Mary Hayley Bell[a], Lady Mills (22 January 1911 – 1 December 2005) was an English actress and writer, married for 64 years to actor Sir John Mills. Her novel Whistle Down the Wind was adapted as a film, starring her teenaged daughter, actress Hayley Mills.
Background
Mary Hayley Bell was born in Shanghai International Settlement, Shanghai, China, where her father, Colonel Francis Hayley Bell, served in the Chinese Maritime Customs Service with postings to various Treaty Ports. Her mother was Agnes (née McGowan). Her father, a Boer War veteran, served, from 1925 to 1928, as Customs Commissioner for Kowloon (within Hong Kong, although this position had no connection with the British colonial administration). During this period Mary attended school in Hong Kong and frequently spent weekends of leisure at the Commissioner's official country bungalow near Fan Ling Golf Club.[1] The family later (1930) moved to Tianjin (then known as Tientsin). In the run-up to World War II, Francis Bell was the Defence Security Officer in Singapore in 1936 MI5. He staged a mock commando raid on Singapore's vital installations, including the naval base, where his men took control of a fuel dump, fleet of boats, and telephone exchange switchboards, in order to highlight Singapore's vulnerability to attack. This led to furious reactions from senior officials, with complaints being made to the War Office, and Bell was sacked.[2]
Acting roles
Mary Hayley Bell travelled to England to attend Malvern Girls' College and RADA.[3] Her stage debut was in 1932 in The Barretts of Wimpole Street with an American touring company in Shanghai. On the London stage, she appeared in Vintage Wine in 1934 and further West End roles followed, as well as a tour of Australia and a New York debut in 1939.[3][4] Her acting career ended on her marriage to Mills, in 1941.[3] Later in life, she had a small uncredited role as a nursing home resident in the 1993 Eric Sykes film The Big Freeze, opposite her husband.[5] She also appeared in her son's documentary Sir John Mills' Moving Memories (2000).[6]
Her 1962 novel, Far Morning, was illustrated by John Mills's niece, Molly Blake.[11]
Marriage and children
It was while living at Tianjin, China, that she first met John Mills, who was on tour at the time.[12] They next met when she was appearing in Tony Draws a Horse at the Comedy Theatre in London in 1939. She recalled an after-dinner party in Mills's dressing room after one of his performances as George in Of Mice and Men at the Apollo Theatre.[citation needed]
Mills and Hayley Bell married at Marylebone Register Office in London on 16 January 1941. Mills had a 48-hour pass from the Royal Engineers, so their honeymoon at Duke's Hotel was one night. The Mills's first home was a 16th-century cottage named "Misbourne" which they purchased in 1942 and lived at until the autumn of 1945. The survival of the marriage for the 64 years until his death on 23 April 2005 is rare in show business. Mills said that he regretted that his divorce from his first wife prevented Hayley Bell from having a church wedding. They renewed their marriage vows, sixty years after they married, at St. Mary's Church in Denham, Buckinghamshire on 16 January 2001.[citation needed]
Jonathan Mills (b. 1949) is a writer and film producer.[16]
Death
In 1975, the Mills family bought Hills House, Denham, Buckinghamshire, a 17th-century house with a four-acre (16 000 m2) garden. By 2003, it was too big and the stairs were too challenging for both Sir John and Lady Mills. They moved to a bungalow in the village in 2003. Lady Mills suffered from Alzheimer's disease and used a wheelchair in her final years. Sir John died on 23 April 2005, aged 97, in Buckinghamshire.[17] His widow died eight months later, on 1 December 2005, aged 94.[9]
^From staff records: "The Maritimes Customs – officers in Charge 1921 -1935)" and from verbal information provided by Mary Bell herself to Hong Kong Police Inspector P. A. Crush in 1968- not a good enough source; needs support from reliable published source.
^The Battle for Singapore: The True Story of the Greatest Catastrophe of World War II, Peter Thompson, Little, Brown, 2010