Background
The daughter of Jeanne-Marie Langtry (1881-1964) and granddaughter of Victorian socialite actress Lillie Langtry, who was the mistress of King Edward VII of England, Mary was brought up in Poltalloch, Argyll, Scotland.
The daughter of Jeanne-Marie Langtry (1881-1964) and granddaughter of Victorian socialite actress Lillie Langtry, who was the mistress of King Edward VII of England, Mary was brought up in Poltalloch, Argyll, Scotland.
Until the age of 16, she attended the Lycée Français Charles de Gaulle in South Kensington, London.
She began her television career in 1948, having gained broadcasting experience on the radio during World World War World War II As more and more men were called up to fight, women became increasingly in demand to fill posts at the British Broadcasting Corporation. Mary Malcolm was taken on and worked for the Home Service as a continuity announcer from March 1942. With the relaunch of the British Broadcasting Corporation"s television service after the war, she worked alongside Sylvia Peters and McDonald Hobley, with the trio averaging ten days" work a month each. At this time, all television programs were introduced by an in-vision host or hostess and broadcasts were normally live.
Malcolm received no training and became known for her spoonerisms: "By the end of the day I was tired, and when I came to the weather forecast I just read it out without really trying.
My biggest fear was "drain and rizzle", which I said more than once." With the advent of commercial rival Independent Television in 1955, the British Broadcasting Corporation’s reliance on announcers diminished. Commercial breaks quickly became popular and the British Broadcasting Corporation decided audiences no longer needed a hostess to soothe them.
Malcolm left the British Broadcasting Corporation in 1956 although she continued to appear as a guest on various programs including an episode of the comedy series The Goodies. Her autobiography, Maine, was published in 1956.