Naomi Chance
BornDecember 1927
Died18 March 2003 (aged 75)
France
OccupationActress
SpouseGuy Hamilton (1953 - before 1964)

Naomi Chance (born Naomi Freeman, December 1927 – 18 March 2003) was an English film and television actress.[1][2] Chance was at one time married to the film director Guy Hamilton.[3] She appeared in many television shows, including The Plane Makers, (Joyce Pender); five times in Compact, (Harriet Stone); The Newcomers (Amelia Huntley); once in each of the 1970s television shows, The Sweeney, (Miss. Fay Mayhew); Within These Walls, (Jean Betts); The Hanged Man; (Jane Cowley), and many others, from the 1950s onwards.

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1950Night and the CityNightclub HostessUncredited
1952Wings of DangerAvril Talbot
1952It Started in ParadisePrimrose, the modelUncredited
1952The Gambler and the LadyLady Susan Willens
1953Top of the FormNorthern Woman On StationUncredited
1953Blood OrangeGina, a model
1953The Saint's Girl FridayCarol Denby
1953Strange StoriesYoung woman
1954Dangerous VoyageJoan Drew
1954The End of the RoadMolly
1956A Touch of the SunMiss Caroline Lovejoy
1957Suspended AlibiDiana
1957Confess, KillerEdna Farsonwith Leo McKern
1958The Man InsideJane Leighton
1959Operation BullshineSubaltern Godfrey A.T.S.
1960The Trials of Oscar WildeLillie Langtry
1964The Comedy ManMinor Role
1965He Who Rides a TigerLady Cleveland

Personal life

Chance married director Guy Hamilton in 1953; they later divorced (Hamilton remarried in 1964).[4][5]

Her second husband was a retired naval surgeon, with whom she lived in Devon.

References

  1. "Naomi Chance". BFI. Archived from the original on 23 October 2012. Retrieved 28 April 2011.
  2. Hal Erickson. "The Saint's Girl Friday". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 30 January 2013.
  3. "Overview for Guy Hamilton". Turner Classic Movies.
  4. Baxter, Brian (21 April 2016). "Guy Hamilton obituary". The Guardian.
  5. — McFarlane, B. (2020, January 09). Hamilton, (Mervyn Ian) Guy (1922–2016), film director. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
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