Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Pat Ashton

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Occupation
  
Actress

Years active
  
1965–1984


Name
  
Pat Ashton

Role
  
Actress

Pat Ashton httpsc2staticflickrcom8733491499855921363

Born
  
28 February 1931 (
1931-02-28
)

Died
  
June 23, 2013, Diss, United Kingdom

Spouse
  
Geoff Godwin (m. 1953–1985)

Movies and TV shows
  
Similar People
  
Reg Varney, Ian La Frenais, Dick Clement, Ken Russell, George Sidney

Benny Hill - When Things Go Wrong (1972)


Pat Ashton (28 February 1931 – 23 June 2013) was an English actress. Her engaging cockney, blonde persona is best remembered for appearances in English TV-sitcom film spin-offs On the Buses (1971) and Mutiny On the Buses (1972). She was married to Geoff Godwin 1953-1985, separated with 1 child.

Contents

Pat Ashton The Clippies

Thick As Thieves LWT 1974


Early life

Pat Ashton - IMDb

Ashton was born and raised in Wood Green, North London. Trained from childhood as a singer and tap-dancer, she performed in the 1950s at seaside resorts around England in summer season shows. In the early 1960s, she toured Europe with Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop in Oh, What a Lovely War!. Early West End appearances included Half a Sixpence and The Matchgirls.

Career

Pat Ashton Pat Ashton obituary Television radio The Guardian

Ashton's first television break was taking the role of Fanny Cornforth opposite Oliver Reed in Ken Russell's Danté's Inferno (1967), a film in the Omnibus series on the life of Dante Gabriel Rossetti. The part later led to a small role in Russell's 1971 film The Devils.

Pat Ashton On the buses Obituaries JezzWarrencom

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

Ashton played numerous TV roles; credits include: On the Buses (1971) - subsequently making memorable appearances in two spin-off films; The Benny Hill Show (1972–80); Both Ends 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, with James Bolam); The Gaffer (1981–83, with Bill Maynard), and Tripper's Day (1984, with Leonard Rossiter) Beer Hunter Minder Episode 1980 (with Dennis Waterman, George Cole.

A notable television role was that of Annie, wife of a burglar (Bob Hoskins) who comes out of prison to find that his old friend (John Thaw) has moved in, in Thick As Thieves (1974). When LWT declined a second series, the writers Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais took the idea to the BBC, where it was developed into the much-loved series Porridge.

On stage, she later appeared in Stepping Out, and was a regular performer at the Players' Theatre in London.

Partial filmography

  • Half a Sixpence (1967) - Pub Character
  • On the Buses (1971) - Sally
  • The Devils (1971) - Gossiping woman (uncredited)
  • Mutiny on the Buses (1972) - Norah
  • Nearest and Dearest (1972) - Freda
  • The Optimists of Nine Elms a.k.a. The Optimists (1973) - Woman at Nursery
  • Party Party (1983) - Johnny's Mum
  • Bloodbath at the House of Death (1983) - Barmaid
  • References

    Pat Ashton Wikipedia