Roberta Taylor Explained

Roberta Taylor
Birth Name:Roberta Alexandra Mary Roberts
Birth Date:26 February 1948
Birth Place:West Ham, Essex, England
Death Place:London, England
Yearsactive:1972–2024
Television:EastEnders (1997–2000)
The Bill (2002-2008)
Spouse:
    Children:1

    Roberta Alexandra Mary Taylor (;[1] 26 February 1948 – 6 July 2024) was an English actress and author. She was known for her roles of Irene Raymond in EastEnders (1997–2000) and Inspector Gina Gold in The Bill (2002–2008).

    Career

    Taylor worked in the theatre and appeared at the Glasgow Citizens Theatre from 1980 to 1992.[2] During that period, she played La Duchesse de Guermantes in a stage adaptation of Marcel Proust's A la recherche du temps perdu (Remembrance of Things Past) entitled A Waste of Time, in which Rupert Everett and Gary Oldman were also in the cast. She was also seen in Noël Coward's Design for Living, Oscar Wilde's A Woman of No Importance and An Ideal Husband. She was the Princess Kosmonopolis in Tennessee Williams' Sweet Bird of Youth in 1992, and in 1995 played the Nurse in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet at the Lyric Hammersmith.[3]

    She also appeared in episodes of the television series Doctors, Sharman, Holby City, Silent Witness, Shakespeare and Hathaway and Inspector Morse. She has appeared as a guest on The Paul O'Grady Show and in the films The Witches (1990) and Tom & Viv (1994).[4] She has also appeared as herself on Lily Savage's Blankety Blank.[5]

    In 2005 she played Mrs Pardiggle in the BBC's drama serial adaptation of Charles Dickens' Bleak House.[6] In 2009, she starred as the long-suffering Phoebe Rice in John Osborne's play The Entertainer at the Royal Exchange Theatre in Manchester. In 2011 she appeared in the West End revival of Pygmalion, alongside Rupert Everett, Kara Tointon and Diana Rigg.[7] In September 2017, Taylor made a guest appearance in Casualty.[8]

    Books

    Alongside her acting career, Taylor was an author. Her first book, Too Many Mothers, a memoir of her childhood, was published in October 2005. She was criticised by two cousins for some of the content in the book, with one of the cousins claiming that she was "too flippant about traumatic events in his difficult past". She refused to remove any of the content prior to publication, and later walked away from one of them at a book signing. Her first novel, The Reinvention of Ivy Brown, was published in November 2008.[9]

    Personal life and death

    Born out of wedlock to Robert Alexander Archer, an already married bus conductor, Taylor was brought up by her mother Winifred Roberts, aunts, and grandmother.[10] [4] [11]

    She married Victor Taylor on 1 April 1966.[12] [1] The couple had a son but divorced in 1975.[13] Taylor met actor Peter Guinness while working with the Glasgow Citizens Theatre. They married in September 1996 after having been together for twenty years. Guinness appeared in a few episodes of The Bill as her character’s lover in 2007.[13]

    Taylor died of pneumonia following a fall, on 6 July 2024, at the age of 76. Taylor had suffered from emphysema due to being a "dedicated smoker".[14]

    Filmography

    Notes and References

    1. Book: Too Many Mothers - Roberta Taylor - Google Books . 1 May 2009. 31 August 2018. 9781848872561 . Taylor . Roberta . Atlantic Books .
    2. Web site: Dibdin . Thom . Glasgow Citizens announces autumn season | News . The Stage . 21 May 2014 . 31 August 2018.
    3. Web site: Roberta Taylor . TVGuide.com . 23 July 2024 . en.
    4. Web site: TalkTalk . TalkTalk . 31 August 2018.
    5. Lily Savage's Blankety Blank. ITV. 13 May 2001.
    6. Web site: Roberta Taylor: Biography . Hellomagazine.com . 31 August 2018.
    7. Web site: Pygmalion . Exeunt Magazine . 31 August 2018.
    8. Web site: BBC One - Casualty, Series 32, Episode 5 . . 23 July 2024.
    9. Web site: The Reinvention of Ivy Brown . Atlantic Books . 23 July 2024.
    10. Web site: Exclusive: Eastenders star causes heartache for family with misery memoir . Daily Record . 22 November 2009. 31 August 2018.
    11. Web site: Fighting shy of fame . Birmingham Post. 31 October 2005. 31 August 2018.
    12. Web site: Findmypast.co.uk . 2 September 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140903123744/http://search.findmypast.co.uk/results/world-records/england-and-wales-marriages-1837-2008?firstname=roberta%20a%20m&lastname=roberts . 3 September 2014.
    13. Web site: Interview: Why I'm pleased to be leaving EastEnders; Roberta Taylor talks about her unusual past and why she is quitting Albert Square. Thefreelibrary.com . 31 August 2018.
    14. Web site: Roberta Taylor obituary Television The Guardian . . 23 July 2024.
    15. Web site: BBC One - Luther, Series 5, Episode 3 . BBC . 25 July 2024.