Times Colonist

Briton made her name in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang

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Sally Ann Howes, the British actress known best for her role as Truly Scrumptiou­s in the 1968 family musical Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, has died at 91.

“My brother and I thought Sally Ann might hold on until the Christmas screening of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang as this would have greatly appealed to her mischievou­s side,” her nephew tweeted.

Howes began her career as a child actor, appearing in Thursday’s Child after a family friend, an agent, suggested her, then the 1944 drama The Halfway House, which landed her at Ealing studios in London as a contract player.

Through her childhood, she continued working, starring in Anna Karenina, opposite Vivien Leigh, Dead of Night with Michael Redgrave and Nicholas Nickleby.

In 1958, Howes moved to the U.S. to star in My Fair Lady on Broadway, replacing Julie Andrews as the down-on-herluck Eliza Doolittle.

After going home to England for the short-lived The Sally Ann Howes Show, she returned to the U.S. and Broadway for runs in Kwamina, a revolution­ary interracia­l love story based in Africa with an almost entirely Black cast, What Makes Sammy Run? and Brigadoon at the New York City Opera.

A 1966 TV adaptation of Brigadoon, which reunited Howes with some of her Broadway cast, won five prime-time Emmy awards.

But it was Chitty Chitty Bang Bang that made Howes a household fixture, in which she played the bright, bubbly daughter of a confection­ery magnate who served as the love interest to Dick Van Dyke’s Caractacus Potts.

Of the Music Box number, during which she poses as a wind-up doll, Howes said: “It was the most difficult thing in the whole world. I really was very proud of it. I did it on the set. I was a bit nervous about it, with about 150 extras [looking on]. They put me up on this box and off I went. And I got it in one take.”

In later years, Howes returned to the stage in tours of The King &I and The Sound of Music, as well as her own one-woman show, From This Moment On.

Howes was most recently working with the Palm Beach Theatre Guild in Florida, a nonprofit dedicated to preserving the Royal Poinciana Playhouse.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Dick Van Dyke and Sally Ann Howes on the set of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang in 1967.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Dick Van Dyke and Sally Ann Howes on the set of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang in 1967.

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