Dolores Mantez

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Dolores Mantez
Dolores Mantez.jpg
Mantez in UFO (1970)
Born
Dolores Brenda Mantey

17 October 1936
Died30 November 2012(2012-11-30) (aged 76)
Other namesDolores B. Harding (married name)
OccupationActress
Singer
Years active1959–70s
TelevisionUFO
Spouse(s)
Robert Harding
(m. 1976⁠–⁠1999)
(his death)
Children1 son

Dolores Brenda Harding (née Mantey; 17 October 1936 – 30 November 2012), known professionally as Dolores Mantez, was a British television actress of the 1960s and early 1970s, best known for her appearances in Gerry Anderson's science-fiction TV series UFO.

Life and career[]

Harding was born in Liverpool to a Ghanaian father and an Irish mother. She changed her birth surname of "Mantey" by one letter and initially followed a career as a seamstress in a dress shop. She then started to sing semi-professionally, an occupation that became a full-time job when she joined a group that appeared in cabaret. However, while she was visiting her agent, she happened to meet an actor's agent who believed that her exotic physical appearance was exactly what was needed for a role as a student in Sapphire (1959), a film about the emerging Afro-Caribbean community in England. At the time, Mantez had no acting experience, but her work on the film resulted in a succession of parts in television series such as Shadow Squad and The Avengers.[2] She also played a small role as a nurse in the film The Angry Silence (1960) starring Richard Attenborough.

Mantez's acting career was boosted with a role as a nurse in the film Life for Ruth (1962), co-starring Patrick McGoohan. This in turn led to appearances in two episodes of the TV series Danger Man, first as an agent working with John Drake in "Loyalty Always Pays", and then as a West Indian woman in "The Man on the Beach". She appeared as artist Rita Bell in an episode of the ABC series The Human Jungle ("The Twenty-Four Hour Man", 1964). Another of Mantez's roles was as Happy Lee, the girl suspected of Marty Hopkirk's murder in the pilot episode of the ITC series Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) ("My Late Lamented Friend and Partner", 1969). During the 1960s, Mantez appeared in a number of stage musicals; these included Cowardy Custard (the Mermaid Theatre's tribute to Noël Coward), Monty Norman's The Perils of Scobie Prilt, and the West End production of (starring Margaret Lockwood). She toured Europe, once appearing in Porgy And Bess in East Berlin. She may be best known for her portrayal of Lieutenant Nina Barry (frequently sporting a purple wig, as did all female staff on Moonbase) in the science-fiction TV series UFO, broadcast in 1970 and 1971. Her final acting role was as Indigo Jones, a mixed-race lady of means, in an episode of the BBC series The Onedin Line ("Fetch and Carry", 1972).[citation needed]

Personal life[]

In the mid-1970s, Mantez met businessman Robert Harding in a pub. They married in 1976. After their son Robert Jr. ("Robbie") was born, Mantez gave up acting. She died on 30 November 2012 following a short illness, aged 76.[3]

Filmography[]

Year Title Role Notes
1959 Sapphire Uncredited
1960 ITV Play of the Week Rosa

TV Series

1960 ITV Television Playhouse The Singer

TV Series

1960 The Angry Silence Nurse
1960–1968 Armchair Theatre Willy / Gloria Oliver

TV Series, 2 Episodes

1961 The Avengers Judith

TV Series

1961 Hurricane Jessica de Boissière

TV Series, 4 Episodes

1964 The Human Jungle Rita

TV Series

1965 Danger Man Mary Ann / Miss Sefadu

TV Series, 2 Episodes

1966 United! Caroline Hillarette

TV Series, 2 Episodes

1967 Rainbow City Schoolteacher

TV Series

1967 Z Cars Singer

TV Series

1968 ITV Playhouse Carey Ford

TV Series

1969 Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) Happy Lee

TV Series

1970 Ryan International Marie

TV Series

1970-1971 UFO Nina Barry

TV Series, 23 Episodes

1972 The Onedin Line Miss Indigo

TV Series

References[]

  1. ^ "Croydon Advertiser Latest Stories Feed |Page 20, Chan:5532549 |RSSing.com"". Croydon232.rssing.com. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  2. ^ "R.I.P. Dolores Mantez". Starburstmagazine.com. 17 December 2012. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
  3. ^ "Deaths Announcements - Telegraph: Dolores Harding". The Daily Telegraph. 30 November 2012. Archived from the original on 21 April 2013. Retrieved 30 December 2012.

External links[]

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