Background
Baxter was born as Feodora Kathleen Alice Forde in Bremen, Germany to an Anglo-Irish naval engineer father and a German mother of noble background, Hedwig von Dieskau.
Baxter was born as Feodora Kathleen Alice Forde in Bremen, Germany to an Anglo-Irish naval engineer father and a German mother of noble background, Hedwig von Dieskau.
Feodora Forde came to London at the age of six and studied acting at the Italia Conti Academy.
Her stage career spanned half a century, and she appeared in a number of films and in television The family castle lies on the outskirts of Halle in Saxony-Anhalt. Hedwig had been lady-in-waiting to Princess Charlotte, sister of Kaiser Wilhelm World War II Feodora was named after Charlotte"s daughter, Princess Feodora of Saxe-Meiningen, who committed suicide in 1945.
She made her debut on the London stage at the age of 15 at the Adelphi Theatre in 1925 as an urchin in a short-lived musical, Love"s Prisoner.
Her breakthrough occurred in 1928 when she substituted as Peter Pan for Jean Forbes-Robertson, whom she understudied. On the advice of the play"s author, J. M. Barrie, Feodora changed her name to Jane Baxter.
She was spotted by the writer Ian Hay, who suggested her for the lead in A Damsel in Distress, a play he had written with P. G. Wodehouse. She made her screen debut in 1930 in a B-movie, Bed and Breakfast, and acted in a succession of films in the 1930s, most famously Blossom Time with Richard Tauber in 1934.
She also performed in several West End shows and in 1935 she joined the repertory company at the Liverpool Playhouse.
She had further success in London in 1937 with George and Margaret which ran for two years and in 1947 she co-starred on Broadway with John Gielgud and Margaret Rutherford in The Importance of Being Earnest, in which she played Cicely Cardew. Another classic role in 1948 was Viola in Twelfth Night at the Old Vic, directed by Alec Guinness. Baxter"s television work included plays and series such as Upstairs, Downstairs.
Her last appearance was in the documentary Missing Believed Lost (1992), in which Sir John Mills also appeared.
Jane Baxter died in 1996, four days after her 87th birthday, from stomach cancer. Jane Baxter was described by newspaper journalist Tom Vallance as "the epitome of middle-class breeding – sensible and practical, pretty rather than glamorous, with a delicate complexion.
Perfect elocution, a beaming smile and just a hint of the coquette behind the cool exterior.".