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  1. Dorothy Renée Ascherson (19 May 1915 – 30 October 2014), known professionally as Renée Asherson, was an English actress. Much of her theatrical career was spent in Shakespearean plays, appearing at such venues as the Old Vic, the Liverpool Playhouse, and the Westminster Theatre.

  2. Actress: Miss Marple: A Murder Is Announced. A beautiful and durable actress of screen, stage and television, Asherson was born Renée Ascherson in London (dropping the "c" early in her acting career), the younger daughter of Charles Ascherson, a businessman and bibliophile of German-Jewish extraction, and his second wife, Dorothy Wiseman, who ...

    • January 1, 1
    • Kensington, London, England, UK
    • January 1, 1
    • Primrose Hill, London, England, UK
  3. Actress: Miss Marple: A Murder Is Announced. A beautiful and durable actress of screen, stage and television, Asherson was born Renée Ascherson in London (dropping the "c" early in her acting career), the younger daughter of Charles Ascherson, a businessman and bibliophile of German-Jewish extraction, and his second wife, Dorothy Wiseman, who ...

    • May 19, 1915
    • October 30, 2014
  4. 6 de nov. de 2014 · Of unblemished beauty and coquettish grace, Renée Asherson, who has died aged 99, was a most delightful figure on the English stage. She rose quickly to playing opposite Gielgud and Olivier, as...

    • Simon Farquhar
  5. 1. The Others (2001) PG-13 | 104 min | Horror, Mystery, Thriller. 7.6. Rate this. 74 Metascore. In 1945, immediately following the end of Second World War, a woman who lives with her two photosensitive children on her darkened old family estate in the Channel Islands becomes convinced that the home is haunted.

  6. Descubre todas las películas de la filmografía de Renée Asherson. De sus inicios hasta el final de sus 56 años de carrera.

  7. www.thetimes.com › article › renee-asherson-slptz8zz8djRenée Asherson - The Times

    Renée Asherson. Her passion was undoubtedly for the theatre, but Renée Asherson is still most affectionately remembered as the princess of France in Laurence Olivier’s 1944 film of Shakespeare’s Henry V. With her.