Susan Jameson

Susan Jameson
Born
Susan I. M. Jameson[1]

(1941-08-13) 13 August 1941
Barnt Green, Worcestershire, England
OccupationActress
Years active1962–present
SpouseJames Bolam (m. 1971)
Children2

Susan I. M. Jameson (born 13 August 1941) is an English actress. She is best known for her roles as Jessie Seaton in When the Boat Comes In, Esther Lane in the BBC crime drama series New Tricks, and portraying Great Aunt Loretta in the CBeebies show Grandpa in My Pocket.[2] She has also extensively performed in radio, notably voicing Mrs Wibbsey opposite the Fourth Doctor Tom Baker in a series of Doctor Who audio dramas.[3] She also voiced audiobooks for all 52 novels by Catherine Cookson.[4]

Career

Jameson began acting at the age of the 10 when she enrolled at a speech and drama school in Birmingham; she broke into professional acting in the late 1950's, working for various repertory theatre companies based in Birmingham, Glasgow, Coventry and Cheltenham respecively.[5][6] In 1962, she made her television debut appearing in an episode of Dixon of Dock Green. The following year she secured for her first major television role as Myra Booth (née Dickinson) in Coronation Street, featuring in 52 episodes between 1963 and 1964, she was offered a further two year contract to continue with part, but she subsequently declined.[7][8] During this period, Jameson appeared in a number of television shows including The Likely Lads, No Hiding Place, Z-Cars, Strange Report, UFO, The Doctors, Softly Softly: Task Force and Space 1999.

In 1969, she appeared as Kate in the first series of Take Three Girls, which follows the lives of three young women who share a bedsit in West Kensington.[9] In 1974, she featured in the final series of Special Branch, as Detective Sergeant Mary Holmes.[10] Between 1976 to 1981, she played Jessie Seaton (later Jessie Ashton) in all four series of the period drama When the Boat Comes In, appearing alongside her husband James Bolam. In 1980, she appeared as prospective Labour candidate Christine Forster in the mini-series To Serve Them All My Days. She later reprised her role as Kate in Take Three Women in 1982 (the follow up to Take Three Girls) which reunited the original characters Victoria, Kate and Avril after going their separate ways in the intervening years.[11] She also appeared in various sitcoms including The Upchat Line, Rings on Their Fingers, Hi-de-Hi!, Home to Roost, Hell's Bells, Never The Twain and All in Good Faith.[12] In 1987, she played Aunt Em in the children's serial The Secret World of Molly Flint for TVS, two years later she appeared in an episode of Boon as Judy Shelley, a mentally ill mother who seeks refuge at Woodcote Park.[13]

Jameson has continued to appear in supporting roles on television and film, appearing in Casualty, Woof!, Heartbeat, The Girl (1996), The Bill, Two Days, Nine Lives (2001), Dalziel and Pascoe, Holby City, Doctors, Grandpa in My Pocket, Him, Midsomer Murders and All Creatures Great and Small.[2] Between 2003 and 2013, she appeared in New Tricks as Esther Lane, the long-suffering wife of ex-Detective Inspector Brian Lane (played by Alun Armstrong), she featured in ten series before she departed along with Armstrong in 2013.[14] In 2009, she was one of five actresses portraying Queen Elizabeth II in the docu-drama series The Queen, which charted pivotal years in the monarch's life.[15]

Personal life

She is married to fellow actor James Bolam, with whom she has appeared in numerous episodes of various television series, including The Likely Lads, When The Boat Comes In, New Tricks and Grandpa in My Pocket, as well appearing on stage on a number of occasions including Macbeth and A Fool and His Money[16][17] They have lived in Wisborough Green, West Sussex for over 30 years.[18]

Jameson has also worked as a writer, including three episodes of The Hoobs, and the semi-autobiographical Pony Tails, a collection of four short stories based on the ponies she and her family have owned over the years.[19] Jameson is a patron of the Chichester Festival Youth Theatre and president of the ABC Animal Sanctuary in West Chiltington and the Cat and Rabbit Rescue Centre in Sidlesham. She has also been involved in a number of animal charities, including the Hawk and Owl Trust, Compassion in World Farming and Merrylegs Assisted Riding, where she latterly helped young disabled horse riders at Brinsbury College in Pulborough.[4]

Selected filmography

TV and Film

Year Title Role Notes
1962 Dixon of Dock Green Jessie Kennedy Episode: "Cash and Carry"
1963 –

1968

Coronation Street Myra Booth (née Dickinson) 60 episodes
1964 Crossroads Patricia Walker 3 episodes
The Likely Lads Pat Episode: "Double Date"
1965 No Hiding Place Dana Clark Episode: "A Menace to the Public"
1965 –

1975

Z-Cars WPC Nelson 6 episodes
1968 Last of the Long-haired Boys Bimba Film
1969 Strange Report Moira Episode: "REPORT 8319 GRENADE - What price change?"
1969 –

1970

Take Three Girls Kate 12 episodes
1970 Armchair Theatre Jean Episode: "Say Goodnight to Your Grandma"
The Doctors Pamela Renshaw 8 episodes
The Wednesday Play Jenny Episode: "Rest in Peace, Uncle Fred"
1971 I, Monster Diane Film
UFO Anne Stone Episode: "The Sound of Silence"
1973 Softly, Softly: Task Force WDC Joan Bray Episode: "The Loud Mouth"
1974 Special Branch DS Mary Holmes 4 episodes
1975 Space: 1999 Professor Juliet Mackie Episode: "Dragon's Domain"
1976 –

1981

When the Boat Comes In Jessie Ashton (née Seaton) 30 episodes
1978 International Velvet TV Interviewer Film
The Upchat Connection Maggie 8 episodes
Wodehouse Playhouse Bella Mae Jobson Episode: "The Editor Regrets"
1980 Rings on Their Fingers Jennifer 2 episodes
1980 –

1981

To Serve Them All My Days Christine Forster 5 episodes
1982 Take Three Women Kate 3 episodes
1983 Hi-de-Hi! Jenny Maitland Episode: "The Marriage Settlement"
1985 Terry on the Fence Terry's mum Film
1986 Hell's Bells Emma Hethercote 6 episodes
Home to Roost Judith Trevelyan Episode: "Any Questions?"
1986 –

2023

Casualty Harriet/ Samantha Grieve/ Sheila Falon/

Audrey Rinsler/ Freya Hall

7 episodes
1987 Never the Twain Dr. Collins Episode: "Feed a Cold"
The Secret World of Molly Flint Aunt Em 5 episodes
1988 All in Good Faith Emma Lambe 6 episodes
1989 Boon Judith Shelley Episode: "Sickness and Health"
1991 Woof! Mrs. Varley 1 episode
1993 –

2009

Heartbeat Jennifer Bradshaw/ Edwina Lambert/

Sonia Rumbold

4 episodes
1996 The Girl Daisy Loam TV movie
1997 The Bill Beverley Harper Episode: "An Englishman's Home"
2001 Two Days, Nine Lives Polly Film
2002 Dalziel and Pascoe Annie Pascoe Episode: "The Unwanted"
2003 –

2013

New Tricks Esther Lane 54 episodes
2004 Holby City Sylvia Clifford Episode: "Striking a Chord"
2004 –

2012

Doctors Lily Preston/ Grace Masson/

Mrs. Alice Devene

3 episodes
2009 The Queen Queen Elizabeth II Episode: "The Rivals"
2009 –

2014

Grandpa in My Pocket Great Aunt Loretta 36 episodes
2012 Holby City Abigail Dutton Episode: "Hold on Me"
2016 Him Rose 3 episodes
2017 Midsomer Murders Germaine Troughton Episode: "Last Man Out"
2020 All Creatures Great and Small Lillian Calvert Episode: "Andante"

Radio

Date Title Role Director Station
23 August 2004 The Coast of Maine: Miss Tempy's Watchers Sarah Ann Binson Ned Chaillet BBC Radio 4, Woman's Hour Drama
3 March 2005 The Tragical Comedy or Comical Tragedy of Mr. Punch[20] Grandmother Lu Kemp BBC Radio 3, The Wire
16 March 2005
– 6 April 2005
The Great Pursuit Cynthia Bogden Toby Swift BBC Radio 4
5 May 2005 Stone Baby[21] Nurse Toby Swift BBC Radio 3, The Wire
6 May 2005 Claw Marks on the Curtain: The Open Window Caroline Nuttel Ned Chaillet BBC Radio 4, Woman's Hour Drama
5 December 2005
– 30 December 2005
David Copperfield Peggotty / Mrs Gummidge Jeremy Mortimer BBC Radio 4, Woman's Hour Drama

References

  1. ^ "Index entry". FreeBMD. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 9 March 2011.
  2. ^ a b "Susan Jameson". Tres Magazine. 10 December 2020.
  3. ^ "Tom Baker returns as the Fourth Doctor in new audio dramas!". BBC. 29 July 2009.
  4. ^ a b "Susan Jameson's new writing career". Sussex Life. 27 June 2017.
  5. ^ "Susan Jameson". Theatricalia.
  6. ^ "Susan Jameson". Corrie.net.
  7. ^ "Susan's role left a friendly canine co-star confused". Portsmouth Evening News. 20 February 1987. p. 20.
  8. ^ Jameson reprised the role for a brief 8 episode stint in early 1968.
  9. ^ "Take Three Girls/ Take Three Women". Nostalgia Central.
  10. ^ Pratt, Tony (19 April 1974). "Secret of a Fair Cop". Daily Mirror. p. 19.
  11. ^ "Take Three Girls and add 12 Years". Hartlepool Daily Mail. 12 June 1982. p. 7.
  12. ^ "Susan Jameson". British Comedy Guide.
  13. ^ "Boon (an Episode guide)". epguides.
  14. ^ Reilly, Elaine (13 August 2013). "New Tricks' Alun: 'I'm pleased Brian's not bumped off'". What to Watch.
  15. ^ Five actors to play the Queen in 'pivotal' Channel 4 drama The Guardian. 27 January 2009
  16. ^ "Partners on Stage". Burton Daily Mail. 18 April 1998. p. 15.
  17. ^ "Acting with James is unique". Derby Daily Telegraph. 12 April 1998. p. 78.
  18. ^ "Hundreds of villagers vote with their feet objecting to Celtique Energie's bid to explore for oil between Wisborough Green and Kirdford". Sussex World. 26 October 2013.
  19. ^ "Susan Jameson publishes first children's novel". The Gait Post. 7 February 2017.
  20. ^ "The Wire – The Tragical Comedy or Comical Tragedy of Mr Punch". BBC. 3 March 2005. Retrieved 27 November 2013.
  21. ^ "The Wire – A new wave of dramaStone BabyBy Sean Buckley". BBC. 5 May 2005. Retrieved 27 November 2013.