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BOOKS | BIOGRAPHY | FILMOGRAPHY | GALLERY | MARY ON TV | NEWS | GUEST BOOK |
ESKIMO NELL (1974) Directed by Martin Campbell Mary's big screen debut, in a tiny uncredited cameo, as a stripping traffic warden! |
EROTIC INFERNO (1975) Directed by Trevor Wrenn Appearing under her married name but in a much bigger role than her previous film, Mary features as a randy lesbian stable girl named Jane. |
I'M NOT FEELING MYSELF TONIGHT (1975) Directed by Joe McGrath Uncredited again, Mary appears briefly as a nymphomaniac lured into a road digger's tent for a bit of slap and tickle! |
INTIMATE GAMES (1976) Directed by Tudor Gates Mary plays a virginal church singer who enjoys an innocent grope from a choirboy. Her film co-stars other 1970's goddesses, Suzy Mandel, Anna Bergman and Heather Deeley. |
KEEP IT UP DOWNSTAIRS (1976) Directed by Robert Young As Polly the saucy scullery maid, Mary is the focus of most of the sexual interest in this naughty 'Upstairs, Downstairs' spoof set in 1904. The film's cast is headlined by Diana Dors. |
PRIVATE PLEASURES (1975) Directed by Paul Gerber A feature-length hardcore movie filmed in Sweden under the original title I Nod Och Lust. In the British release most of Mary's bisexual threesome scene, featured toward the end of the film, was removed. |
COME PLAY WITH ME (1977) Directed by George Harrison Marks The film that made Mary Millington a star! The longest running movie in British cinema history, Come Play With Me ran in London's West End for nearly four years from 1977 to 1981. The film - a saucy comedy set in a health farm in Scotland - broke cinema box office records throughout the UK and went on to become one of the most profitable movies of the decade. The drawing of Mary as a naughty nurse on the film poster became one of the defining images of 1970's cinema in the UK. |
THE PLAYBIRDS (1978) Directed by Willy Roe The Playbirds ("A murder thriller with thrilling bodies") marked the beginning of Mary's association with director Willy Roe, who went on to direct her in two more (inferior) movies. Here she plays a policewoman, WPC Lucy Sheridan, on the trail of a seedy pornographer played by Alan Lake. Despite the film's downbeat ending, it was a huge success at the British box office. |
WHAT'S UP SUPERDOC? (1978) Directed by Derek Ford An unmemorable throwaway role for Mary as a blonde temptress. Her scene lasts just a few seconds which is a pity because What's Up Superdoc? is a superior British sex comedy. The movie stars Harry H. Corbett. |
CONFESSIONS OF THE DAVID GALAXY AFFAIR (1979) Directed by Willy Roe Mary is reunited with Alan Lake in this turgid tale of sex and astrology. She stars as the unfortunately named Millicent Cumming, who despite hundreds of lovers, has never achieved orgasm during sex. The film was re-titled Star Sex for its reissue in 1980. |
QUEEN OF THE BLUES (1979) Directed by Willy Roe The last of Mary's films to be released in her lifetime, Queen of the Blues features Mary as a night-club stripper. The movie was still on release when she tragically killed herself in August 1979. |
THE GREAT ROCK 'n' ROLL SWINDLE (1979) Directed by Julien Temple Mary's greatest moment in the best film of her career. Unfortunately she did not live to see the film's huge international success. The movie charts the rise and fall of notorious punk rock group The Sex Pistols and their manager Malcolm McLaren. Mary stars as herself in an amusing sequence set at the Moulin Cinema (where Come Play With Me enjoyed its record-breaking run) alongside Pistol's lead guitarist Steve Jones and the incomparable Irene Handl. |
MARY MILLINGTON'S TRUE BLUE CONFESSIONS (1980) Directed by Nick Galtress A tribute, of dubious taste, to Britain's foremost sex symbol. The mixture of archive clips, interviews, out-takes and imagined 're-creations' of Mary's life attempts to tell her life story. Loved and loathed in equal quantities by fans, the film was a massive hit. |
MARY MILLINGTON'S WORLD STRIPTEASE EXTRAVAGANZA (1981) Directed by Roy Deverell A nasty piece of sexploitation produced by the infamous John M. East. Excerpts from Queen Of The Blues are cobbled together with footage of a striptease competition. The film is compered by comedian Bernie Winters (who later regretted his involvement in the project). |
Film reviews by Simon Sheridan. No right to reproduce words or images without the express written permission from the author and FAB Press.
BOOKS | BIOGRAPHY | FILMOGRAPHY | GALLERY | MARY ON TV | NEWS | GUEST BOOK |