Jennifer Moss (actress)

Jennifer Victoria Moss (10 January 1945 – 5 October 2006) was an English actress and singer born in Wigan, Lancashire. She was best known for her role as Lucille Hewitt on the long-running soap opera, Coronation Street, which she played from 1960–74.[1]

Jennifer Moss
Born
Jennifer Victoria Moss

(1945-01-10)10 January 1945
Wigan, Lancashire, England
Died5 October 2006(2006-10-05) (aged 61)
Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland
OccupationActress, singer
Years active1960–1997
Known forLucille Hewitt (Coronation Street)
Children3

Early career

Moss first achieved fame as a twelve-year-old as one of the child actors on the BBC's light entertainment programme Children's Hour. It was there that she first came to the attention of actor Tony Warren, who would later create Coronation Street. Moss moved into television in the early 1960s, and appeared in June Evening and Magnolia Street for BBC Television. At the age of 15, she joined Coronation Street in episode four as the programme's first wildchild Lucille Hewitt, a role she played until she left in 1974 after 14 years and 756 episodes.[1]

Music career/discography

In 1961, during the Equity strike, Moss used her freedom away from the Street to concentrate on other projects. She appeared in a West End musical, and made her debut on the big screen when she co-starred with David Hemmings, Veronica Hurst, John Pike and Joan Newell in the beat film Live It Up! (1963), singing Please Let It Happen To Me. Her debut single Hobbies, produced by Joe Meek failed to make the UK top 40 and her music career fizzled. She recorded a number of other songs which remained unreleased until 1996, when a CD compilation album Let's Go With Joe Meek's Girls was released.

Below is a complete list of songs that Moss recorded with Meek:

  • Hobbies/Big Boys - Columbia DB 7063 June 1963
  • Please Don't Say Goodbye
  • Please Let It Happen To Me (from Live It Up!)
  • When My Boy Comes Marching Home

After the Equity strike, Moss returned to Coronation Street where she would remain as Lucille until July 1974.[1]

Later career

After spending much of the 1970s and the early 1980s in relative obscurity, Moss finally beat her demons and slipped back into acting. She was heard on the Liverpool BBC radio soap opera The Merseysiders, and seen as an extra on Channel 4's Brookside. In 1986 she played Stephen McGann's mother in the BBC comedy series Help!, and in 1989, appeared as a waitress in The Bread Christmas Special.[1]

Jennifer returned to guest TV shows in the late 1990s, appearing on Tony Warren's episode of This Is Your Life, L!VE TV and Sky Soaps. In 1997, she appeared opposite Patricia Routledge in the Woman of the Year episode of Hetty Wainthropp Investigates as a nosy neighbour. In 2000, Moss appeared on the programme After They Were Famous, and a year later was interviewed on Life After the Street.[1]

Personal life

In the 1980s, Moss successfully battled alcoholism, which was ultimately the reason for her being sacked from Coronation Street by then producer Susi Hush for bad behaviour in 1974. Moss stated that she drank to numb the pain she felt after the death of her father, Reg. In an interview with the Evening Times in 1979, Moss, then living in a three-apartment house in Wigan, found for her by the local Social Works Department when she was homeless, Moss said: "My youngest daughter, Sarah, is only three years old and is mentally handicapped... while I was pregnant I was drinking all the time. I will go to my grave with this damage to my child on my conscience." Her eldest daughter, Naomi (like Sarah) was taken into care, and her baby boy had died when he was three days old in 1976.[2]

In August 1980, it was reported that Moss and her then fourth husband had broken into a local Labour club in a search for drink. She left court and was put on probation for two years.[3]

Moss joined Alcoholics Anonymous and decided to settle in Liverpool in 1982, on the basis that the city had 28 Alcoholics Anonymous meetings weekly. She lived in a house owned by the Merseyside Housing Improvement Trust and began to sort her life out.[4] Before reviving her acting career, she took on various jobs as a waitress and a taxi driver but there were also court appearances for breaking and entering and shoplifting, a charge of which she was cleared.[5]

She was married five times. She wed her first husband, the son of a millionaire in 1968, but they divorced the following year after Jennifer gave birth to their daughter. She then married a Leeds motor dealer, Adrian Glick , who was violent to her. Her third marriage was to a man ten years her junior and an alcoholic, and her fourth marriage to a Liberal worker eighteen years younger than her also dissolved quickly. In 1989, Moss wed her fifth husband, computer software expert and Cambridge graduate Stephen Ramsden, and was happily married to him until her death.[6]

Towards the end of her life, she reconciled with her daughter Naomi, who later married and made Moss a grandmother. She was also often reunited with former and current Coronation Street stars when she attended launches and anniversary parties. She and Ramsden ran an Internet stamp collecting business.[6]

According to the Wigan Evening Post, Moss had been in failing health for some time, but made a spiritual pilgrimage to India in her last year, where she finally came to terms with her father's death.[7]

Death

Moss died in October 2006 at her home in Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland. Her wishes were to be buried next to her father, Reg, whose gravestone already bore her name before she died. She had been estranged from her mother, Dora.[7]

References

  1. Jennifer Moss at IMDb
  2. Milne, Margaret (27 March 1979). "The Fallen Star". Evening Times. Glasgow. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
  3. "Probation for TV actress". The Herald. Glasgow. 27 August 1980. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
  4. "Obituary: Jennifer Moss". The Daily Telegraph. London, UK. 6 October 2006. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
  5. Newley, Patrick (30 October 2006). "Jennifer Moss". The Stage. London, UK. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
  6. "Jennifer Moss". Corrie.net. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
  7. "Former Wigan TV star dies in Scotland". Wigan Evening Post. 6 October 2006. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
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