Skip to main content

THE PIONEER (REMEMBERING JILL GASCOINE)


After moving to LA, the English actress and author Jill Gascoine kind of faded from view.

Yet for a period in the 1980s, she broke convention as the star of Britain's favourite detective series 'The Gentle Touch'.

Born in London in 1937,  she cut her teeth as an actor in the Dundee Repertory Theatre and in Leicester where she worked with Ken Loach at the Living Theatre.

It was in Dundee that she would marry her first husband Bill Keith, a local hotelier with whom she would have two sons but it ended in divorce.


Scraping a living and supporting her two sons, she graduated to television roles building a career with appearances in popular shows during the 1970s like 'Dr Finlay's Casebook', 'Z Cars', 'Dixon of Dock Green', 'Late Night Theatre' 'Six Days of Justice', 'General Hospital', 'Softly, Softly', 'Taskforce' and 'Within These Walls'.

There was also a role in the raunchy 1975 British softcore sex comedy 'Confessions of A Pop Performer' with Robin Askwith.

And a role as Wendy as an adult in a live action TV production of 'Peter Pan' with Mia Farrow and Danny Kaye.

Her big breakthrough came in the BBC nautical soap 'The Onedin Line' where she played Letty for three series.


This led to her landing the role of Maggie Forbes in ITV's groundbreaking primetime London cop drama 'The Gentle Touch'.

Created by Terence Feely, it beat BBC1's 'Juliet Bravo' by four months to become the first police drama to be fronted by a woman and began with Maggie's husband being killed in the first episode.

Over five series, 'The Gentle Touch' acquired a reputation for its frank treatment of controversial issues like sexism, racism, pornography, homosexuality, mental health and euthanasia.

Gascoine famously encouraged one actress playing a prostitute to rewrite her dialogue after she complained it was not realistic. That actress was Lynda La Plante who would go on to write for ITV the iconic gangster series 'Widows' and the female led cop drama 'Prime Suspect'.


When 'The Gentle Touch' came to an end, Gascoine signed up to a 1984 spin-off 'CATS Eyes' with saw Leslie Ash which saw Forbes run a private detective agency in Kent.

She would later admit the spin-off was silly, aiming to be a British equivalent of 'Charlie's Angels' but it ran for three series and Wasa ratings success.

By the time it came to an end, she had been five years married to the actor Alfred Molina who she had fallen in love with as they shared the stage in a West End production of 'Destry Rides Again'.

There was a regular role in the final season of ITV's hit sitcom 'Hone to Roost' with John Thaw and Reece Dindsdale and she also joined Glenda Jackson, Richard Harris, Jenny Agutter, Nigel Hawthorne and Frank Finkay in Peter Duffell's 1990 adventure movie 'King of the Wind'.


Gascoine also popped up in episodes of the ITV series 'Boon', 'Taggart', 'El C.I.D.' with Amanda Redman and John Bird and Tony Dow's Screen One film 'Trust Me' which also starred husband Alfred Molina, Hywel Bennett and Roger Lloyd Pack.

As Alfred Molina's career started to blossom in Hollywood, she also tried to buikda career in LA but it proved more of a struggle.

There were minor movie roles as a waitress in Paul Haggis' 1993 Canadian drama 'Red Hot' in 1993 with Balthazar Getty, Carla Gugino and Armin Meuller Stahl and as a nurse in David Zucker's sports comedy BASEketball with Ernest Borgnine, Jenny McCarthy, Yasmine Bleeth and Robert Vaughn.

There was an appearance as an English aristocrat who Barry Corbin's Maurice tries to impress in a 1994 episode of the quirky CBS Alaskan comedy drama 'Northern Exposure'.

And while she returned to the theatre, Gascoine also battled depression.


Encouraged by her husband, Gascoine turned to writing three novels - 'Addicted' and 'Lilian' about affairs and 'Just Like A Woman' in which the heroine on her fifties was forced into an abortion.

There would guest appearances as a nun in the CBS TV film 'The Patron Saint of Liars' with Dana Delany and Clancy Brown and the hit Roma Downey CBS series 'Touched By An Angel'.

In 1997, she successfully battled kidney cancer.

And in 2009, she was cast as the mother of Ronnie and Roxy Mitchell in the BBC1 soap 'Eastenders' but pulled out on the first day of filming, only to be replaced by Glynnis Barber.


In 2013 at a gala to raise funding for Alzheimer's, Gascoine revealed she had developed the degenerative brain disease.

Gascoine was clearly adored by many of her fellow actors who praised her for her generosity.

But she was also rightly hailed as a trailblazer.

(Jill Gascoine passed away at the age of 83 on April 29, 2020)

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A FAMILY DIVIDED (KIN, SEASON TWO)

© RTE & AMC+ Recently  in a review of 'The Dry' for the Slugger O'Toole website,  I wrote about it being a golden age for Irish TV drama. And it is. Last year saw Sharon Horgan's Irish Film and Television Award winning black comedy ' Bad Sisters ' delight audiences on Apple TV+. Fran Harris ' The Dry ' has made a bit of a splash on Britbox, RTE and ITVx. ©  RTE & AMC+ North of the border, Channel 4's ' Derry Girls ' and BBC Northern Ireland's 'Three Families' and ' Blue Lights ' have really impressed audiences. However over the past eight weeks, one show has muscled its way back to the front of the pack. 'Kin' is a gangland drama made by RTE and AMC. The first series hit our screens in September 2021 and made an immediate impression with its high production values and gripping storyline. © RTE & AMC+ The tale of a south Dublin crime family, the Kinsellas sucked into a feud with a more powerful gang hea...

TWO SOULS COLLIDE (BALLYWALTER)

© Breakout Pictures & Elysian 'Ballywalter' isn't about Ballywalter. The Northern Irish coastal village simply provides a backdrop for director Prasanna Puranawajah and screenwriter Stacey Gregg's delicate tale of damaged souls coming into each other's orbit and helping each other cope. If anything, Belfast features more than Ballywalter in Puranawajah's movie but we know  that title was already taken . Seana Kerslake plays Eileen, a twentysomething university dropout who has gone off the rails and is back living with her mum, Abigail McGibbon's Jen. Taking on the job of a taxi driver, she has to endure the opinions of customers who don't think it's a job for a woman. © Breakout Pictures & Elysian Eileen doubles as a barista and can be pretty spiky with the customers in both jobs. Disillusioned and dejected, she hides behind drink as she struggles to come to terms with the death of her father, the sudden ending of a relationship with a cheati...

FILMS OF 2024 (SIXTY TO FIFTY ONE)

© Amazon MGM Studios 2024 was a year of underwhelming blockbusters, patchy streaming movies and genuinely rewarding awards contenders. But what caught the eye of Pomona over the past 12 months? Pomona ranks 60 movies it watched - focusing on the good, the bad and the ugly. Here's our countdown from 60 to 51. 60. CHRISTMAS EVE IN MILLER'S POINT (Tyler Thomas Taomina) Good Christmas movies are difficult to pull off. For every ' It's A Wonderful Life ,' ' Miracle On 34th Street ' and ' Elf ,' there's three or four turkeys like ' Santa Claus - The Movie ,' ' Fred Claus ' or ' Jingle All The Way '. Now you can add Taomina's irritating comedy drama to the naughty list. A feeble attempt to give the Festive movie an indie twist,  Taomina's film thinks it's groundbreaking and is incredibly smug about its indie ambitions. However it's a relentlessly unfunny tale about a large Italian American family celebrating Chris...