Nyree Dawn Porter, who died on April 10th aged 61, became a star when she was one of the popular television players used by the producer Donald Wilson to persuade a reluctant BBC to make The Forsyte Saga, the memorable 1967 series created from the novels of John Galsworthy attacking the dominance of property over humanity. The series won an audience of over 100 million in 26 countries. Nyree Dawn Porter's classical good looks, slightly wan and other-worldly, were ideal for the part of Irene Forsyte, wife of the cold "man of property" Soames Forsyte, played by Eric Porter (no relation). Her looks became known worldwide, so that for years she received often demented fan mail from people who either thought that the cold and property-conscious Soames should have been hanged, drawn and quartered for raping his beautiful but frigid wife, or sympathised with him on the grounds that Irene was herself a cold and irritating bitch.
The formidable cast with whom she had to play also included Kenneth More, who was in a career limbo at the age of 50. He played Jolyon Forsyte, cousin of Soames, who in the end runs off with Irene Forsyte.
The series, in which the character of Irene was made pivotal, was almost a non-starter. Sydney Newman, head of BBC drama, was doubtful whether a "costume" piece would appeal to popular taste in the swinging 60s. Others were equally doubtful, even if such a series were to be made, whether two people both called Porter could star in it.
In the end the actress got her big chance because of BBC politics. The 26 episodes broadcast in 1967, the centenary of Galsworthy's birth, were deliberately used by the corporation to boost public interest in the BBC 2 television channel, which had been launched three years previously. The channel needed a big, bold project and the series that made Nyree Dawn Porter's name was the most expensive BBC drama project to date.
It called for the sort of professionalism that she could provide. She had arrived in Britain from her native New Zealand in 1960, the daughter of a master butcher in Napier, and had acquired experience in New Zealand theatre companies. Some of her scenes "with" Eric Porter had to be played in his absence, with her uttering answers to questions that had not been asked, since Eric Porter had gone down with appendicitis. The last 13 episodes were being recorded when the first were being broadcast, so there was little room for error.
Of the eight million people who could receive BBC 2, six million watched The Forsyte Saga; the leading actors became household names. When the series was shown the following year on BBC 1, it was to an audience of 18 million.
Such epoch-making success in television often has a price, and it did so in the case of Nyree Dawn Porter. Before the Saga she had not experienced difficulty in getting guest appearance parts (in such series as The Saint, The Avengers and Danger Man). She could also get leading roles, making her British TV debut in the Madame Bovary series in 1964 for BBC 2, and then going on to play the title role in the television version of Hugh Walpole's Judith Paris.
But, after The Forsyte Saga, she found that the BBC usually resisted her agent's advances, calling her "our Irene", and refusing to contemplate her as anything else. She returned to the theatre, often in international tours, and in 1995 was able to boast that since playing Irene she had been round the world four times.
The truth could well have been that by the 1960s her personality and style were largely out of fashion, except for "costume drama" set in quite different eras. A quiet, church-going person, she maintained that "you don't need to strip to be sexy", a truth that was rapidly going out of circulation.
She acted for British TV in the 1980 series For Maddie With Love and in David Copperfield. But apart from fortune-telling with cards, which caused some of her friends to call her "the witch", she had fine bone structure but no flamboyant sales points in a steadily corrupting market. She also had personal tragedies: her first husband, actor Byron O'Leary, died from an accidental overdose of sleeping tablets and whisky; she and her second husband, Robin Halstead, by whom she had her only daughter, Talya, were divorced in 1987.
Although she appeared in a stage version of The Forsyte Saga as late as 1991, it was that one BBC television series in the 1960s that gives the Nyree Dawn Porter name (it means "little white flower" in Maori) a continuing resonance.
Nyree Dawn Porter: born 1940; died, April 2001