In 1966, Garnett had her first screen role in an
ITV Play of the Week written by
John Mortimer called
A Choice of Kings. In 1967, she joined the
Royal Shakespeare Company. As an actress, she was taken up by
Harold Pinter, who found her a part in his film
The Go-Between (1971).
Spotlight 1973 gave her height as 5 feet 8 inches and her eye colour as blue. Her mother described her as "very beautiful and deeply intelligent". In 1969, according to
Frances Spalding, she was much admired by
Cyril Connolly. In her late twenties, Garnett was living on a houseboat on the River Thames, moored by
Battersea Bridge at
Chelsea, which had been bought for her by her parents. However, her life was turbulent, the result of combining a high-spending lifestyle with having no income at all. She decided to give up acting and move to Morocco with a boyfriend, causing her father to complain "Surely she ought to get a job and get on with her profession!" At the age of 29, her life was falling apart. On an afternoon in May 1973,
David Plante and Mark Lancaster took Garnett and her two sisters, all in long dresses, out to a club, where they danced together, while the men watched. A few days later, while suffering from deep depression, Garnett drowned in the river at Chelsea. In her biography of Duncan Grant of 1997, Frances Spalding gives the view that "Amaryllis was a rare combination of character, imagination and friendliness." ==See also==