Glenda Jackson, a two-time Academy Award-winning performer who had a second career in politics as a British MP before an acclaimed late-life return to stage and screen, has died at 87.
Jackson’s agent Lionel Larner said she died on Thursday at her home in London after a short illness. He said she had recently completed filming The Great Escaper, in which co-starred with Michael Caine.
Born in 1936 in Birkenhead, northwest England, Jackson trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London. She became one of the biggest British stars of the 1960s and 70s, and won two Academy Awards, for Women in Love in 1971 and A Touch of Class in 1974.
She then went into politics, winning election to Parliament in 1992. She spent 23 years as a Labour Party MP, serving as a minister for transport in Prime Minister Tony Blair’s first government in 1997.