Noele Gordon
Noele Gordon | |
---|---|
Born | Joan Noele Gordon 25 December 1919 |
Died | 14 April 1985 Birmingham, England | (aged 65)
Resting place | St Mary's Churchyard, Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire, England |
Occupation | actress |
Years active | 1945–1984 |
Joan Noele Gordon (25 December 1919 – 14 April 1985) was an English actress and television presenter.[1] She played the role of Meg Mortimer (originally Richardson) in the long-running British soap opera Crossroads from 1964 to 1983.[2]
Early life[]
Gordon's father was an engineer in the Merchant Navy and she was born in East Ham, Essex (now part of the London Borough of Newham). She was given the middle name of Noele because she was born on Christmas Day. After attending convent school at Ilford, she was taught to dance by Maude Wells and later spent several years living in Southend on Sea. She made her first public appearance at the East Ham Palace and shortly afterwards, sung "Dear Little Jammy Face" at a restaurant in London. After this event, her mother and her aunt were keen for her to begin a stage career. Gordon was credited as the first woman to be seen on colour television sets,[3][4] as she took part in John Logie Baird's world's first colour transmission on 3 July 1928.
Career[]
Early career[]
She attended RADA, appeared in repertory theatres and the West End stage. From June 1943 to July 1944 she appeared in the musical The Lisbon Story at the London Hippodrome. In April 1949, took the role of Meg Brockie in the original London production of Brigadoon for 685 performances at Her Majesty's Theatre. She stayed with the show for a national tour. In 1953 she toured as Mrs Sally Adams in Call Me Madam after Billie Adams had played the role in the London season at the Coliseum. She appeared in two British films, 29 Acacia Avenue (1945) and Lisbon Story (1946) in minor parts. Her acting career came to a halt in 1955 when she joined Associated Television in London where she presented their first-ever programme, The Weekend Show. She worked behind the scenes as Head of Lifestyle programmes. Gordon then studied the television medium at New York University in America and after her return helped Reg Watson and Ned Sherrin launch ATV Midlands in 1956.[5]
As well as being a producer, Gordon became a presenter for the new Birmingham-based service. Her first television appearance for ATV in the Midlands, Tea With Noele Gordon, was the first popular ITV chat show and while presenting this series, she became the first woman to interview a British Prime Minister,[5] at the time Harold Macmillan was in office. Initially commissioned as an emergency schedule filler, the show became so successful that Gordon gave up her executive position to concentrate on presenting.[6] She then moved on to present a daily live entertainment show, Lunchbox, an early daytime programme.[5]
Crossroads[]
In the summer of 1964 Lunchbox came to an end after more than 2,000 episodes. It made way for a new daily soap opera, Crossroads, in which Gordon played the role of motel owner Meg Richardson (later Meg Mortimer), a part which had been developed with Gordon in mind as she was still under contract to Lew Grade's ATV.[7]
First in 1969 and over the following decade, she won the TV Times award for most popular television actress on eight occasions.[3][8]
Gordon was the only member of the Crossroads cast who had a permanent contract;[9] whilst all other cast members were booked as and when on an ad hoc basis.
Gordon stayed with the programme until she was sacked in 1981, when ATV was in the process of being re-constituted into a new company, Central Independent Television. Central were obliged to continue ATV's commitment to Crossroads; however, Head of Programmes Charles Denton and Head of Drama Margaret Matheson wanted to end the soap opera in favour of more expensive and lavish drama productions. The decision to dismiss Gordon - the show's most popular cast member - was taken in the hope that viewers would desert the show, giving Central a valid excuse to axe it.[10]
She returned to Crossroads in August 1983 for two episodes.
In 1985, Matheson's successor Ted Childs ordered Crossroads to be revamped; one element in the updating if the show was its renaming as Crossroads Motel. The programme's new look was designed to bring back Gordon on an 'as and when' basis, starting with a three-month stint from April 1985. Gordon's return as Meg was devised by the new producer, Phillip Bowman, who himself ended the involvement with the series of regulars Ronald Allen and Sue Lloyd. Gordon, who had already appeared in 3,521 episodes, was too ill to make the planned return.
Later career[]
After the termination of her Crossroads contract, Gordon appeared in Gypsy at Leicester's Haymarket Theatre followed by a revival of Irving Berlin's musical Call Me Madam touring the Midlands and then at the Victoria Palace Theatre where it ran for only 88 performances. Her last stage appearance was in The Boy Friend at Plymouth's Theatre Royal produced by Roger Redfarn, as she became ill during the run and had to be replaced.[citation needed]
In an interview she gave the TV Times in 1981 she announced that she might, once her stage work had come to an end, take up the offer of returning to presenting. In the same 1981 TV Times interview she commented that a future role as a breakfast television presenter was being negotiated. She would however not return to television full-time because of her theatre commitments.[11]
Personal life[]
For many years in the 1960s and early 1970s, Gordon lived in a large white-washed country house in Weir End, near Ross-on-Wye, beside the A40 road to Monmouth. Gordon never married.[citation needed]
It became known in 1982 that Gordon was suffering from cancer, for which she underwent two major operations. She retired to her home in Birmingham, where she died in 1985 of stomach cancer. She is buried in the churchyard of St Mary's Church in Ross-on-Wye.[12]
Tony Adams, who played Adam Chance in the series of Crossroads, commented in 1985 just after her death that "There has never been a star of Crossroads, although Nolly was Crossroads."[13]
References[]
- ^ "ATV Icon: Noele Gordon". ATV Today. Retrieved 28 May 2012.
- ^ Osborn, Michael (17 January 2008). "The great British soap matriarch". BBC News. Retrieved 22 September 2017.
- ^ Jump up to: a b As detailed by ITV in their on-air obituary broadcast prior to an episode of Crossroads broadcast on 14 April 1985
- ^ As noted in BBC One's TV Heros series, 1991
- ^ Jump up to: a b c Detailed in her autobiography, My Life at Crossroads, 1974
- ^ "Noele Gordon (obituary)". The Stage. 18 April 1985. p. 15.
- ^ "Hazel Adair". The Times. London. 25 November 2015. Retrieved 28 November 2015. (subscription required)
- ^ "Noele Gordon". TV Times (Unforgettables! ed.). 1988. p. 22.
- ^ As noted by Jane Rossington and Paul Henry on the documentary Crossroads Revisited in 1985
- ^ As detailed in the 1982 book, Crossroads - The Drama of a Soap Opera.
- ^ TV Times interview with Noele Gordon in November 1981.
- ^ Noele Gordon profile, findagrave.com; accessed 16 March 2017.
- ^ As spoken by Adams on Crossroads Revisited, the 21st Anniversary documentary for the soap.
External links[]
- Noele Gordon at IMDb
- Noele Gordon webpage
- Noele Gordon - appearance on This Is Your Life
- 1919 births
- 1985 deaths
- English stage actresses
- English television actresses
- English people of Scottish descent
- English soap opera actresses
- People from East Ham
- 20th-century English actresses
- Alumni of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
- Actresses from London