Jennifer Wilson (actress)

Jennifer Wenda Wilson (25 April 1932 – 29 March 2022) was an English actress. Beginning her on-screen acting career in the 1950s, she played Kate Nickleby in a BBC dramatisation of Nicholas Nickleby in 1957. Wilson's last acting roles were as Mrs. Bradbury in Coronation Street in 2014 and as Nancy Milne in three episodes of the BBC lunchtime soap Doctors between 2014 and 2015.

Jennifer Wilson
The Brothers (1976), left to right: Derek Benfield, Margaret Ashcroft, Jennifer Wilson, Robin Chadwick, Jean Anderson, Colin Baker
Born
Jennifer Wenda Lohr

(1932-04-25)25 April 1932
London, Middlesex, England
Died29 March 2022(2022-03-29) (aged 89)[1]
France
OccupationActress
Years active1952–2015

Life and career

Wilson began her film career in The Story of Gilbert and Sullivan (1953), while still at RADA, from which she graduated in 1952. One of her earliest television roles was Kate Nickleby in the 1957 BBC Television adaptation of Nicholas Nickleby. She played Detective Sergeant Helen Webb in the first series of ITV's Special Branch (1969) and, in probably her best known role, Jennifer Hammond in the 1970s series The Brothers.[2] In 1965, she appeared in Bill Naughton's Spring and Port Wine at the Mermaid Theatre, London in the part of Florence.[3]

Family

Her first husband was the artist Stanley Swain, whom she married in 1954. In 1959, she married actor Brian Peck (1930–2021).[4]

Death

Wilson died at her home in France on 29 March 2022, at the age of 89.[5][4]

Selected television filmography

References

  1. Hayward, Anthony (11 April 2022). "Jennifer Wilson obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 April 2022.
  2. Paul Cornell, Martin Day, & Keith Topping. The Guinness Book of Classic British TV. Guinness, 1996, pg. 17.
  3. Naughton, Bill (1967). Spring and Port Wine. London: Samuel French. ISBN 0-573-01550-3.
  4. Jennifer Wilson dead: Coronation Street and Casualty star dies aged 89, mirror.co.uk. Accessed 4 April 2022.
  5. "Jennifer Wilson obituary | Television & radio | the Guardian".


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