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Edward Underdown's father owned a Norfolk estate in the Stanford Battle area. It was here that Edward learnt and developed his riding. Before his career as an actor Edward was a gentleman jockey and rode with great aplomb both on the flat and over sticks (see references to his riding career in John Hislop's books).
The cast consists of little known professional actors, and real soldiers with speaking parts. The male leads are Edward Underdown and Ralph Clanton with Michael Trubshawe. Two supporting actors who became famous later on are Christopher Lee as a tank commander and Desmond Llewelyn as a tank gunner.
The New York Times wrote: "this Julian Wintle production often stirs up a fair amount of suspense and absorption, chiefly because of the efficient direction of Jeffrey Dell, an excellent performance by Edward Underdown, as a detective, and a painless round-up of typical British "types" in minor roles. But the scenario is a meandering affair ...
The Woman with No Name is a 1950 British drama film directed by Ladislao Vajda and starring Phyllis Calvert, Edward Underdown, Helen Cherry, Richard Burton and James Hayter. [3] In the United States it was released as Her Panelled Door. [4]
Kine Weekly wrote: "James Robertson Justice tends to overact as the cynical Jonathan and Edward Underdown is a bit too doleful as Hugh – but Valerie Hobson never loses her composure as the attractive yet calculating Alycia, and she soon rallies the team and tightens up the plot. The concluding chapters are first class theatre and tension ...
Street of Shadows, also known as Shadow Man, is a 1953 British film noir written and directed by Richard Vernon and starring Cesar Romero, Victor Maddern, Kay Kendall and Edward Underdown. [1] It is based on the 1951 novel The Creaking Chair by Laurence Meynell.
Underdown is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: David Edward Underdown (David Underdown) (1925–2009), English historian; Charles Edward Underdown (Edward Underdown) (1908–1989), English actor; Emanuel Maguire Underdown (1831–1913), English barrister, author and industrialist; Emily Underdown (1863–1947), English author
The Woman's Angle is 1952 British drama film directed by Leslie Arliss and starring Edward Underdown, Cathy O'Donnell and Lois Maxwell. [2] It is based on the novel Three Cups of Coffee by Ruth Feiner .