Forty five days later, on 14 April, there was much cause for rejoicing for Frank and Rosemary Christie, a British couple living on a tea plantation in in India, with the arrival of their first child, Julie Frances.
Soon, clothes are being stripped off and flesh is being pressed together in ways that are both awkward and unaffected.
Christie's breakthrough film role was in 1963.
After dual roles in 's adaptation of the novel 1966 , starring with , she appeared as 's heroine Bathsheba Everdene in Schlesinger's 1967.