Barbara Windsor a priceless and mischievous stage sensation
over 4 years in The guardian
The late actor took on Brecht, Falstaff and panto and will be remembered for her collaborations with Joan Littlewood
Peter Bradshaw on her film career
Fame is a funny thing. Barbara Windsor will obviously be remembered for the Carry On films and for playing Peggy Mitchell in EastEnders. But she was very much a theatre animal who made her stage debut at the age of 13 in Sleeping Beauty, became a pivotal member of Joan Littlewood’s Theatre Workshop and was playing in panto in her 70s. She even became a character in a play – Terry Johnson’s Cleo, Camping, Emmanuelle and Dick – and one of my treasured memories is of the sound of Windsor’s hearty gurgle at seeing herself impersonated by Samantha Spiro on a National Theatre stage.
She had the priceless gift of being able to project a distinct, unique personality. That made her a natural for Littlewood, who was wary of what she called, in heavily inverted commas, “acting”. Like a lot of the young women at Theatre Workshop, Windsor was previously a performer at Winston’s nightclub in London. “They could all sing, dance, ad lib, change clothes in a matter of seconds,” wrote Littlewood, “and light up the scene.” Barbara Windsor went on lighting up the scene for the rest of her life. Continue reading...