Lynda Bellingham Explained

Lynda Bellingham
Honorific Suffix:OBE
Birth Name:Meredith Lee Hughes
Birth Date:1948 5, df=y
Death Place:Westminster, London, England
Birth Place:Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Resting Place:Townsend Cemetery, Crewkerne, Crewkerne, Somerset, England
Occupation:Broadcaster, actress, author
Notable Works:Loose Women
Alma Mater:Royal Central School of Speech and Drama
Years Active:19712014
Children:2

Lynda Bellingham OBE (; 31 May 194819 October 2014)[1] was an English actress, broadcaster and author. She acted in television series such as All Creatures Great and Small, Doctor Who, Second Thoughts and Faith in the Future. She was also known for her appearances as the mother in the long-running series of "Oxo Family" British TV advertisements between 1983 and 1999, and as a panellist on the ITV lunchtime chat show Loose Women between 2007 and 2011.

Early life

Bellingham was born Meredith Hughes in Montreal to a single mother, but was given up for adoption because she was born out of wedlock in a strict church-going family. She was adopted when she was four months old. Bellingham was educated at Aylesbury High School and trained at the Central School of Speech and Drama.[1]

Film and television

Acting

Bellingham's first television role was an appearance in The Misfit when she was 21. She played a nurse in the 1970s ATV afternoon soap opera General Hospital. Her early film credits included roles in Confessions of a Driving Instructor (1976), Stand Up, Virgin Soldiers (1977) and Riding High (1981) with Eddie Kidd. She also appeared in the comedy short The Waterloo Bridge Handicap (1978) with Leonard Rossiter. Prior to her brief role as Janice Wyatt in Sweeney! (1977), the first big-screen adaptation of the TV police drama series The Sweeney, she had appeared in the Sweeney episode "Trojan Bus" (1975) in which she played Nancy King, accomplice to two Australian robbers. In 1981, she appeared in the ITV comedy-drama Funny Man set in the music hall of the late 1920s.

Her other roles included Helen Herriot in the James Herriot drama All Creatures Great and Small (in which she was the second actress to play the role on television, replacing Carol Drinkwater), the 1980 Andrea Newman drama series Mackenzie, Blake's 7 (1981), and the situation comedy Second Thoughts,[2] along with its sequel Faith in the Future.[3] With her Oxo Family co-star, Michael Redfern she appeared in an episode of Filthy Rich and Catflap.

Bellingham appeared as the Inquisitor in the 14-part Doctor Who serial The Trial of a Time Lord in 1986.[4] She reprised the character for the Big Finish Productions audio series Gallifrey, and in the Big Finish Productions audio drama Trial of the Valeyard, (which she recorded only a few months before announcing her cancer). She starred as Emily Marlowe in the film The Scarlet Tunic in 1998,[3] and appeared in Gleb Panfilov's as Empress Alexandra the following year. She was in Waking the Dead A Simple Sacrifice (2001) parts one and two playing Mary Mantel.

From 2000 to 2003, Bellingham played Pauline Farnell, the compassionate accountant in At Home with the Braithwaites with Amanda Redman and former All Creatures Great and Small colleague Peter Davison.[5] She had a recurring role in The Bill as villainess Irene Radford for several months in 2004,[6] and appeared as Marlene in Devil's Gate the same year. She also appeared in Midsomer Murders "The Fisher King" as Jane Willows. She had a role in the ITV comedy Bonkers playing Mrs Wadlow, a man-eating suburban housewife who seduces her neighbour's teenage son and turns him into her gigolo.[7] Later that year, she filmed guest appearances in episodes of Love Soup and Robin Hood. She played DCI Karen Hardwick in a 2007 episode of New Tricks (S4:E1).

Television commercials

Bellingham played the central character in the long-running "Oxo Family" series of TV commercials, starting in 1983, playing a mother who binds her family together by cooking them meals featuring Oxo products. The advertisements typically featured the family sitting down to a meal at which Oxo gravy would be served. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, the family was seen to grow older. When the campaign was retired in 1999, the family moved out of the house.

Television presenting

On 17 December 2010, Bellingham guest-presented the ITV programme Lorraine.

In 2012, she presented her own cookery series called My Tasty Travels with Lynda Bellingham. The following year, she presented the ITV programme Country House Sunday.

Loose Women

Bellingham joined Loose Women on 10 April 2007, appearing alongside Carol McGiffin and Coleen Nolan, and continued as a regular on the show until 2011. In all, Bellingham made more than 300 appearances on the show, including a special appearance in 2014 shortly before her death. Two editions of Loose Women were dedicated to Bellingham after her death.

Strictly Come Dancing

See main article: Strictly Come Dancing. In 2009, Bellingham was one of the contestants in the seventh series of Strictly Come Dancing, where she was partnered with Darren Bennett. She was voted out by the judges in the fourth week.

Week #Dance/SongJudges' scoresResult
Craig Revel HorwoodAlesha DixonLen GoodmanBruno TonioliTotal
1Tango / "Under Pressure"367521Safe
2Cha-Cha-Cha / "Don't Go Breaking My Heart"566623Safe
3Paso Doble / "Devil Woman"577625Bottom Two
4Foxtrot / "Calendar Girl"576624Eliminated

Other appearances

In 1993, Bellingham was the subject of This Is Your Life when she was surprised by Michael Aspel on the set of Second Thoughts.[8]

In February 1999, she was part of the Heated Rollers comedy team alongside Gwyneth Strong and Joanna Monro, with the Heated Rollers programme being the first all-women sketch show broadcast on BBC Radio 2.[9] [10] [11] In 2010, Bellingham was the voice-over for British rap band N-Dubz's reality show on Channel 4.

In 2011, Bellingham featured in a short film entitled Too Close for Comfort, playing the character of a mother to her real-life son, actor and celebrity butler Michael Peluso (from ITV's fly-on-the-wall documentary series The Savoy).[12] [13] [14] [15] Bellingham and Peluso reprised their roles for the follow-up web series of the same name in 2014. Mirroring Bellingham's personal life, her character had developed cancer.

Bellingham also appeared as a contestant on the TV show Celebrity Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?

Live performances

Twice in the 1960s, Bellingham appeared in the Pendley Open Air Shakespeare Festival.

In January 2005, she appeared in a play entitled Losing Louis at Hampstead Theatre before transferring to the Trafalgar Studios in London. Her performance received critical acclaim, especially from Michael Billington.[16]

In October 2007, she appeared in the play Vincent River at the Trafalgar Studios in London.

From September 2008 to July 2009, Bellingham played the role of Chris Harper in the stage version of the hit film Calendar Girls on tour and at the Noël Coward Theatre in the West End. She returned to the show for further tours in 2010, 2011 and 2012.

Over the Christmas/New Year period of 2011/12, she played the Fairy Godmother in the pantomime Cinderella at the Birmingham Hippodrome. She played the role again at the Alhambra Theatre, Bradford over the Christmas/New Year period of 2012/13.

Bellingham was due to star in Kay Mellor's play A Passionate Woman at the Sheffield Crucible, followed by a national tour, however, it was announced in July 2013 that the show had to be postponed owing to Bellingham's cancer treatment.

Writing

In 2010, Bellingham launched her book Lost and Found, a story of her life and career and toured the country for private readings.[1] Her novel Tell Me Tomorrow was published in 2013. In 2014, Bellingham's autobiography, There's Something I'm Dying to Tell You, was issued shortly before her death.[17] Her final story, The Boy I Love was published posthumously in November 2014.[18]

Personal life

Bellingham was married three times, first in 1975 to film and theatre producer Greg Smith.[19] According to Bellingham in her 2010 autobiography, the marriage was one driven primarily by sex, with Smith later admitting to numerous affairs with other actresses, including some who sent nude photos to their home.

Her second marriage (1981–96) was to restaurateur Nunzio Peluso, with whom she had two sons, Michael and Robbie.[20] The couple were introduced to each other at the Italian restaurant La Famiglia in Chelsea, London, in the early 1980s by friend and fellow actor Christopher Biggins. After a whirlwind courtship and romance, the couple married but the relationship was marred by Peluso's jealousy of Bellingham's former lovers leading to a series of altercations, fights and domestic abuse towards her. Around the same time as Bellingham was being abused by Peluso, she was starring in the Oxo adverts and felt bound to hide the truth about her marriage for fear of spoiling her image in the commercials. As Bellingham revealed in her 2010 autobiography Lost & Found: My Story: "maybe if my private life had been happier I would have enjoyed doing it more. As it was, I felt I was living a lie. Being the nation's favourite mum on screen and going home to an abusive relationship was heartbreaking [...] the irony was horrific. Here I was, the Oxo mum, hiding behind closed doors, isolated from her friends and family." The couple divorced in 1996, Bellingham giving her former husband half of everything she owned, although he continued to intimidate her. A restraining order was granted in 2000 to keep Peluso away from his former wife. On 31 May 2008, Bellingham married her boyfriend, Spain-based timeshare salesman, Michael Pattemore (known on Loose Women as "Mr Spain"), at St Stephen Walbrook on her 60th birthday.

Bellingham was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2014 New Year Honours for voluntary service to charitable giving.[21]

Illness and death

On 16 July 2013, it was announced that Bellingham had been diagnosed with colorectal cancer. She released a statement saying she was "not going to die."[22]

In September 2014, Bellingham confirmed that her cancer had metastasised to her lungs and liver and that she had "months to live". She announced that she had made the choice in August 2014 to stop chemotherapy in November, so that she could have "one last Christmas" with her family and die in January 2015.[23] [24] [25] Bellingham died in a London hospital on 19 October 2014 with her husband Michael by her side.[26]

On 3 November 2014, her funeral took place at St Bartholomew's Church in Crewkerne. Bellingham was buried in Crewkerne Townsend Cemetery. Her headstone names her as Lynda Bellingham-Pattemore.

Filmography

Film roles

YearTitleRoleNotes
1976 Confessions of a Driving Instructor Mary Truscott
1977 Sweeney! Janice Wyatt
1977 Stand Up, Virgin Soldiers Valerie
1978 The Waterloo Bridge Handicap Miss Beamish
1981 Riding High Miss Mott
1998 The Scarlet Tunic Emily Marlowe
1999 Don't Go Breaking My Heart Maxine
2000
2001 Bodywork Poppy Fields
2004 Devil's Gate Marlene

Television roles

YearTitleRoleNotes
1971The MisfitWee Jeanie Episode: "On the New Establishment"
1971 ITV Sunday Night TheatreNurse Mary Tiller Episode: "Mr. Pargiter"
1971 KateHattie 2 Episodes
1971 A Family at WarChrissie 3 Episodes
1972 The Fenn Street GangLiza Episode: "From Sudbury with Love"
1972–1973General HospitalNurse Hilda Price 27 Episodes
1973 Tell TarbyNurse Norma Snockers6 Episodes
1974Z-CarsPauline TysonEpisode: "Pressure"
1974A Little Bit of WisdomGwen MorganEpisode: "A Little Bit of Respect"
1974Billy LiarAlison Episode: "Billy and the New Life"
1975Within These WallsYvonne Melton Episode: "The Slap"
1975 Z-CarsIrene 3 Episodes
1975The Sweeney Nancy King Episode: "Trojan Bus"
1976CouplesJack 6 Episodes
1976Whodunnit?Suzy BoothEpisode: "Dead Ball"
1976 Yus My DearCarole Episode: "Woman Trouble"
1977Yes, HonestlyAmandaEpisode: "Entertaining Mr. Roscoe"
1977 Doctor on the GoEleanor Wilcox Episode: "What's in a Name?"
1977Big Boy Now!Brenda BollingtonEpisode: "Supergirl"
1977Cottage to LetBarbaraEpisode: "Second Opinion"
1977 The FuzzWPC Pamela ‘Purrfect’ Purvis All 7 Episodes
1978The Pink Medicine ShowVariousAll 6 Episodes
1979 Don't Forget to Write!Angela Episode: "Enter Hitler"
1979HazellVanessa Episode: "Hazell Gets the Part"
1979ShoestringNicolaEpisode: "Find the Lady"
1980The ProfessionalsBetty Hope Episode: "Slush Fund"
1980MackenzieRuth IsaacsAll 12 Episodes
1981 Funny ManGwen11 Episodes
1981Blake's 7VenaEpisode: "Headhunter"
1982Murphy's MobElaine Murphy 12 Episodes
1982 AngelsKathy Stone 5 Episodes
1982Educating MarmaladeRegistrarEpisode: "Walkies"
1984The Gentle TouchAlison Fairbrother 2 Episodes
1986 Doctor WhoThe Inquisitor 14 Episodes
1987Filthy Rich & CatflapMs Tomkins Episode: #1.4
1987Screen TwoMary MorrisEpisode: "The Vision"
1988–1990All Creatures Great and SmallHelen Herriot 47 Episodes
1990–1993JackanoryStoryteller 9 Episodes
1991–1994Second ThoughtsFaith Greyshott All 49 Episodes
1994Martin ChuzzlewitMrs. Lupin 5 Episodes
1995Julia Jekyll and Harriet HydeAunt CassandraEpisode: "A Fright for Aunt Cassandra"
1995–1998 Faith in the FutureFaith GreyshottAll 22 Episodes
1998CasualtySteph Yates Episode: "Trust"
2000–2003At Home with the BraithwaitesPauline Farnell 19 Episodes
2000Reach for the MoonPenny Martin All 6 Episodes
2000Bob MartinLynda BellinghamEpisode: "Mr. and Mrs."
2001Waking the DeadMary Mantel2 Episodes
2001My Uncle SilasMrs. GadsbyEpisode: "The Widder"
2002Happy TogetherTeresaTV film
2003LandladyTV film
2004 Midsomer MurdersJane Willows Episode: "The Fisher King"
2004Dalziel and PascoeJess Pitman Episode: "Great Escapes"
2004The Last DetectiveCouncillor Marjorie BalsamEpisode: "The Long Bank Holiday"
2004Monkey TrousersVariousTV film
2004 The BillIrene Radford 19 Episodes
2004Odd SocksMagdalena Unaired TV series
2005Murder in SuburbiaMilly GoodmanEpisode: "The Wedding"
2006 Holby CityCaitlin Lucas Episode: "Brother's Keeper"
2007BonkersMrs. Wadlow5 episodes
2007New TricksDet. Supt. Karen Hardwick Episode: "Casualty"
2007Robin HoodQueen EleanorEpisode: "Treasure of the Nation"
2008Re-extinctMarg PreciousTV film
2008Love SoupMatildaEpisode: "Whose God Is It Anyway?"
2009Mister ElevenShirleyBoth 2 Episodes
2011Just RosieLynda BellinghamTV film
2014–2015Too Close for ComfortMary All 4 Episodes

Stage

YearTitleRoleNotes
1969A Man for All SeasonsMargaret More Lyceum Theatre, Crewe
1969–1970Doctor in the HouseMonica Lyceum Theatre, Crewe
1970The Wheel of FortuneAmy Lyceum Theatre, Crewe
Toad of Toad HallRatty Lyceum Theatre, Crewe
1974BordelloRachel Sondheim Theatre
1975Norman, Is that You?Mary Phoenix Theatre
My Fat FriendVicky Theatre Royal, Windsor
1977Castle in the Air Boss TrentTheatre Royal, Windsor
1978The Flip Side Sharon Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Croydon
1985Strippers Stripper Phoenix Theatre
1985–1986Look, No Hans! Monica Novello Theatre
2002Marry Me You IdiotElinor Waugh Jermyn Theatre, London
2005 Losing LouisElizabeth
2006Sugar MummiesMaggie Royal Court Theatre
2007 Vincent River AnitaTrafalgar Studios
2008–2009 Calendar GirlsChris Noël Coward Theatre
2010–2012 Chris UK Tour
2011–2012CinderellaFairy Godmother
2012–2013 Cinderella Fairy Godmother Alahmbra Theatre, Bradford
2013–2014Dick Whittington Fairy BowbellsWhite Rock Theatre, Hastings

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lynda Bellingham – obituary . 20 October 2014 . . 13 February 2017.
  2. News: Guide to the week. Cavanagh. Deborah. 27 August 1994. Western Daily Press. 4 January 2024. Newspapers.com.
  3. News: My Future seems brighter; Lynda Bellingham. Hagan. Angela. 8 November 1996. Daily Mirror. 4 January 2024.
  4. News: Obituary: Lynda Bellingham. BBC News. 20 October 2014. 23 October 2014.
  5. News: Don't say the O word; Why Britain's most famous TV mum hates a certain gravy after her axing from the Oxo advert. Penfold. Paul. 25 January 2002. Daily Record. 4 January 2024.
  6. Maund. Allison. 2–8 October 2004. The last temptation?. Inside Soap. 40. 33.
  7. News: TV & radio: Lynda's bonkers sexy role. Laws. Roz. 28 January 2007. Sunday Mercury. 4 January 2024.
  8. 33 . . Linda Bellingham . 1993 .
  9. Web site: BBC Radio 4 Extra – Heated Rollers, Episode 1 .
  10. Web site: BBC Radio 4 Extra – Heated Rollers .
  11. Web site: BBC Radio 4 Extra – Heated Rollers, Episode 4 .
  12. Web site: Lynda Bellingham's son Michael Peluso joins the Loose Women to pay an emotional tribute to his late mum .
  13. Web site: The Savoy – Watch episodes .
  14. Web site: The Savoy – Welcome Back .
  15. Web site: The Savoy – Five Star Standards .
  16. https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2005/jan/25/theatre/ The Guardian, Michael Billington
  17. News: Lynda Bellingham's last interview screened just days after her death . Caroline . Davies . The Guardian . 22 October 2014 . 23 October 2014.
  18. Book: Lynda, Bellingham. The boy I love. 20 November 2014. 9781471148972. London. 894273350.
  19. News: Simon . Sheridan . Greg Smith: Producer of the 'Confessions' films . The Independent . 1 May 2009.
  20. News: Oxo mum's life of domestic violence . . 24 December 1999 .
  21. News: Matthew . Weaver. Lynda Bellingham, actor and presenter, dies aged 66. The Guardian . 20 October 2014 . 23 October 2014.
  22. News: Alistair. Foster. Lynda Bellingham: 'I will deal with this cancer, I’m not going to die'. Evening Standard. 16 July 2013.
  23. News: Lynda Bellingham may have months to live. Sky News. 28 September 2014.
  24. News: Ex-Loose Women star Lynda Bellingham: My cancer is terminal and I only have months to live. Daily Record. 28 September 2014.
  25. News: Hannah. Stephenson. Ex-Loose Women star Lynda Bellingham: I want one last Christmas with my family before saying goodbye and going to sleep. Daily Record. 29 September 2014.
  26. News: Lynda Bellingham: Tributes paid after actress dies at 66. BBC News. 20 October 2014. 23 October 2014.