Nelson Mail

The £10 Pom who became one of Australia’s best-loved soap actresses

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Cornelia Frances, who has died aged 77, was an English-born actress who emigrated to Australia in 1970 as a ‘‘£10 Pom’’ and became known for her role as the antagonist­ic lawyer Morag Bellingham in the television soap opera Home and Away; she also presented the Australian version of The Weakest Link.

She was first seen as Morag in 1988, although her appearance­s were sporadic and would often take place when one of the characters was in legal trouble.

Neverthele­ss, she had her own storylines, including giving up her child for adoption, surviving a plane crash at sea and, as a judge, presiding over a sexual assault trial.

Although she played the role for

29 years, Frances found the intermitte­nt nature of her work

‘‘very unsettling’’ and would use media interviews to demand a permanent slot.

She also broke new ground in 1995 with her sympatheti­c portrayal of a transgende­r character called Lindy in the ABC drama So Like a Woman. ‘‘It was challengin­g to be believable, and to understand what a transsexua­l goes through,’’ she said, adding: ‘‘I hope that I can convey . . . a bit of an idea about what can happen.’’

She was born Cornelia Frances Zulver in Liverpool and educated at a Catholic boarding school. She trained at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London and had uncredited roles in Peeping Tom (1960) and The Queen’s Guard (1961), both directed by her uncle, Michael Powell.

In 1965 she visited Australia with her boyfriend, where she became the first woman to read the television news on Channel 9 in Perth. They returned to England, married and then migrated permanentl­y in 1970 under the Assisted Passage Migration Scheme.

SActress b April 7, 1941 d May 29, 2018

tage appearance­s in Perth evolved to presenting television shows. The tough and acidic personalit­y for which Frances became famous was first seen in 1976 in the popular soap opera The Young Doctors, in which she played Sister Grace Scott, basing her character on Sister Sebastian, the strictest person at her school.

‘‘You couldn’t speak, and you couldn’t do this, and you couldn’t talk then, and you had to pray a lot,’’ she said in 2001.

She was also seen in Sons and Daughters (1982-86) and Prisoner in Cell Block H.

After her first stint on Home and Away ended in 1989, work dried up. She returned to England for a couple of seasons in pantomime, and by the mid-1990s was working in the customer relations department of the wine company Cellarmast­ers.

Salvation came in 2001 when Channel Seven in Melbourne offered her an audition for the ‘‘Anne Robinson role’’ in the

‘‘I’m forthright. I’m impatient. I hate inefficien­cy. I don’t suffer fools gladly . . . But a bitch? No.’’ Cornelia Frances, denying any resemblanc­e to her on-screen characters

Australian version of The Weakest Link.

As in the British version, under-pressure contestant­s came out with some unlikely answers. One of her favourites was a player who hazarded a guess that Noah’s Ark had come to rest on Mt Kosciuszko, Australia’s highest mountain; she responded by asking the contestant if he thought that Moses had parted the waters of Sydney Harbour.

When another contender shot off an unthinking response to a question about which girl’s name had become popular through Peter Pan, she suggested that he might take all the women he knew called Tinkerbell to dinner.

In 2011, Frances, known for her flaming red hair, became an ambassador for ‘‘Redheads for Redheads’’, a campaign by the Australian Orangutan Project to raise awareness of the endangered species.

She insisted that she hardly resembled her on-screen personalit­y, adding: ‘‘I’m forthright. I’m impatient. I hate inefficien­cy. I don’t suffer fools gladly . . . But a bitch? No.’’

She died from cancer in a Sydney hospital on Monday.

‘‘I’ve always played the strong ladies,’’ she told A Current Affair earlier this year. ‘‘I’m going to fight it [the cancer], by God I am. That 60 years in the industry . . . it’s been a wonderful road and I’ve loved every minute of it. I’ve loved every soapie I’ve been on.’’

Frances married Michael Eastland in 1969. They later separated, and she is survived by their son. – Telegraph Group/AAP

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 ?? GETTY/AAP ?? Cornelia Frances in Sydney in 2002, left, and at a reunion of actors, third left, above. The others are Judy Nunn, Ray Meagher, and Norman Coburn.
GETTY/AAP Cornelia Frances in Sydney in 2002, left, and at a reunion of actors, third left, above. The others are Judy Nunn, Ray Meagher, and Norman Coburn.

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