
Catherine Lacey
Acting
From Wikipedia Catherine Lacey (6 May 1904 – 23 September 1979) was an English actress of stage and screen. She made her film debut in 1938 as the secretive nun who wears high heels in the Alfred Hitchcock film The Lady Vanishes, but was credited as Catherine Lacy. She was subsequently cast in major films like I Know Where I'm Going! (1945), The October Man (1947), Whisky Galore! (1949), The Servant (1963) and The Fighting Prince of Donegal (1966), in which she played Queen Elizabeth I. In 1966/67 she played in two notable horror films, as a malevolent fortune-teller in The Mummy's Shroud and as Boris Karloff's insane wife in Michael Reeves' The Sorcerers. For the latter she won a 'Silver Asteroid' award as Best Actress at the Trieste Science Fiction Film Festival in 1968. Eight years earlier she received the Guild of TV Producers and Directors award as Actress of the Year. Her television debut, in 1938, was in a BBC production of The Duchess of Malfi; her last appearance, in 1973, was in the Play for Today instalment Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont.

Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont
Mrs. Arbuthnot

The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes
Woman in Wheelchair
Wine of India
Bee
All's Well That Ends Well
Countess of Rousillon

The Sorcerers
Estelle Monserrat

The Mummy's Shroud
Haiti

The Servant
Lady Agatha Mounset

The Shadow of the Cat
Ella Venable

Crack in the Mirror
Mother Superior

The Solitary Child
Mrs. Evans

Rockets Galore
Mrs Waggett

Innocent Sinners
Angela Chesney

The Master Builder
Aline Solness

The Man in the Sky
Mary's mother

Another Sky
Selena Prouse

Whisky Galore!
Mrs. Waggett
When The Bough Breaks
Almoner

The White Unicorn
Miss Cater

The October Man
Miss Selby

Carnival
Florry Raeburn

Pink String and Sealing Wax
Miss Porter

I Know Where I'm Going!
Mrs. Robinson
Famous Scenes from Shakespeare No. 2: Macbeth Act II, Scene 2 and Act V, Scene I
Gentlewoman

Cottage to Let
Mrs. Stokes

Castle of Crimes
Francine Rollard

Poison Pen
Connie Fateley
Marco Millions

The Lady Vanishes
The Nun







