
In later years, Cole would repeat her performance of this now famous monologue on both the London stage and for BBC Radio.Īnother of Cole's famous roles was of bad-tempered retired photojournalist Diana Trent in the sitcom Waiting for God, which ran from 1990 to 1994. Cole performed the role of Muriel to great acclaim during the half-hour monologue "Soldiering On".
DOC MARTIN CAST SERIES
In 1988, Cole joined actresses Thora Hird, Maggie Smith, Julie Walters and Patricia Routledge in the award-winning first series of Talking Heads, featuring dramatic monologues written for BBC Television by British playwright Alan Bennett. She also appeared in a single episode of Fresh Fields as dog-trainer Mrs Robertson (1986). Cole was actually only in her early forties when she took the role playing characters much older than she actually is (notably in Waiting for God) became a hallmark of her career. Arkwright was scared of her advances and often hid when he saw her approaching the shop. Mrs Featherstone was the only rival to Nurse Gladys Emmanuel for the affections of shopkeeper Arkwright, played by Ronnie Barker (who had recommended her to play the part after seeing her in Tenko), although she was attracted to him only because she liked his stingy ways. Cole played the role of the stern, officious yet kindly doctor over three series and a one-off special between 19.ĭuring this same period, Cole also played the elderly, paranoid and morose customer Mrs Delphine Featherstone, nicknamed "The Black Widow", in the BBC comedy Open All Hours. The starkly realistic series was explicit in its portrayal of the horrific conditions and brutality faced by the women during their imprisonment, and dealt with issues such as rape, stillbirth, lesbianism, suicide, abortion and euthanasia.

One of Cole's most recognised and popular roles was of Dr Beatrice (Bea) Mason in the 1980s television series Tenko, a drama which chronicled the lives of British women in Singapore after the Japanese invasion and their consequent confinement in a Japanese prisoner of war camp. At the age of 63 she returned to the same role when the play was revived at the West End's Savoy Theatre in 2004. She made her stage debut at the age of seventeen playing the eccentric, elderly medium Madame Arcati in Noël Coward's Blithe Spirit.

She was made an OBE in the 2005 Queen's Birthday Honours.Ĭole was born in Solihull, Warwickshire, and trained at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School from 1958 to 1960 and went on to consolidate her acting skills in repertory theatres around the United Kingdom.

DOC MARTIN CAST TV
She won Best TV Actress at the 1992 British Comedy Awards for her role in Waiting For God and won Best Comedy Performance at the 2012 British Soap Awards for her role in Coronation Street. Ben Onwukwe boasts a 30-year stage career including leading roles with the RSC and the Royal Court, as well as 11 years on TV as Recall McKenzie in London’s Burning and, more recently, the role of Jackson Donckers in Professor T.Patricia Stephanie Cole OBE (born 5 October 1941) is an English stage, television, radio and film actress, known for high-profile roles in shows such as Tenko (1981–1985), Open All Hours (1982–1985), A Bit of a Do (1989), Waiting for God (1990–1994), Keeping Mum (1997–1998), Doc Martin (2004–2009), Cabin Pressure (2008–2014), Still Open All Hours (2013–2019), Man Down (2014–2017) and as Sylvia Goodwin in ITV soap opera Coronation Street (2011–2013).

Joe Absolom’s impressive TV career has barely seen him off our screens in twenty-five years: from Matthew Rose in EastEnders to Al Large in Doc Martin, Christopher Halliwell in A Confession and Andy Warren in The Bay. The 1994 feature film starred Tim Robbins and Morgan Freeman and was nominated for seven Academy Awards. However, when Warden Stammas decides to bully Andy into subservience and exploit his talents for accountancy, a desperate plan is quietly hatched…īased on Stephen King’s 1982 novella Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption, this thrilling stage production examines desperation, injustice, friendship and hope behind the claustrophobic bars of a maximum security facility. Andy strikes up an unlikely friendship with the prison fixer Red, and things take a slight turn for the better. Incarcerated at the notorious Shawshank facility, he quickly learns that no one can survive alone. THE ACCLAIMED STAGE VERSION OF THE NATION’S FAVOURITE MOVIEĭespite protests of his innocence, Andy Dufresne is handed a double life sentence for the brutal murder of his wife and her lover.
