Ina Skriver

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Ina Skriver
Born
Ina Merete Meincke

March 16, 1945
Sorø, Denmark
NationalityDanish
OccupationActress, model

Ina Skriver (born March 16, 1945) is a Danish-born actress and model who worked mostly in British films and television. She is now retired and lives in Somerset.

Born in Sorø, Denmark, the daughter of Johan Frederik Utke Meincke and Janine Teslack, her original name was Ina Merete Meincke.[1] She has also worked as Christina World.[2]

In 1972, Ina was working as a model through Marianne Models of Copenhagen[3] and had already begun to use the surname of her first husband, Jørgen Skriver.

In 1976 she first appeared in television drama in an episode of The New Avengers, going on to appear in several films, and played the lead in The Golden Lady (1979), working for the first time as Christina World.[4]

On 19 October 1983 she married as his second wife Thomas Ælla Godfrey Gage, a scion of the Anglo-Irish Gage family of County Kerry, gaining two step-sons and two step-daughters.[5] They settled at Withypool, Somerset.[1]

In an unusual libel case in 1984, Skriver sued the Daily Express for claiming that she had been to Balmoral with the Prince of Wales and Prince Andrew.[6]

Films[]

×′′The Professionals (TV series)′′, ′′Servant of Two Masters(1978): Jutta (as Christina World) [11]

External links[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ a b Burke's Peerage, volume 2 (2003), page 1501
  2. ^ Adrian Room, Naming Names: Stories of Pseudonyms and Name Changes, with a Who's Who (Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1981), p. 328
  3. ^ Model Ina Skriver at Model Archives of Marlowe Press, accessed 21 November 2017
  4. ^ Bowker's Complete Video Directory 2001, p. 686
  5. ^ Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage (1995), p. 500
  6. ^ The Spectator, Volume 252 (1984), p. 38
  7. ^ Rodney Marshall, Sam Denham, Piers Johnson, Avengerland Regained (2015), p. 71
  8. ^ Jay Robert Nash, Stanley Ralph Ross, eds., The Motion Picture Guide, Volume 3 (1985), p. 759
  9. ^ John Kenneth Muir, Exploring Space: 1999: An Episode Guide and Complete History (2011), p. 125
  10. ^ Screen World, Volume 34 (1983), p. 22
  11. ^ "Ina Skriver".
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