'Charlotte Ninon Coleman' (
April 3,
1968 -
November 14,
2001) was an
English actress.
She was born in
London. Her mother was the actress
Ann Beach, and her father was the TV producer
Francis Coleman. Her younger sister is the actress
Lisa Coleman, who has appeared in ''
Casualty'' as Jude.
She went to the
Anna Scher Theatre school in
Islington,
North London, because she said she was "too cool" to go to the
Brownies.
Early TV roles in ''A Choice of Evils'' (
BBC, 1977) and ''Two People'' (
LWT, c.1977, as Emma Moffatt) followed. She had a crush on Stephen Garlick, her co-star in ''Two People''. For the role, she had to choose a stuffed toy for Emma to carry; she chose a toy which she named "Haggis", which she still had when interviewed in 1990.
Her first major TV role was as Sue, in
Southern Television's ''
Worzel Gummidge''. This ran for four series (and a Christmas special), from 1978 to 1981 on the
ITV network.
This was soon followed by her role as the teenage rebel
Marmalade Atkins, firstly in ''Marmalade Atkins in Space'' (a one-off drama shown in 1981 as part of the Dramarama strand), and then in two series, ''Educating Marmalade'' (1982 - 1983) and ''Danger - Marmalade at Work'' (1984). All three were made by
Thames and written by
Andrew Davies.
When she was 15, feeling that her upbringing to that point had been too liberal (her parents "didn't believe in restraint"), she used her earnings to enrol in
Dartington Hall school in Devon - ironically a very progressive school which students "didn't have to go to any lessons, so I didn't. I spent 15 grand - all my money - and it was just stupid really." After this, she attended cookery school."
[1]
In 1990 she appeared as Jess, a girl from Lancashire brought up by a strict Pentecostal mother, in the acclaimed
BBC television drama ''
Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit'' based on
Jeanette Winterson's
novel of the same name. Coleman won a
Royal Television Society Best Actress award for her portrayal of the young lesbian character. She also read the novel for release by
BBC Audiobooks.
In the early 1990s she sometimes worked as a waitress in
Camden Town at The Blue Bridge café.
Her best known film role was as Scarlett, Charles' punk flatmate, in ''
Four Weddings and a Funeral''.
She also appeared in
Simon Nye's little-known 1998 sitcom ''
How Do You Want Me?'', alongside
Dylan Moran''.
Other television appearances in the 1980s and 90s included roles in ''
The Bill'' and ''
Inspector Morse'', in the short-lived comedy series ''
Freddie and Max'', with
Anne Bancroft, the drama about homelessness, ''
Sweet Nothing'', and, in 1996, another lesbian role, Barb Gale, in the political satire ''
Giving Tongue''.
She died of an
asthma attack at the age of 33 years.
External links
★
★
Almost Grown, interview from December 1996
★
Charlotte Coleman, Guardian Obituary
★
Obituary at Socialist site
Notes
1. Almost Grown