In 1953, Harris won a New Zealand Government Drama Bursary, which allowed her to study for two years at the Northern Theatre School in Bradford, under Esmé Church.[4][5] A fellow student was Edward Petherbridge, and the two married in 1957.[6] They divorced in 1980.
Career
Petherbridge acted in weekly and fortnightly rep with companies including Lincoln Theatre Rep and Ipswich Rep (under director Peter Coe), playing Alison in the first out-of-London production of John Osborne'sLook Back in Anger in August 1957.[7] She also played the title role in The Diary of Anne Frank at Ipswich Rep early in 1958, again directed by Coe,[8] amongst other plays. In 1958, Petherbridge (with her husband) returned to New Zealand to spend eighteen months touring with the New Zealand Players under Stafford Byrne. She played the lead, Clarissa Hailsham-Brown, in Agatha Christie's The Spider's Web,[9] and Gwendolen Fairfax in Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest.[10] Edward Petherbridge played Algernon Moncrieff in this production, and Stafford Byrne's wife, English actor Barbara Leake, played Lady Bracknell. Both shows toured the country during 1958-59, following which the Petherbridges performed with the NZ Players Drama Quartet,[11] giving 150 performances for schools during 1959, one of which Edward recalls in his autobiography.[12]
The Petherbridges returned to England, where Louise later gave birth to their son David, and continued her career, including a brief period working for Noël Coward. She returned to New Zealand in the mid 1970s, after she and Edward separated, divorcing in 1980. She had a long and outstanding career as an actor, producer, writer/deviser and director in New Zealand.
1974: Played Katherine Mansfield in Brian McNeill's The Two Tigers (Fortune Theatre at the Athenaeum, director Murray Hutchinson). "Louise Petherbridge gave quite a superb performance as Katherine. So fluid in speech and movement, she was delicate or brave as required..."[21]
1978: Director/artistic director, Orlando, an adaptation of Virginia Woolf's novel (John Drummond composer, Shona Dunlop choreographer) for Dunedin Dance Theatre as a contemporary masque, encompassing music, dance and drama. At Playhouse Theatre, Dunedin. "We do not presume to interpret Virginia Woolf's brilliant novel entire. This is simply a montage inspired by it."[24]
1981: Director/co-creator While Grandmother Played Bridge for Dunedin Dance Theatre, at Dunedin Teachers College Auditorium, choreographer Shona Dunlop. Inspired by a short story by the Austrian emigre Dr Nicholas Zisserman, it sought to recreate the mood in Austria prior to and during the Nazi takeover as perceived by the young Nicholas.[25] Performers included Petherbridge's son David as Young Nicholas, Honor McKellar, Jan Bolwell, Terry MacTavish, Carol Brown and others.
1982: Actor/script commissioner, The Perfumed Business Woman by Brian McNeill (playwright) and John Drummond (composer), Fortune Theatre, Dunedin, director Anthony Richardson. A solo play about Mata Hari.[27]
1991: Director/deviser, with Edwin Carr (music), Coup De Folie, a piece about NZ writer and teacher Sylvia Ashton-Warner (played by Terry MacTavish). Manhattan Theatre, Dunedin. Choreography by Shona Dunlop.[28]
Petherbridge made some film and television appearances. Short films include Cake Tin (2006), directed by Rosemary Riddell[30] and Dream-Makers (1992), written and directed by Robert Sarkies.[31]
Petherbridge appeared in two episodes of Beyond the Law for TVNZ, in one of which she played con-artist Amy Bock, aka 'Percy Redwood'.[citation needed]
Death
Petherbridge died at her home in Dunedin, on 18 January 2024, at the age of 92.[32]
^"Huxley's Drama". paperspast.natlib.govt.nz. 24 November 1949. Retrieved 27 July 2021.
^"This New Zealander has no illusions". The Stage (UK). 20 March 1958. p. 14.
^Lang, William (15 February 1954). "Actors learn their art at a Bradford school". The Yorkshire Post and Leeds Mercury. p. 7.
^"Petherbridge, Louise Durant, 1931-". Petherbridge, Louise Durant, 1931- | Items | National Library of New Zealand | National Library of New Zealand. Retrieved 28 July 2021.