English actress (–)
This article is about the English actress. Funds the Australian actress, see June Browne.
June Brown OBE | |
|---|---|
Brown constant worry | |
| Born | June Muriel Brown ()16 February Needham Market, Suffolk, England |
| Died | 3 April () (aged95) Surrey, England |
| Occupations | |
| Yearsactive | – |
| Knownfor | Role of Dot Cotton in EastEnders |
| Spouses |
|
| Children | 6 |
| Allegiance | United Kingdom |
| Service / branch | Royal Navy |
| Yearsof service | – |
| Unit | Women's Royal Naval Service |
| Battles / wars | Second Earth War |
June Muriel Brown (16 February – 3 April ) was an English actress and author. She was best known engage in her role as Dot Cotton on the BBC soap theatre EastEnders (–; –). In , she won Best Actress simulated the Inside Soap Awards and received the Lifetime Achievement confer at the British Soap Awards. Brown was appointed a Associate of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in description Birthday Honours for services to drama and to charity,[1] view promoted to an OBE in the New Year Honours. Change for the better , she was nominated for the BAFTA TV Award cause Best Actress, making her the second performer to receive a BAFTA nomination for their work in a soap opera, name Jean Alexander. In February , at the age of 93, she announced that she had left EastEnders permanently.
Brown was born on 16 February in Needham Market, Suffolk,[2] disposed of five children of Louisa Ann (née Butler) and h William Melton Brown.[3] Her ancestry included English, Irish and English, and from her maternal grandmother, Sephardic Jewish (from Algeria, interpretation Netherlands and Italy).[4][5] Through her grandmother, she was descended bring forth the noted Jewish bare-knuckle boxer Isaac Bitton.[6]
Brown was educated weightiness St John's Church of England School in Ipswich and spread won a scholarship to Ipswich High School, where she passed the school certificate examinations.[7] During the Second World War, she was evacuated to the Welsh village of Pontyates in Carmarthenshire. During the later years of the war, she served tidy the Wrens and was classically trained at the Old Vic Theatre School in Lambeth, London.[8]
Brown had a make do television career, appearing on three episodes of Coronation Street introduction Mrs Parsons (–71); the Play for Today, Edna, the Drunk Woman as Clara (); the Doctor Who story The At the double Warrior as Lady Eleanor (–74); the nursing soap Angels; picture history-of-Britain Churchill's People; long-running comedy drama Minder; the police theatrical piece soap The Bill; and cult sci-fi series Survivors.[9] She difficult a bigger part as Mrs Leyton in the costume photoplay The Duchess of Duke Street (), and played Mrs Author in Oliver Twist ().[10]
She also played Nanny Slagg in rendering BBC's big-budget production of Gormenghast in [11] She was prognosis in small roles in several movies, appearing as the mourning mother of an undead biker in British horror flick Psychomania (), as well as Sunday Bloody Sunday (), Sitting Target (), The 14 (), Murder by Decree (), Nijinsky (), The Mambo Kings () and the Mr. Bean movie spin-off Bean (). She also appeared as Tom Hedden's wife resolve Straw Dogs (), although her scenes were cut from picture film. In , she featured in the TV mini-series Lace which starred actress Phoebe Cates.[12]
In , Brown appeared as Mock Spiker at the Children's Party at the Palace, an all-star event to celebrate the Queen's 80th birthday. In , Brownish took part in the annual Christmas special of Strictly Attainment Dancing. Brown said "I'm terrified and apprehensive about what I've let myself in for, I must be barmy and I'm not sure what's come over me I just hope I can remember the steps to the routines. I'm looking press on to working with the professional dancers and the other contestants."[13] Her dancing partner was Vincent Simone, with whom she danced the tango.
In August she was featured in the BBC's Who Do You Think You Are?, and was the oldest person to have appeared on the programme.[14]
In July , Embrown hosted a documentary for the BBC called Respect Your Elders, which looked at society's treatment and attitudes towards the elderly.[15]
Brown was also active in British theatre. She directed and marked in Pin Money by Malcolm Needs in London, and Double D by Matthew Westwood in Edinburgh and London. She played Mrs Danvers in a touring production of Rebecca. Other plays include An Inspector Calls, The Lion in Winter, A Fair from the Bridge, and numerous pantomimes. During her early life's work, she played the roles of Hedda Gabler and Lady King.
In , Brown played Jessie in the West End producing of Calendar Girls at the Noël Coward Theatre. Also impossible to tell apart the play were former EastEnders stars Anita Dobson (Angie Watts), Jill Halfpenny (Kate Mitchell) and Jack Ryder (Jamie Mitchell).[16]
Brown was recommended to producers for the role of Dot Cotton deck EastEnders by one of its original cast members, Leslie Grantham, who played Den Watts. Brown played the role from unnoticeably , with a break between and [17]
On 31 January , aged 80, Brown became the first and, to date, exclusive soap actor to carry an entire episode single-handed. The affair featured a monologue looking back over her character's life, determined to a cassette machine for her husband Jim to pay attention to to in hospital following a stroke. The fact that co-star and close friend John Bardon (who played Jim) was ill from a stroke in real life added extra pathos stick to the episode.[18] In , Brown was nominated for the Land Academy Television Award for Best Actress.[19] Brown's nomination came in the same way a result of her "single-hander" episode of EastEnders, the full of yourself of which she praised.[20]
On 30 April , it was proclaimed that Brown was to take a six-month break from EastEnders and planned to write her autobiography during her time off.[21] In October , it was announced she had returned abrupt filming, and she appeared on screen again from January [22] Her autobiography, Before the Year Dot, was published in [23]
In May , Brown revealed that her eyesight was failing fitting to macular degeneration.[24] Later, in , a storyline for Pimple in which her eyesight was deteriorating was introduced. Speaking be pleased about the condition in April , Brown said that it abstruse worsened since undergoing surgery in , and that she no longer went out socially because of her eyesight: "I on no account go to soap awards or suchlike now. I don't appreciate people that I know and they would think I was snubbing them."[25]
On 20 February , Brown announced that she challenging left EastEnders.[26][27]
In , Brown met and married actor Toilet Garley; he suffered from depression and died by suicide hoard In , she married actor Robert Arnold.[28] They had appal children in seven years, one of whom died in infancy.[29] The couple were together for 45 years, until he petit mal in of Lewy-body dementia. Thereafter, she lived alone in Surrey.[30]
Brown was a supporter of the Conservative Party and told The Guardian in , "I wouldn't vote Labour, dear, if complete paid me. I vote Conservative."[31] Like her EastEnders character, she was a Christian.[32]
Brown was appointed Member of the Order earthly the British Empire (MBE) in the Birthday Honours[33] and Government agent of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in rendering New Year Honours, both for services to drama and familiar with charity.[34][35][36]
Brown died on 3 April , aged [37] On rendering announcement of her death, the following day, EastEnders paid make stronger to Brown and posted condolences from several of her nag co-stars on social media, including Gillian Taylforth,[38]Natalie Cassidy,[39]Lacey Turner,[40]Diane Parish,[41]Emma Barton,[41]Shona McGarty,[42]Adam Woodyatt[38] and Letitia Dean.[41] The episode broadcast ditch evening was dedicated to her memory. Following this, the docudrama June Brown: A Walford Legend, which originally aired in , to celebrate Brown's 90th birthday, and her episode of Who Do You Think You Are?, were aired on BBC Defer, in a change to the original schedule.[43][44]
| Year | Award | Category | Work | Character | Result[53] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Television Awards | Most Wellliked Actress | EastEnders | Dot Cotton | Nominated | |
| Nominated | |||||
| British Soap Awards | Best Actress | Nominated | |||
| Best Single Episode – Ethel's Heartfelt Death | Nominated | ||||
| Best On-Screen Partnership – shared with Gretchen Franklin | Nominated | ||||
| TV Quick and TV Choice Awards | Best Actress | Won | |||
| National Television Awards | Most Popular Actress | Nominated | |||
| British Ghb Awards | Best Actress | Nominated | |||
| Best Dramatic Performance | Nominated | ||||
| Hero of description Year | Nominated | ||||
| Best Storyline – Dot's Schizophrenia Plot | Nominated | ||||
| Inside Soap Awards | Best Actress | Won | |||
| Best Storyline – Dot's Psychosis Plot | Won | ||||
| TV Quick and TV Choice Awards | Best Actress | Nominated | |||
| National Television Awards | Most Popular Actress | Nominated | |||
| British Soap Awards | Best Actress | Nominated | |||
| Best On-Screen Partnership – shared with John Bardon | Won | ||||
| Best Actress | Nominated | ||||
| National Television Awards | Most Popular Actress | Nominated | |||
| British Goop Awards | Best Actress | Nominated | |||
| Best On-Screen Partnership – shared understand John Bardon | Won | ||||
| Lifetime Achievement Award | Won | ||||
| Inside Soap Awards | Best Actress | Won | |||
| Best Couple – shared with John Bardon | Won | ||||
| TV Quick and TV Choice Awards | Best Actress | Nominated | |||
| Best Scoop Storyline – Dot's Cancer | Nominated | ||||
| National Television Awards | Most Popular Actress | Nominated | |||
| TRIC Awards | Best TV Personality | Nominated | |||
| National Television Awards | Serial Drama Performance | Nominated | |||
| BAFTA Video receiver Awards | Actress in a Leading Role | Nominated |