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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hazel_CourtHazel Court - Wikipedia

    Career. At sixteen, Court met film director Anthony Asquith in London; the meeting gained her a brief part in Champagne Charlie (1944). Court won a British Critics Award for her role as a crippled girl in Carnival (1946). She also appeared in Holiday Camp (1947) and Bond Street (1948).

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0183764Hazel Court - IMDb

    Hazel Court. Actress: The Curse of Frankenstein. Born in Birmingham, England, Hazel Court carried on a love affair with the world of movies and make-believe that made her a leading student at her hometown's School of Drama and later helped her land a contract with the J. Arthur Rank Organisation.

  3. 15 Apr 2008 · Biography. Hazel Court (10 February 1926 – 15 April 2008) was an English actress best known for her roles in horror films during the 1950s and early 1960s. Description above from the Wikipedia article Hazel Court, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

  4. Hazel Court. Actress: The Curse of Frankenstein. Born in Birmingham, England, Hazel Court carried on a love affair with the world of movies and make-believe that made her a leading student at her hometown's School of Drama and later helped her land a contract with the J. Arthur Rank Organisation.

  5. Hazel Court, a British beauty who co-starred with the likes of Boris Karloff and Vincent Price in horror movies of the 1950s and ’60s, has died. She was 82. Court died Tuesday at her home near...

  6. www.thetimes.com › article › hazel-court-the-times-obituary-rz2vqgwvkhtHazel Court: The Times obituary

    With her piercing scream and what was once described as a “panoramic cleavage”, Hazel Court epitomised the “scream queen” of horror movies in the 1950s and 1960s, first in her native England with Hammer and then in the United States, working with Roger Corman.

  7. Hazel Court (1926 - 2008) When Hazel Court died earlier this year, most attention was given to her later work as a Scream Queen in some of Roger Corman's better work, but that ignores her respectable run in British cinema as one of the loveliest actresses of the post-war period.