Dame Joan Ploverwright, one of Britain’s most celebrated stage and screen stars and the widow of Sir Laurence Olivier, has died aged 95.
Her career spanned 60 years and included an Oscar nomination for the 1991 film Enchanted April.
She married Olivier in 1961 after playing his daughter in The Entertainer and became a leading member of the National Theatre, which he founded.
In a statement, her family said they were “proud of all that Joan did and of who she was as a loving and deeply connected person.”
Her family said: “It is with great sadness that we inform you that Dame John Ploverwright, Lady Olivier, passed away peacefully at Denville Hall on 16 January 2025, surrounded by her family, aged 95.
“She enjoyed a long and distinguished career spanning seven decades across theatre, film and television until her retirement due to blindness.
“She cherished her last 10 years in Sussex with regular visits from friends and family, filled with much laughter and fond memories.”
They added: “With Ploverwright’s unwavering courage and her fearless determination to make the most of them, she overcame her many challenges, and she certainly did.”
Ploverwright and Olivier fell in love, and their acting partnership earned her a BAFTA nomination for the film version of The Entertainer, released in 1960.
That year, Ploverwright also won a Tony Award for her performance in A Taste of Honey on Broadway in the United States.
Her other awards included a West End Society. Drama Award – later renamed the Olivier Awards after her husband – for Philumena in 1978.
That same year, she received another BAFTA nomination for her performance in the film version of Equus with Richard Burton.
In 2014, she lost her sight and retired from the stage.