Film stars are often seen as a Hollywood creation but this book explores
how British cinema developed its own culture of stardom, and how its
female stars have been prized by audiences worldwide. Female Stars of
British Cinema uses case studies of seven female stars whose careers
span the 1940s to the present day - Jean Kent, Diana Dors, Rita
Tushingham, Glenda Jackson, Helena Bonham Carter, Emily Lloyd, and Judi
Dench - to explore how British star femininities have developed over
time, and how the image of the British female star has responded to
broader social and cultural changes. These 'women in question' offer a
way into the complexities of British cinema's culture of stardom which
has sometimes espoused glamour and sometimes rejected it, and is
entangled with issues of regional, national and ethnic identity, as well
as class, sexuality and age. Exploring and investigating the variety of
British star femininities over the last seventy-five years, this book
also interrogates the omissions and absences from that same cinematic
firmament.