Norma Renault

Norma Renault (July 28, 1923 – March 3, 2012) was a singer and actress who starred in theatre and film productions in Canada and London, England, including the musical Salad Days at the Crest Theatre in Toronto.

Biography
Norma Renault was born in Toronto, Ontario on July 28, 1923. As a young woman, she sang with the Leslie Bell Singers, a female choir formed in 1939 from former pupils of Leslie Bell at Parkdale Collegiate Institute in Toronto, which became the Leslie Bell Singers in 1945. She began to act with an amateur group called the Deep River Players in Deep River, Ontario.

Renault starred in productions in Canada and London, England, including the musical Salad Days at the Crest Theatre in Toronto as well as Epitaph for George Dillon at the Grand Theatre in London, Ontario. She is mentioned for her role in The Man Who Came to Dinner along with Amelia Hall (both "beloved Canadians") who prompted bouts of audience laughter during every exchange of dialogue. "Even Nathan Cohen admitted (perhaps somewhat inscrutably) that he found the production amazing".

From 1950–1970, she worked in productions for various television shows, often for the Canadian Broadcasting Company. She appeared in four episodes of the TV series Folio (1955–1959), The Unforeseen (1958), and Festival (1960–1969) which aired on CBC Television. Renault was a cast member in the television documentary film A Further Glimpse of Joey (1961), alongside Martha Henry in the CBC television drama Talking to a Stranger (1969) and in the three part miniseries You've Come a Long Way, Katie (1981).