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Believing that Diana would return one day to teach elocution and not continue
with her plan to become an actress, her father finally agreed that Diana
could attend the London academy full-time, instead of once a week. He had
been assured by Miss Cunningham, and by her elocution teacher, Mrs Barraclough,
that this was one area in which she shone. He had been promised by the
head of the Academy, Wilfred Foulis that she would come to no harm under
his guidance. Diana's welfare had been solemnly and sensibly confirmed
by Miss Whipp, who ran the YWCA hostel around the corner from LAMDA.
Diana left Swindon one cold January afternoon in 1946, sporting a green
suitcase and a return ticket, promising that she would return home every
weekend. Her father lectured her all the way to the station, letting her know he
was giving her her big change in life. "Failure is unthinkable", he had said,
and would occur if she did not work hard and concentrate on her studies. Mary
Fluck who, although happy that her daughter was setting out to do things she had
never had the opportunity to do, felt broken hearted. Her life was ending, for
the void Diana left would never be filled again.
On arrival at the Earls Court YWCA Diana gave Miss Whipp her blue ration
book, for being under eighteen she was entitled to extra food, which was
still rationed even though the war was over. Diana settled down to her
first night in London, and away from home, in a room with three other girls,
two of whom were also studying at LAMDA. At seven the following morning
Diana was abruptly awakened from her sleep by a loud clanging bell. Thinking
the place had caught fire, she leapt from her bed only to find - rather
like a prison - it was the waking up bell. The YWCA did not provide lunch,
only an evening meal. Diana was on a tight budget, £2 given to her by her
father, £1.50 for room and board, and the remaining 50p for her lunches
throughout the week. He apparently intended that she venture no further
than Earls Court and the acting academy each day.
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Aged 13, Diana's first pin-up photograph. Taken by the local newspaper photographer. |
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At ten, classes commenced at LAMDA, Diana presented herself there, feeling that she had begun her first steps to stardom. At fourteen Diana was the youngest full-time student the academy had ever had. As those first months went by Diana's life took a rather uniform path. Days began with the wretched bell at seven, and then there were classes where those aspiring artistes studied the art of stage make-up, improvisation, film technique, Shakespeare, the other classics, miming and fencing. There were also lessons in how to fall down dead on the floor, in various ways depending on the cause of death, and other more unusual exercises.
During these days Diana acquired an agent, The Gordon Harbord Agency. Mr Harbord called Diana to discuss a film which was being cast, Black Narcissus. She hurried to his office, heart pounding with excitement at the thought
that her chance to become a film star had arrived. Diana was so disappointed
when she did not get the role, it went to Jean Simmons, whose career at
the time was soaring high and who played the part beautifully. Having experienced
her first real set back to her ambitions, and with the wonderful optimism
of youth, she set to rebuilding her career. One of her efforts, through
the help of a newspaper photographer from the Swindon Advertiser,
resulted in an evening job, for the princely sum of one guinea an hour,
posing as a photographic model with the London Camera Club. Eventually
Diana was asked, with the strictest propriety, if she would be prepared
to remove her swimsuit. A serious discussion followed with her mother,
and as her guinea was such a help with the expense of keeping her in London,
it was decided she should do it. To Diana's astonishment the reaction from
her father was if she was prepared to pose nude for art classes then it
was entirely up to her, a reasoning of a simple father who knew in his
heart that Diana would go her own way no matter what he said.
Weeks went by, and Diana continued with her studies. The acting
exams were due at the end of the summer term, and this involved long pieces from
Shakespeare and other well known plays before an adjudicator. Peter Ustinov had
already awarded her a bronze medal the previous term, and now she was attempting
silver. The adjudicator for her silver exam was a casting director named Eric
L'Epine Smith, and having watched Diana go through her paces called her out into
the dark auditorium and told her she had won the medal with Honours. But the
best news of all was that he was casting a film called The Shop At Sly Corner
which had been a big success in a London theatre. He thought Diana would be
perfect for a small part.
Diana's head swam, she was breathless with excitement, what did it matter
that it was a small part? Anything would have suited her then, even a 'walk
on' part just so long as she could get in front of that camera in a film
studio. Eric had a warning though, they must keep Diana's age secret, for
the time being anyhow. He told her, "The producer will think I've
gone mad if I suggest such a young girl for the kind of part that this
is. You'll be able to prove your worth when we give you a screen test,
so until then pretend you're seventeen". Of course this presented
no problem to Diana who had for the last couple of years been pretending
just that.
Diana sailed through her scene, the role was that of a sexy tart, and with
the help of a few drinks earlier in the day, the effect was exactly what
was required. Her salary was fixed at £8 per day. There was only one problem,
her name. Mr L'Epine Smith tactfully suggested that Diana loose her original
surname, Fluck, 'in case some people put vulgar connotations on it'. This
lead to a somewhat heated scene in Harbord's office when her father went
to London to sign her contracts, as she was still very much a minor. Diana
was not present when these discussions took place and could only imagine
the problem it presented to Harbord. As usual, Mary Fluck came up with
the solution by announcing that Diana's grandmother's maiden name had been
Dors, and that in her opinion, two names beginning with the same letter
had a strong sound for a film star. Diana Dors it should most decidedly
be! Diana was not enamoured of the idea believing that her new name was
not glamorous.
The role in the film took exactly three days to complete, and Diana returned
to LAMDA, where everyone seemed to treat her with a certain amount of awe.
She had appeared professionally in a film. Even Wilfred Foulis viewed her
chances in a different light, for he had begun to assume the same opinion
as her father; that she was a silly young girl who didn't want to accept
responsibilities and who would probably come to a 'no-good end'. His forecast
seemed even less likely when, some weeks later, Diana received a call from
her agent to enquire if she could dance the 'Jitterbug'. There was a sequence
in a film called Holiday Camp being shot at Gainsborough Studios, and they
would pay the princely sum of £10 for the day. Could she jitterbug indeed? Diana
thought she was the best in the country, for hadn't she performed this crazy
dance every Saturday night with countless Americans at the Bradford Hall,
Swindon?
Off she went to the studios, once again revelling in the atmosphere of
the place, the arc lights, the actors and even the extras, of whom there
were dozens on the day she was called. A large crowd-call had been assembled
for the dance hall scenes in which Diana would appear. Diana was introduced
to her partner, a young actor named John Blythe, with whom she would later
appear in several films for the J. Arthur Rank Organisation. But on that
winter day in 1946 the future was some distance away, although her ambitions
were still set high and her hopes of Hollywood stardom seemed fast becoming
more than dream.
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