Sister Wendy Beckett, Nun Who Became a BBC Star, Dies at 88.
'Sister Wendy Beckett, a Roman Catholic nun who interrupted a cloistered life of prayer in England in 1991 and soared to international stardom with lyrical BBC documentaries that made her one of the most improbable art critics in television history, died on Wednesday in the village of East Harling, England. She was 88.
Her death was confirmed by the Carmelite Monastery in Quidenham, England.
Bending backward in her black habit in the Vaticans Sistine Chapel, gazing up through large eyeglasses at Michelangelos The Creation of Adam, Sister Wendy spoke with a storytellers wonder at the solemn, sensuous moment on the ceiling as two fingertips near the touch that begat the creation of life.
Adams sprawled there in his naked male glory, but hes not alive, she told viewers in 1996. All he can do is lift up a flaccid finger, and out of the clouds whirls down the God of Power. In his great flying cloak theres a world. Whether thats Eve or not, theres a human face there looking straight at Adam with the eyes daring him to respond to the challenge. And Gods finger touches that of Man.
It was a magical moment of television, too. Sister Wendy was small and stooped, with a plain face, buck teeth and a slight speech impediment that rendered Rs as Ws. But her insightful, unscripted commentaries a blend of history, criticism and observations on Leonardo da Vinci, van Gogh, Botticelli, Rembrandt, Monet and other Western masters connected emotionally with millions in Britain and America.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/26/obituaries/sister-wendy-beckett-dead.html?