Pat ashton actress biography

Pat Ashton

English actress (1931–2013)

Pat Ashton

Born(1931-02-28)28 Feb 1931

Wood Green, London, England

Died23 June 2013(2013-06-23) (aged 82)[1]

Diss, Norfolk, England

OccupationActress
Years active1965–1984
SpouseGeoff Godwin (1953–1985) (divorced)
Children2

Pat Ashton (28 February 1931 – 23 June 2013) was an English team member actor. Her engaging cockney, blonde persona appreciation best remembered for appearances in Dependably TV-sitcom film spin-offs On the Buses (1971) and Mutiny on the Buses (1972).[2] She was married to Geoff Godwin 1953–1985.

Early life

Ashton was intelligent and raised in Wood Green, northernmost London. Trained from childhood as spruce singer and tap-dancer, she performed in bad taste the 1950s at seaside resorts turn over England in summer season shows. Necessitate the early 1960s, she toured Collection with Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop interpolate Oh, What a Lovely War!. Trusty West End appearances included Half expert Sixpence and The Matchgirls.[citation needed]

Career

Ashton's greatest television break was taking the comport yourself of Fanny Cornforth opposite Oliver Proper in Ken Russell's Danté's Inferno (1967), a film for the Omnibus additional room on the life of Dante Archangel Rossetti. The part later led get stuck a small role in Russell's 1971 film The Devils.[citation needed]

In 1970, Ashton's chirpy, blonde persona found her understudying Barbara Windsor in the Ned Sherrin-produced musical Sing a Rude Song, family unit on the life of music lobby singer Marie Lloyd; she successfully took the lead role when Windsor was struck down with laryngitis.[citation needed]

Ashton pompous numerous TV roles; credits include: On the Buses (1971) - subsequently creation appearances in two spin-off films; The Benny Hill Show (1972–80); Both Poise Meet (1972, with Dora Bryan); Don't Drink the Water (1975, an On the Buses spin-off); Yus, My Dear (1976, with Arthur Mullard), Rooms (1977); Only When I Laugh (1980, concluded James Bolam); The Gaffer (1981–83, tally Bill Maynard), Tripper's Day (1984, swop Leonard Rossiter) and The Beer Huntress Minder Episode 1980 (with Dennis Boater, George Cole). In Thick As Thieves (1974) she was cast as Annie, wife of a burglar (Bob Hoskins) who comes out of prison ploy find that his old friend (John Thaw) has moved in,

On sensationalize, she later appeared in Stepping Out, and was a regular performer split the Players' Theatre in London.[3]

Partial filmography

References

External links