Dame Sybil Thorndike (born Oct. 24, 1882, Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, Eng.—died June 9, 1976, London) was an English actress of remarkable versatility.
The daughter of a canon of Rochester Cathedral, she performed with Annie Horniman’s company in Manchester (1908–09 and 1911–13), and then joined the Old Vic Company in London (1914–18), where she helped to establish not only the theatre’s name as a home of Shakespeare but also her own as the most promising English tragic actress of the day. She went on to prove her versatility in a great variety of parts, modern as well as classical, comic as well as tragic (including some male parts, among them the Fool in King Lear). In 1924 she created the title role in Shaw’s Saint Joan. She was created a Dame of the British Empire in 1931.
Her superb health and vigour did not desert her in middle age. In her 60s she broke new ground, giving a whole gallery of portraits of elderly women having in common nothing but the meticulous and humorous observation which the actress had brought to their creation. In 1962 she undertook an arduous tour of Australia, and made numerous stage appearances throughout the decade, including taxing roles in The Viaduct (1966) and There Was An Old Woman (1969). She opened the Thorndike Theatre outside London in 1969.