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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Richard Evans

Angela Mortimer obituary

Angela Mortimer holding the Venus Rosewater Dish after her victory at Wimbledon in 1961.
Angela Mortimer holding the Venus Rosewater Dish after her victory at Wimbledon in 1961. Photograph: Smith Archive/Alamy

Angela Mortimer, who has died aged 93, was one of only four British players to have won Wimbledon since the second world war. The odds on this shy young woman emerging from the backwaters of Devon to succeed on the international sporting stage were as remote as the swathes of Dartmoor she used to roam as a child.

But, having survived trying to dig up an unexploded bomb she found on the moor as an eight-year-old, “Mort” as she became known in the tennis world, battled all manner of adversity until she was able to beat Christine Truman in the Wimbledon final of 1961.

On that rainy day, lady luck finally rode with this doggedly persistent performer as she fought back from a set and a break down against Truman after her teenage opponent had taken a heavy fall when leading 6-4, 4-3 and 30-40 on Mortimer’s serve.

Thrown out of her lanky stride, Truman lost her rhythm and her more experienced opponent was able to close out victory 7-5 in the third set – a victory that would have seemed laughable when she was sent packing from Arthur Roberts’s coaching session in Torquay at the age of 15.

Ignoring the fact that Torquay was a two-hour bus ride from her home in Plymouth and that Roberts had been advertising tennis coaching for children of 12 and under, Angela insisted on a trial. After a few shots, Roberts was less than impressed. “You don’t have a clue how to hit the ball,” he said. “You’re 15, which is too old to learn how to play tennis and you live miles away. Go home and forget about tennis.”

Not many teenagers would have survived the cruelty of that assessment, but Mortimer’s mind was made up. She was going to become a tennis player. A year later, she went back to Torquay and an amazed Mr Roberts assigned her to a wall. “Hit against that,” he said. “You can’t do much harm there.”

Eventually the tough but dedicated coach – who went on to help Sue Barker win the French Open – saw that Mortimer’s total obsession with the sport might enable her to overcome initial technical deficiencies and he ended up becoming her coach, mentor and number one supporter.

There is no doubt that partial deafness worked in Mortimer’s favour as she pursued her single-minded ambition. Much of the social whirl passed her by and she was happiest following her own private dreams on a tennis court. Inadvertently she made enemies along the way because some took offence at her off-hand manner, often the simple result of not having heard what they said.

Mortimer was born in Plymouth. Her father, John, worked in property while her mother, Florence (nee Beard), who liked tennis tea parties, looked after Angela and her older sister Jenefer. Once Angela was released from the wall and allowed to practise with other players at Roberts’s school, she progressed rapidly as a solid baseline player and was able to win a round at Wimbledon in 1951.

Two years later she was selected for Britain’s Wightman Cup team against the US – the women’s equivalent of the Davis Cup in those days – and soon became the top ranked player in the country.

It was not until that point that Mortimer, having been taken ill just before the British Hard Court Championships at Bournemouth, discovered her hearing problem. “Only then did I understand the reason I had been able to concentrate so intensely on court, shutting out every noise except the sound of the ball on the racket,” she said. “I had not been able to hear any other noise. For years I had been growing gradually deaf.”

Mortimer fought that adversity in the same manner that she handled other setbacks, including the trip to Egypt that left her feeling weak for months with a stomach virus. She was still far from fit when she battled her way through to the final of the French Championships at Roland Garros in 1955.

It was a suffocatingly hot day and, as the match neared the two-hour mark, she wondered how long she could continue. Then she heard the umpire call for a brandy for her opponent, the American Dorothy Knode, and the knowledge that her rival was suffering too spurred her on to a memorable 2-6, 7-5, 10-8 victory. Afterwards the French Tennis Federation held a champagne party in her honour. But Angela was not there. Exhausted, she had gone to bed.

By then all doubts about her ability to become a top player had vanished and, on her first visit to Australia in 1958, Mortimer added the Australian crown to her growing list of titles. When she won Wimbledon in 1961, only 14 years had elapsed since Roberts had told her not to bother with tennis. A year after her ultimate triumph she retired from full-time competition and, in 1967, married John Barrett, the former British Davis Cup captain, author and long-time BBC commentator at Wimbledon, thereafter using the name Angela Mortimer Barrett.

The ultimate irony, perhaps, was that Angela spent the remaining years of her life living in Kingston upon Thames in total marital harmony with a member of the fourth estate. Partially because of her shyness, she had always shunned publicity and had spent the day before her Wimbledon final barricaded in a relative’s house, refusing to answer the pleas of the baying reporters camped outside.

As those admitted into her confidence were quick to realise, Mortimer valued her friends and was deeply appreciative of the wide world that tennis had offered her. But, for a public figure, she was a very private person.

She was made MBE in 1967.

Mortimer is survived by John, and their children, Michael and Sarah Jane.

• Florence Angela Margaret Mortimer Barrett, tennis player, born 21 April 1932; died 25 August 2025

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