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(CLOSED) MT JULIET HEALTH CARE (MOUNT JULIET, TN) Detailed Hospital Profil hospital-data.com | Ed Harmer, O.D. | Dry Eye Specialist New Jersey omnieyeservices.com | Cancer Research Fund: Frank Harmer Memorial 10k Road Race... pcrf.org.uk | Campus - Cool Springs - Mount... nashvillemedicalgroup.com |
Juliet Harmer (born 11 May 1943 [1]) is an English actress who was best known in the role of Georgina Jones in the BBC TV series Adam Adamant Lives! (1966-7).
[edit] Early careerJuliet Harmer was a primary school teacher and artist who began acting on television in the mid 1960s, appearing in such series as Emergency - Ward 10, Danger Man and Slim John. She played Jill Manson, the nominal headmistress of a deserted school in the village of Little Bazeley-on-Sea in the first episode of the fourth series of The Avengers (ABC, 1965) in which Diana Rigg appeared as Emma Peel [2]. [edit] The PeachesIn 1963 Harmer starred in Michael Gill's short film, The Peaches, written by his wife, Yvonne Gilan, which was shown at the Cannes Film Festival in 1964 [3]. This fantasy about a beautiful young woman's sensual passion for peaches was narrated by Peter Ustinov and included a minor role for Gill's son, Adrian, subsequently the journalist and critic A. A. Gill. [edit] Adam Adamant Lives!The original choice for the role of Georgina Jones in Adam Adamant had been Ann Holloway (later known as Karen Glover in the comedy series Father, Dear Father), who played the part in an untransmitted pilot in April 1966. However, Holloway’s performance was deemed "not to fit the series" [4] and Harmer was cast at short notice from some 300 applicants. She did not even have a screen test and admitted over twenty years later that she had answered affirmatively when asked if she could ride a motor scooter, whereas, in fact, she could not [5]. [edit] Harmer as Georgina JonesGeorgina Jones was a trendy Mod who dressed in the fashionable styles of the mid 1960s. She befriended Adam Adamant, an Edwardian adventurer, played by Gerald Harper, who had been frozen in time in 1902. His return to life in "Swinging London" was the signal for a succession of new adventures, in which Georgina, whom Adamant habitually referred to as "Miss Jones" and failed initially to comprehend, was usually in tow. As Harper put it in 2006, "if you have Adam Adamant from 1902 presented to Georgina who is wearing a mini-skirt which to him is appalling, you immediately have a confrontation and it’s amusing" [6]. In an interview with Russell Twisk for the Radio Times in August 1966 [7], Harmer was described as "the Girl from Adam Adamant". The article emphasised that Harmer sometimes used clothes from her own wardrobe for the part of Georgina Jones, thus pitching her as a trend setter in her own right. Harmer reflected in 2006 that most of her fan mail had been from 14 or 15 year old boys [8]. [edit] Adam Adamant in retrospectThere were 29 episodes of Adam Adamant, spread over two series (1966-7), but, although the show, produced by Verity Lambert, acquired something of cult following that lasted for many years, it did not achieve the heights, in terms of ratings, overseas sales or critical success, that the BBC had hoped for. Lambert regarded it in retrospect as a failure, while reflecting that it had possessed essentially all the same ingredients as the highly successful Avengers [9]. A third series was considered, but never commissioned. Harper recalled Harmer as "a kooky, curious girl, but utterly beautiful and very nice" [10]. The two met again at Pinewood Studios forty years later as part of a documentary film [11] to accompany the release on DVD of the 17 surviving episodes of Adam Adamant. [edit] Other workHarmer married actor William Squire (1916-89) in 1967. After Adam Adamant, she appeared in episodes of a number of other television series, including Department S (1969-70), Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) (1970), The Persuaders! (1971) (as a briefly recurring character named Prue) , Bless This House (1971) and Jason King (1972), a "spin off" of Department S. Films included Quest for Love (1971), a science-fiction romance based on a story by John Wyndham; Carry on Matron (1972), in which she had a walk-on part; and Paris by Night (1988). Harmer published several books, including children's stories and an illuminated manuscript celebrating the healing properties of herbs and flowers. [edit] Notes
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