From super-sleuth to Dame

FILE - Actress Angela Lansbury poses for photos in Sydney, Australia. Lansbury the 88-year-old actress was one of more than 1,000 people who were recognized by Britain's Queen Elizabeth II in the New Year's Honors List. For the first time since the Order of the British Empire was founded in 1917, most of them were women. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft, File)

FILE - Actress Angela Lansbury poses for photos in Sydney, Australia. Lansbury the 88-year-old actress was one of more than 1,000 people who were recognized by Britain's Queen Elizabeth II in the New Year's Honors List. For the first time since the Order of the British Empire was founded in 1917, most of them were women. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft, File)

Published Jan 2, 2014

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London - Honour, She Got.

Hollywood star Angela Lansbury, best known as the clue-collecting super-sleuth in the television series “Murder, She Wrote,” has been made a Dame of the British Empire.

The 88-year-old actress was one of more than 1 000 people who were recognized by Queen Elizabeth II in the New Year's Honours List. For the first time since the Order of the British Empire was founded in 1917, most of them were women.

Actress Penelope Keith, known to Brits as the snobbish Margot Leadbetter in the 1970s sitcom “The Good Life,”was also made a dame.

Dr. Marcus Setchell, the queen's gynecologist, who oversaw the safe delivery of her great-grandson Prince George, was made a knight.

The twice-yearly royal honours reward hundreds of people for services to their community or national life.

Sapa-AP

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