In this picture, taken in 1955, Massey poses (right) with her mother, Adrianne Allen. Allen was also a well-known actor and took starring roles on Broadway in the 1930s Photograph: Bob Haswell/Getty ImagesMassey with her father, actor Raymond Massey, in London (1955). She had just made her stage debut in The Reluctant Debutante at the Cambridge Theatre. She won a Tony nomination for her performancePhotograph: Rex FeaturesAn early film role saw Massey subjected to voyeurism and torture under the eyes of Karlheinz Böhm in Michael Powell's controversial Peeping Tom (1960) Photograph: Photos 12/Alamy
Massey shared the screen with Laurence Olivier in Otto Preminger's psychological thriller, Bunny Lake is Missing (1965)Photograph: Ronald Grant ArchiveMassey married her first husband, actor Jeremy Brett, in 1958. The couple had their son, David, before they divorced in 1962 Photograph: Cleland Rimmer/Getty Images1964's Night of 100 Stars at the London Palladium. Massey dances second left, with (left to right) Susan Hampshire, Miriam Karlin, Hayley Mills and Barbara Windsor Photograph: PAMassey with Alfred Hitchcock in Covent Garden Market, 1971. She was the female lead in Frenzy, a Hitchcock thriller in which a serial killer murdered women with a necktie, which was released the following yearPhotograph: Leonard Brown/APSome of Massey's biggest roles were on the small screen. Here she plays Mrs Danvers in a 1979 BBC production of Rebecca. Her former husband Jeremy Brett played Maxim de Winter, with Joanna David (centre) as Mrs de WinterPhotograph: BBCMassey's stage work included a 1982 performance of Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest at the National Theatre. Massey played Miss Prism alongside Zoe Wanamaker (Gwendolen) and Judi Dench (Lady Bracknell). Massey was awarded the Laurence Olivier theatre award for best actress in a supporting role for her performance Photograph: Alastair Muir/Rex FeaturesMassey's other television work included appearances in The Cherry Orchard (1980), Anna Karenina (1985) and later, Tess of the D'Urbervilles (2008)Photograph: David Montgomery/Getty ImagesMassey received a Bafta for her part in BBC drama Hotel du Lac (1986), in which a romantic novelist retires to a secluded hotel after a string of failed relationshipsPhotograph: Ronald Grant ArchiveBy 1992 Massey was a regular on the Yorkshire Television comedy drama series The Darling Buds of May. She played Mlle Antoinette Dupont, seen here alongside David Jason as Pop Larkin. The show ran from 1991-93Photograph: ITV/Rex FeaturesIn 2005 Massey became Anna Massey CBE for her services to drama Photograph: Fiona Hanson/PAMassey played an overbearing, arthritic mother in the 2006 ITV drama, A Good Murder. Her character was the owner of a £2m pound house, a fact that hadn't escaped the notice of her daughter Kay and her shady boyfriend Niko ... Photograph: Sally Head Productions for Itv/BFIIn one of her last roles Massey played Miss Haxby in the TV drama Affinity. Based on Sarah Waters's novel, the show followed Margeret Prior, a young socialite who becomes enchanted by a medium during her visits as a mentor to Millbank prison Photograph: ITV/Rex Features
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