Wendy Richard, MBE (born
Wendy Emerton 20 July 1943 – 26
February 2009
[2]) was an
English actress best known for playing Miss Brahms in
Are You Being
Served? and Pauline Fowler in
EastEnders. She was first educated
at St George's Primary School in Mount Street, West London,
[2]
before attending the Royal Masonic School for Girls in Rickmansworth,
Hertfordshire, and then the Italia Conti Academy stage school in London.
She died on 26 February 2009 at the Harley Street clinic where she was being
treated for a third bout of breast cancer.
Family and early life
Richard, an only child, was born in Middlesbrough in 1943. Her parents,
Henry and Beatrice Emerton, were publicans and ran the Corporation Hotel in
the town.
Richard left Middlesbrough as a baby, when the family moved first
to Bournemouth, then the Isle of Wight and finally to London. Here they ran
the Shepherds Tavern in Shepherd Market, where Elizabeth Taylor and Antony
Armstrong-Jones, 1st Earl of Snowdon were said to be customers. Richard
attended the local primary school, St George's, but her education was
interrupted when her family moved again, this time to the Valentine Hotel at
Gants Hill, Essex.
Another move, to the Streatham Park Hotel in south
London, followed a few months later. It was here, in December 1954, that
Richard's father committed suicide. The actress, then 11, found his body.
Her mother Beatrice never remarried, and died of liver cancer in May 1972.[2]
Richard was enrolled at the Royal Masonic School for Girls at
Rickmansworth after her father's death, as Henry had been a Freemason, and
help with fees was provided by the organisation. But she found the school
rather "strict," and her art mistress called her paintings and drawings
"affected, rather like herself."[3]
Richard dreamed of becoming a TV continuity girl or film star from a young
age and, after leaving school at 15, helped to pay her way though the Italia
Conti stage school in London by working in the fashion department of Fortnum
and Mason.[4] It was at this
time she decided to change her surname to Richard, because "it was short and
neat."[5] While at the Italia
Conti, Richard appeared on television with Sammy Davis Jr in the ATV
programme Sammy Meets the Girls, and also in No Hiding Place.[3]
|
Wendy Richard MBE |
| Born |
Wendy Emerton
20 July 1943(1943-07-20)
Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire, England |
| Died |
26 February 2009 (aged 65)
London, England |
| Occupation |
Actress |
| Years active |
1960–2009 |
| Spouse(s) |
Leonard Blach (1972–74)
Will Thorpe (1980–84)
Paul Glorney (1990–94)
John Burns (2008–2009)[1] |
Career
She first became familiar to TV audiences playing Joyce Harker, a regular
in the BBC's 1960s soap opera, The Newcomers. She has also appeared
in Dad's Army (first as Edith Parrish, and later as Private Walker's
girl-friend Shirley), Up Pompeii! and The Likely Lads. Richard
also appeared in two Carry On films, playing a cameo role in Carry
On Matron and a supporting part in Carry On Girls (which also
featured future EastEnders co-star, Barbara Windsor). In 1962, her
distinct cockney vocals also helped get her to #1 on the UK singles chart on
the single, Come Outside by Mike Sarne. She also appears in a scene
cut from the released version of The Beatles movie Help! (1965).
Richard's first appearance in a television series was as a teenager in
Stranger on the Shore which debuted in 1961. The theme tune of the
series was the Acker Bilk clarinet solo of the same name. She also had a bit
part in a 1965 episode ("Don't Nail Him Yet") of Danger Man (aka
Secret Agent) with Patrick McGoohan. Wendy Richard's first soap role was
as teenage supermarket till girl Joyce Harker in The Newcomers which
ran on BBC1 from 1965 to 1969. She is probably best known for her role in
the 1970s sitcom Are You Being Served? as Miss Shirley Brahms,
a sales representative with a heavy Cockney accent. (Richard also appeared
in the Are You Being Served? sequel Grace & Favour in 1992 and
1993.)
Richard subsequently found continued success as heroine and matriarch
Pauline Fowler on the BBC soap opera EastEnders, a role she played
from the first episode in 1985 until the character's death at Christmas of
2006. She appeared regularly on the BBC Radio program Just a Minute
from 1989 until 1994. On July 10, 2006, the BBC announced that Richard had
decided to leave EastEnders, after nearly 22 years in the show.[6]
An interview with The Sun revealed that problems with the
EastEnders storyline (primarily Pauline's marriage to Joe Macer) was the
main cause for her departure.[7]
She was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the
2000 Queen's Birthday Honours.[8]
In late 2006, Richard was seen as a guest presenter on the BBC's City
Hospital series and on March 31, 2007, she presented the documentary
A tribute to John Inman, for BBC2.
She had also given interviews for the first time in a number of years,
making appearances on Big Brother's Little Brother, Loose Women,
Parkinson and the Biography Channel special Gloria's Greats
with Gloria Hunniford amongst others.
In April 2007, Richard announced that she would be appearing in a new
role for the first time since leaving Eastenders, playing a part in a
new sitcom penned by David Croft called Here Comes The Queen. The
project came about after she personally asked her good friend Croft to write
something for her. Richard had commented that "the part is like an older
version of Miss Brahms".[9]
In September 2007, it was announced that Richard was to join the second
series of ITV1's sitcom Benidorm playing a “loud-mouthed, rude”
wheelchair-bound character.
In 2007, Richard was awarded a British Soap Award for 'Lifetime
Achievement' for her role in EastEnders.
In January 2008, adverts for The Post Office featuring Richard (as a
human cannonball) began to be shown. In February, she landed the role of
Mrs. Crump in the episode "A Pocket Full of Rye" of the Marple TV
series starring Julia McKenzie. This was to be her final role.
Personal life
During the premiership of Margaret Thatcher, Richard was a frequent and
conspicuous supporter of Thatcher's policies and accomplishments. At one
point the EastEnders script writers gave Richard a script in which
Pauline Fowler launched into a vicious tirade against Thatcher; Richard
refused to perform this sequence,[10]
accusing the script writers of using the series as a soapbox for their own
political opinions.
I
Richard was married four times. Her first marriage was to a music
publisher, her second to an advertising director. Her third marriage, to a
carpet fitter, took place in Westminster. London;[11]
Her first three marriages ended in divorce.[12]
Richard later lived with John Burns, a painter and decorator 20 years her
junior, in the Marylebone area of London. They lived together from 1996, and
married on 10 October 2008 at a hotel in London's Mayfair.[1]
She had no children.[13]
Cancer
Richard was first diagnosed with breast cancer in 1996; she had an
operation and apparently recovered. She had a recurrence of the disease in
2002.[14][15]
Her cancer went into remission after years of treatment. She was given a
clean bill of health in 2005.[15]
Articles about her departure from EastEnders suggest her health
challenges did not play any role in her decision to leave the series and
that it was because her character in the soap remarried, something she
disagreed with.[7]
Richard later said she left because of stress and that she had been
stress-free since leaving the show. She kept in touch with co-stars Natalie
Cassidy, Todd Carty, and James Alexandrou after leaving.[16]
It was reported in the Sunday Express on 5 October 2008 that Wendy
Richard had been diagnosed with breast cancer again. After seeing her
oncologist in January 2008, cancer cells were found in her left armpit.
Further investigation showed that this had metastasised to her left kidney
and bones, including her spine and left ribs.[17]
Death
Richard's agent Kevin Francis reported she had died on the morning of 26
February 2009, at the age of 65, in 'The Harley Street Clinic' in Harley
Street in the borough of Westminster, London. Her husband John Burns was at
her bedside at the time.[18][19]
Mr Francis said: "She was incredibly brave and retained her sense of humour
right to the end."[20] On the
day of her death, a remembrance programme dedicated to Richard was broadcast
on BBC One. Richard's funeral was held on 9 March 2009 at St Marylebone
Parish Church on London's Marylebone Road attended by many who have worked
with Wendy in the media industry.[21]