Anne Heywood Movies
While "Violet Pretty" may have been an acceptable moniker in the silent-movie days, it sounded too showbizzy to be true in the early 1950s: that's why English beauty-contest winner
Violet Pretty became
Anne Heywood upon entering films. She started out in bits in programmers like
Lady Godiva Rides Again (1951), then rose to leading-lady status in the mid-1950s in such audience pleasers as
Doctor at Large (1957) and
Upstairs and Downstairs (1959). Remaining popular in Britain throughout the 1960s, Heywood was more or less an unknown quantity to American filmgoers, except for those art-house habitues who recalled her excellent work in the pioneering lesbian-themed drama The Fox (1968). The producer of 1969's
Midas Run hoped to make Heywood a household name in the U.S. by having her appear prominently in the film's radio and TV ads together with male lead
Fred Astaire. That producer was
Raymond Stross, who happened to be the husband of
Anne Heywood. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide