From Wikipedia
Mary Elizabeth Lawson (30 August 1910 – 4 May 1941) was a
stage and film actress during the 1920s and 1930s. In addition to her
performances on stage and screen, Lawson was known for her romantic affairs,
including with tennis player Fred Perry and her future husband, the married son
of the Dame of Sark.
By the early 1930s, Lawson had established herself on the
stage as a musical comedy star, able to earn fifty to sixty British pounds a
week, and in 1933 she entered into the British film industry. Though she
eventually acted in more than a dozen films, her screen career never matched
her stage success. Her first major role was as Susie in Colonel Blood, which
starred Frank Cellier. The most successful film that Lawson had a role in was
the 1935 production of Scrooge, which starred Seymour Hicks and Donald
Calthrop. She also appeared in films that included in their cast such notable
actors as Stanley Holloway in D'Ye Ken John Peel? and Cotton Queen, Will Fyffe
in Cotton Queen, and Vivien Leigh in Things Are Looking Up, and Bud Flanagan in
A Fire Has Been Arranged. Lawson’s last film was Oh Boy! in 1938.