[1] He performed monologue, satires, revue sketches, vignettes and in musical theater; was also known as a great tango dancer, partnering Loda Halama and her sister Zizi in a hit musical review Tysiąc pięknych dziewcząt (A thousand beautiful girls) and performing with Stanisława Nowicka, "Queen of the Tango."
In Poland his film appearances included Uwiedziona, Krzyk w nocy, O czym się nie mówi, Głos Serca, Antek Policmajster, Jaśnie pan szofer, and Jego wielka miłość.
After the war he returned to Poland where he performed in 1947, first in Kraków, then in Warsaw, as star of the first post-war Polish vaudeville (written by Julian Tuwim): Żołnierz królowej Madagaskaru (Soldier of The Queen Of Madagascar)).
Priscilla was born on May 19, 1924, in Dunfurline, near Edinburgh, Scotland, the daughter of physician parents Dr. Robert Muir MacGregor and Dr. Phyllis MacGregor-Brown.
During WWII she volunteered for duty with the British military and was detailed to the FANYs (First Aid Nursing Yeomanry), with further assignment to the elite SOE (Special Operations Executive) group.
She traveled with him to assignments at the Pentagon, The Defense Language Institute in Monterey, California, and the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island.