Peggy Cummins: Underrated Performer of the Week

 

Peggy Cummins 3Despite her unique combination of sweetness and sex appeal, Welsh actress Peggy Cummins rarely got roles that allowed her to shine. When she got her chance, though, Cummins delivered a sensational performance as sharp-shooting bad girl in the 1949 film noir classic Gun Crazy (aka Deadly Is the Female).

Born Augusta Margaret Diane Fuller in 1925, Peggy Cummins made her film debut in the now-lost 1940 drama Dr. O’Dowd. After appearing with Michael Wilding in the British class satire Her Man Gilbery (1944), Cummins caught the eye of 20th Century-Fox mogul Darryl F. Zanuck.

As part of a much-publicized star search, Zanuck brought her to Hollywood in 1945 to star in Forever Amber. The film, based on Kathleen Winsor’s bestseller, told the story of a beautiful, impoverished young woman who uses men to climb to the top of society in 17th-century England. Condemned by the Hays Office before it was even finished, the production of Forever Amber was fraught with problems. Otto Preminger replaced original director John M. Stahl. Zanuck then replaced Cummins with Linda Darnell. The official reason was that Cummins was “too young” for the part.

After appearing in a string of forgettable films, Peggy starred with John Dahl in the low-budget Gun Crazy. The tale of two young people madly in love with each other—and guns—flopped when originally released. By the 1970s, though, it had become a cult favorite with film noir fans who appreciated the sexual undercurrents and the sizzling chemistry between Cummins and Dahl.

After Gun Crazy, Cummins returned to Britain and made a handful of pleasant films, one of the best being Always a Bride (1953), where she and Ronald Squire played father-daughter con artists out to dupe unsuspecting men on the Riviera. Her most famous film of this period was the 1957 horror classic Curse of the Demon (aka Night of the Demon). Although the film justifies its sterling reputation, Cummins’s role is a thankless one as the love interest of Dana Andrews’ investigator of paranormal activities.

Peggy Cummins retired from acting in 1960. She spent most of her time living in Sussex with her husband Derek Dunnett, whom she married in 1950 (she had several well-publicized romances prior to marrying…one beau was allegedly Howard Hughes). She and Dunnett had two children. He died in 2000.

In 2006, when Elstree Film Classics screened Curse of the Demon as of the 50th Town Festival, Cummins made a rare appearance as the guest of honor. In her review of the festivities “A Night with a Demon,” Katherine Haynes described Peggy as looking “slim and elegant” and “nowhere near her age.”

Rick29 is a film reference book author and a regular contributor at the Classic Film & TV Café , on Facebook and TwitterHe’s a big fan of MovieFanFare, too, of course!

  • Mike in Oz (down under)

    I believe Fox kept the footage shot with Peggy Cummins as Amber until the ’70′s. If anyone out there has any of this footage, I for one would be most interested to view it. I think they got close to half of the film made with her as the title character. Maybe it could be posted on YouTube. If Fox still has it somewhere it would make a terrific Special Feature on a Blu Ray edition of the Linda Darnell film.

    Not all of her films before GUN CRAZY were forgettable. THE LATE GEORGE APLEY with Ronald Colman is a charming and witty comedy of manners directed by the great Joseph L. Manciewicz, who also directed her in the -difficult to see- adventure yarn ESCAPE with Rex Harrison. THE GREEN GRASS OF WYOMING was a hit family-oriented movie which was later remade as APRIL LOVE, which was arguably the lesser of the two movies. Great to know that Peggy is still fit and sharp at 87 and able to grace the Turner festival in the USA. I wish her well.

    • R.B. Armstrong

      Yes, she was very good in THE LATE GEORGE APLEY, a film I just saw recently for the first time.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=713983697 Gordon S. Jackson

    I loved Peggy Cummins in CURSE OF THE DEMON when I first saw it on the lower-half of a double bill at our now vanished Palace Theatre. I also remember seeing GREEN GRASS OF WYOMING when I was younger and liking it altho I don’t remember much about it. But GUN CRAZY is another story. I remember the ads for it when it was first released but I only caught up with it on DVD as my parents considered me too young to watch it during its original release. But when I finally did get to see it, not only was I taken with the incredible direction of Joseph H. Lewis, but the on-view sexual chemistry between Peggy Cummins and co-star John Dahl fairly snapped, crackled and popped. It’s a tough call, but I would say ‘GUN CRAZY just ever-so-slightly noses out THE BIG COMBO as Joseph H. Lewis’s alltime masterpiece. Brilliant ‘b’ movie making with a female protagonist who deserved a much more prominent and successful screen career.