Elizabeth Maud Edwards Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018
Maudie Edwards was born on October 16, 1906 in Neath, Glamorgan, Wales as Elizabeth Maud Edwards. She is known for her work on Only Two Can Play (1962), Girdle of Gold (1952) and The Flying Doctor (1936). She died on March 24, 1991 in London, England.
Spoke the very first words in the UK's longest-running television soap opera Coronation Street (1960).
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Comedienne who ran her own repertory company "The Maudie Edwards Players" at her own theatre, The Palace Theatre, Swansea, and also did singing dubbing for stars in several films.
Actress
Title
Year
Status
Character
Burke & Hare
1972
Woman Passer-by
Under Milk Wood
1972
Mrs. Utah Watkins
The Doctors
1970
TV Series
Mrs. Freeman
Fraud Squad
1969
TV Series
Mrs. Chambers
Dixon of Dock Green
1962
TV Series
Mrs. Griffiths
Band of Thieves
1962
Duchess of Hartlepoole
Only Two Can Play
1962
Mrs. Edna Davies
Clue of the New Pin
1961
Barmaid
Coronation Street
1960
TV Series
Elsie Lappin
The Edgar Wallace Mystery Theatre
1960
TV Series
Barmaid
The Ugly Duckling
1959
Henrietta Jekyll
Life at Stake
1957
Mrs. Glass
The Errol Flynn Theatre
1956
TV Series
Mrs. Anna Gruttzner
The Strange World of Planet X
1956
TV Series
Pollie Boulter
Take a Powder
1953
Matron
Girdle of Gold
1952
Mrs. Griffiths
School for Randle
1949
Bella Donna
Walking on Air
1946
Pink String and Sealing Wax
1945
Mrs. Webster
Query
1945
Customer
I'll Be Your Sweetheart
1945
Mrs. Jones
The Shipbuilders
1943
Lizzie
My Learned Friend
1943
Aladdin
The Flying Doctor
1936
Phyllis
Music Department
Title
Year
Status
Character
Night and the City
1950
singing voice: Gene Tierney - uncredited
Diamond City
1949
singing voice: Diana Dors - uncredited
I'll Be Your Sweetheart
1945
singing voice: Margaret Lockwood - uncredited
Soundtrack
Title
Year
Status
Character
Night and the City
1950
performer: "Here's to Champagne" - uncredited
I'll Be Your Sweetheart
1945
performer: "Oh Mr. Porter"
My Learned Friend
1943
performer: "You do things to me"
Self
Title
Year
Status
Character
Val Parnell's Sunday Night at the London Palladium