Daily Mirror

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Shock, sadness and praise as trailblazi­ng Kay Mellor dies at 71

- BY NICOLA METHVEN TV Editor and MARK JEFFERIES Showbiz Editor Nicola.methven@mirror.co.uk @mirrormeth­s

SHE was a working-class girl from Leeds who could inhabit the lives of sex workers, diet club pals and lottery winners with unflinchin­g compassion, honesty and humour.

Kay Mellor was the voice of struggling underdogs and ordinary people whose trailblazi­ng writing also helped launch the careers of James Corden, Samantha Morton and Sheridan Smith.

The TV industry was reeling yesterday to learn the creator of iconic series, including Fat Friends, Band of Gold, Playing the Field and The Syndicate, had died suddenly at the age of 71.

A spokesman for her TV production company, Rollem Production­s, confirmed “with profound sadness” that she had passed away on Sunday.

Gavin and Stacey star Ruth Jones, who appeared in ITV ’s Fat Friends along with Smith, Corden and Alison Steadman, led the flood of tributes.

She said British TV had “lost one of its greats” adding she felt “completely privileged” to have worked with her.

“Such a down-to-earth, funny, bighearted person whose brilliance lay in seeing the extraordin­ary in the day-today,” she said.

Mellor was known for writing dramas featuring strong female lead characters, and for setting them in the North.

Her upbringing on a council estate informed her work. Her father George Daniel sold vacuum cleaners, and when Mellor was nine, her mother Dinah remarried upholstere­r Abe Harris.

DETERMINED

Mellor and her husband Anthony were married in 1967 after she became pregnant at 16 with daughter Yvonne Francas, now a TV producer.

She gave birth to second daughter and later Coronation Street star Gaynor Faye – who has appeared in many of her mother’s dramas including Playing the Field – four years later.

Mellor drew on this experience in 2013 drama In the Club, saying it helped her “exorcise some demons”.

Reflecting on becoming a mum while at school, she said: “I remember Anthony and I walking home to tell my mum and I felt so frightened.

“She was wonderful though. She sat down and said, ‘You know, you don’t have to marry him, if you don’t want’.”

But she was happy to wed her 17-year-old boyfriend and move into his mum’s council house because they were “head-over-heels”.

But she said: “I was always grateful to my mother for saying that, though.”

As their two daughters grew older, Kay took O-levels and A-levels, then trained in drama as a mature student, before founding a theatre company.

She later moved to Coronation Street and created award-winning kids’ drama Children’s Ward with Paul Abbott, who went on to write Shameless.

Her big break as a writer came with ground-breaking Band of Gold about sex workers on the streets of Bradford trying to run their own business.

She wrote the ITV drama, which ran for three years from 1995, after taking a wrong turn and driving into a red-light area, where Mellor was shocked to see underage girls touting for work.

It gave Hollywood star Samantha Morton one of her first major roles, before she went on to star in Minority Report opposite Tom Cruise. Mellor had

She put working class characters at the centre of brilliant, moving and funny stories

WEST YORKSHIRE MAYOR TRACY BRABIN ON ‘HUGE LOSS’ OF MELLOR

been determined to set her work in and around Yorkshire. She declared: “It’s vital the north of England is represente­d in mainstream drama, not just soap opera.

“Northern dramas have a different feeling because it feels like these are my people, this is the world I know, this is the world I grew up in.”

While she said of her home city of Leeds that it “feeds my creativity”.

West Yorkshire mayor Tracy Brabin yesterday described her as “our voice of the North”, saying: “She put working

class characters at the centre of brilliant compassion­ate, moving and funny stories. Such a loss.”

Fat Friends, which aired on ITV from 2000 to 2005, also gave Corden his first major acting role alongside Ruth Jones.

He said: “She was the most generous, kind and loving person. She gave so many people their first chances. I’ve the fondest memories of being on set with her.”

Former Emmerdale actress Lisa Riley, who also starred in the drama about a slimming club group, described her as “the best boss to work for”.

Coronation Street’s Antony Cotton noted she “was a real trailblaze­r for women”.

Mellor, who was awarded an OBE in 2010, also acted, starring in her adaptation of Jane Eyre in 1997 and Gifted in 2003.

Her play A Passionate Woman, based on the story of her own mother’s doomed affair with a Polish fairground worker, was turned into a BBC drama starring Billie

Piper and Sue Johnston. While her BBC1 series The Syndicate about lottery winners ran for four series from 2012 until last year.

Kym Marsh, who appeared in the drama, said it had been “an absolute honour” to work with her.

Sir Lenny Henry, who also worked on the series, added:

“I found her to be incredibly creative, funny and instinctiv­e. She’ll be missed.”

Mellor said she was inspired to write the drama because of “the times we are living in, where people are desperate and holding on to the dream of winning the lottery as the only solution available”.

Doctor Who writer Russell T Davies said he had learned valuable lessons from Mellor, who had an “unshakeabl­e belief in story, story, story”. He said: “I adored her. She taught me so

much. And she was hilarious.” His Dark Materials writer Jack Thorne said: “I got lucky enough to hear Kay Mellor speak about Band of Gold, and the care and attention with which she told that story, in which she told all her stories, was remarkable.”

BBC content chief Charlotte Moore said: “Kay wrote with such heart, humanity, humour and passion.”

ITV drama chief Polly Hill described Mellor’s incredible ability to connect with her audiences.

She said: “I have been with her many times as she was stopped by people in the street telling her how much they love her characters, how they related to them and wanted more.”

I adored her. She taught me so much. She was hilarious

RUSSELL T DAVIES ON HIS ADMIRATION FOR HER

 ?? ?? LOOSE WOMEN Ruth Langsford, Gaynor Faye, Brenda Edwards and Kay in 2020
LOOSE WOMEN Ruth Langsford, Gaynor Faye, Brenda Edwards and Kay in 2020
 ?? ?? CORRIE ROOTS Gaynor Faye, Kay Mellor, and Julie Hesmondhal­gh, in 2013
CORRIE ROOTS Gaynor Faye, Kay Mellor, and Julie Hesmondhal­gh, in 2013
 ?? ?? TELLY GOLD One of her last TV interviews
HONOUR Receiving her OBE, 2010
TELLY GOLD One of her last TV interviews HONOUR Receiving her OBE, 2010

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