Pamela Stanley

[7] She appeared with Martin Harvey in Leopold David Lewis' The Bells (1933) at the Savoy Theatre, and also as Wendy in Peter Pan in 1934.

In the same year she acted in two productions by Sir Robert Atkins at the Regent's Park Open Air Theatre, where she played Titania in A Midsummer Night's Dream with Phyllis Neilson-Terry, Leslie French, and Greer Garson as an uncredited extra; in The Tempest she was Miranda to John Drinkwater's Prospero, with Leslie French as Ariel and Atkins as Caliban.

However, John Gielgud had just ended a very successful Broadway run of the same play; the critics were not impressed and the show closed after 39 performances.

Nevertheless, he found the audience very appreciative: "All around me on the first night the air hummed with pretty comments, and blasts of Isn't she sweet?

[18] She made a final appearance in a small, uncredited part in The Last Hand Grenade as the Governor's Wife.

The film, directed by Gordon Flemyng starred Stanley Baker, Honor Blackman and Richard Attenborough.

Her grandmother (Mrs. Henry Evans-Gordon) was born Mary Theodosia (May) Sartoris, and was painted several times by Frederic Leighton.

Her grandmother May in the early 1870s ( Frederic Leighton , 1870s)