech world really speaks to her impact. I imagine very few people would reach that level. Wonderful actress, she was the best character in Downton.

    • jedberg 3 days ago ago

      This is a really good point. Unless there is some tech angle these things don't usually make HN.

      I wonder how much of it has to do with the overlap between tech nerds and Harry Potter nerds.

    • tsujamin 3 days ago ago

      Don’t forget The First Wives Club! RIP

  • gennarro 3 days ago ago

    Sorry to see this, she's been an absolute legend over the years. She was always great even when I didn't think I would love the show or movie.

  • noefingway 3 days ago ago

    Truly one of the greatest actors of all time. For those of you that haven't seen this, I strongly recommend watching this show. Just a group of ladies having tea and a chat. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt7363336/

  • throw0101d 3 days ago ago
  • workingdog 3 days ago ago

    I don't think you can understand the 1960s without seeing her glorious movie, The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie

    It captures the tension of social norms and rebellion and, if one pays attention, the natural consequences of unbridled enthusiasm.

    Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CXA0N55c3iw

    • frereubu 3 days ago ago

      Showing my age a bit here, but when I think of her this film is always what I'm reminded of. That phrase "I am Miss Jean Brodie... and I am in my prime" in her frightfully posh Scottish accent rattles around my head quite a bit for some reason.

      I've always thought of her as being well-known, but apparently it was Downton Abbey that really made her properly famous, which she didn't really like: https://x.com/lewispringle/status/1839680373774581849

    • cafard 3 days ago ago

      But the book and movie are set in the 1930s, though I guess 1930s through a 1960s sensibility.

    • jonjacky 3 days ago ago

      I think her character Prof. McGonagall in the Harry Potter movies drew heavily on her much earlier role as that other Scottish school teacher, Jean Brodie.

    • whamlastxmas 3 days ago ago

      Lovely, thank you for sharing!

    • udkl 3 days ago ago

      > I don't think you can understand the 1960s

      I think the same of "The Graduate (1967)" - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6cKafIqhEvk

      Note - this is not a movie she is in.

  • IanKerr 3 days ago ago

    She was excellent at whatever she was in. An absolute icon of cinema. RIP Maggie Smith.

  • junon 3 days ago ago

    If you haven't seen it already, check out "Tea with the Dames". It's great, and I'd assume one of the last things Dame Maggie Smith was in.

  • TMWNN 2 days ago ago

    The only person in history to win an Oscar while portraying an Oscar nominee. <https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/news/...>

  • mandibles 3 days ago ago

    Rest in peace to one of the true greats.

    My favorite line from Downtown Abby: "What's a week end?"

  • thoughtpalette 3 days ago ago

    I'll never forget her in the Hook VHS I had growing up. RIP

  • penguin_booze 3 days ago ago

    The Lady in the Van cuts a lot of onion for me. RIP.

    • eszed a day ago ago

      I was fortunate enough to see her in that on stage. She and Nick Farrell were on top form. It's a highlight.

      I shed real tears when I saw that she had passed. The other week, with James Earl Jones, as well. We're losing a generation of actors with real, deep roots in theatre, who then adapted to TV and cinema as those media matured. They're a bridge generation, and their experience will not be replicated. The profession and the culture are the poorer for their loss.

  • gumboshoes 3 days ago ago

    Peace to a good one.

  • asix66 3 days ago ago

    I will add "The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel" to another good movie she was in, along with an excellent cast.

  • vr46 3 days ago ago

    Excellent on stage in A German Life, even when the writing wasn't up to her acting. And the Lady In The Van!

    RIP Maggie Smith

  • saucymew 3 days ago ago

    Maggie Smith's character in both Abbey and HP brooked no BS. We're reaching the time now when more of the Harry Potter teachers are leaving this world, I am not looking forward to the students.

    • TheNewsIsHere 2 days ago ago

      This is a striking and sobering comment, sauceymew.

      We’ll be lucky to live that long, and sorry to see them fall.

      (Edit: s/fail/fall)

  • jl6 3 days ago ago

    Big boots to fill if they go ahead with the Harry Potter TV series.

  • ilrwbwrkhv 3 days ago ago

    One of the best artists of stage and cinema. Will miss her.

  • killingtime74 3 days ago ago

    What a life well lived. 89 is a great age