Betty Alberge
Betty Alberge | |
---|---|
Born | Manchester, Lancashire, England | 22 January 1922
Died | 18 May 1991 Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England | (aged 69)
Occupation | Actress |
Spouse | Rupert Marshall (m. 1944) |
Children | Christine |
Betty Alberge (22 January 1922 – 18 May 1991) was an English theatre, radio and television actress, with an extensive career which ran from the late 1930s to the 1980s. She was best known for her roles as Florrie Lindley in Coronation Street, in which she appeared between 1960 and 1965, and as Edna Cross in Brookside between 1983 and 1985.
Early life
Born in Manchester on 22 January 1922, Alberge received her formal education at Fallowfield Central School for Girls in Manchester. Whilst at school she became interested in acting after performing in a school theatrical production of Maurice Maeterlinck's The Death of Tintagiles with school friend Patricia Pilkington, later to become known as Pat Phoenix and play Elsie Tanner in Coronation Street.[1]
Acting career
After initial training to be an actress at the Repertory School of Acting in Manchester, Alberge completed her training with the Colwyn Bay Repertory Company, at the New Rialto Theatre in Colwyn Bay. During World War II she was employed as a performer with ENSA. In the 1950s she worked with a wide variety dramatic productions in theatre and with the British Broadcasting Corporation.[1]
Coronation Street
Alberge was one of the original cast of the television serial drama Coronation Street, playing the character Florrie Lindley from episode one, on Friday 9 December 1960, until 1965 when she left the series. The show's creator, Tony Warren, originally wrote the part of Ida Barlow for Alberge, but after the first audition, he cast her in the role as shopkeeper. Alberge had the distinction of having the second line in the first scene of the first episode: "It's funny having me own name over me own shop, Florrie Lindley". The character let customers believe she was a widow when, in fact, she was estranged from her husband Norman. Under new producer Tim Aspinall, Alberge was written out of the serial in June 1965, after almost 300 episodes, when her character emigrated to Canada with her husband Norman.[1][2]
Later work
After she left Coronation Street, Alberge continued to perform in theatre, and regularly appeared as a supporting character actress in television dramas and light entertainment shows from the 1960s to the 1980s, including Z-Cars, the Ken Dodd Show, Crown Court, Rentaghost, Odd Man Out and Juliet Bravo. In November 1983, she joined the cast of Brookside, playing pensioner Edna Cross. She remained in this role until the character's death in 1985, after just over 100 episodes.[2][3] When Alberge learned that her character was to be written out of the soap, she said "Life goes on."[4]
Her last on screen performance was in 1986 in an episode of the BBC's Casualty.[2]
Personal life
Alberge married Rupert Marshall in Manchester in 1944.[5] The couple had one daughter, Christine, in 1947.[6]
Death
Alberge died on 18 May 1991, aged 69, in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire.
Filmography
Film
Year | Title | Role | Type |
---|---|---|---|
1959 | Post and Pheasant | Mrs Throttle | TV movie |
1960 | Coronation Street: First Dry Run | Florrie Lindley | TV movie |
1966 | Second Honeymoon | Agnes Bowden | TV movie |
1971 | Crucible of Terror | Dorothy Clare | Feature film |
1972 | Disciple of Death | Dorothy | Feature film |
1980 | Exchange and Divide | Mrs Carr | Feature film |
Television
Year | Title | Role | Type |
---|---|---|---|
1958 | Television Playwright | Lucy Parkinson | TV play series, season 1, episode 14: "Red Rose for Ransom" |
1958 | ITV Play of the Week | Mrs Broome | TV play series, season 4, episode 1: "Mary Broome" |
1959 | The Ken Dodd Show | TV series, 1 episode | |
1960 | BBC Sunday-Night Play | Mrs Doyle | TV play series, season 1, episode 17: "Twentieth Century Theatre: Love on the Dole" |
1960 | Knight Errant Limited | Receptionist / Mrs Rigby-Jones | TV series, season 2, 2 episodes |
1960–65 | Coronation Street | Florrie Lindley | TV series, 288 episodes |
1968 | The Wednesday Play | Ivy | TV play series, season 8, episode 3: "The Gorge" |
1969 | Nearest and Dearest | Mrs Rowbottom | TV series, season 2, episode 2: "Wish You Were Here" |
1969 | Softly Softly: Task Force | Mrs Dawkins | TV series, season 1, episode 1: "Arrival" |
1969–72 | ITV Playhouse | Mrs Milner / Marge | TV play series, 2 episodes |
1969–76 | Z-Cars | Various characters | TV series, 6 episodes |
1970 | Francis Durbridge's Paul Temple | Joan Langford | TV series, season 2, episode 13: "Re-take" |
1971 | Public Eye | Mrs Greene | TV series, season 5, episode 8: "Who Wants to Be Told Bad News?" |
1971 | The Fenn Street Gang | Mrs Mathews | TV series, season 1, episode 12: "Who Was That Lady?" |
1973 | Harriet’s Back in Town | Mrs Henry | TV series, season 1, 2 episodes |
1973 | Crown Court | Mrs Winifred Cummings | TV series, season 2, episode 141: "A Message to Ireland: Part 3" |
1974 | A Raging Calm | Mrs Baxter | Miniseries, episode 6: "Missing Persons" |
1974 | Zodiac | Paula Sutton | TV series, season 1, episode 2: "The Cool Aquarian" |
1974 | Marked Personal | Mabel Green | TV series, season 1, 2 episodes |
1974 | Late Night Drama | Mother | TV series, season 1, episode 2: "A Brisk Dip Sagaciously Considered" |
1974 | Father Brown | Mrs Gow | TV series, season 1, episode 11: "The Head of Caesar" |
1975 | Rooms | Miss Gardner | TV series, season 1, episodes 18–19 |
1975 | Rule Britannia! | Landlady | TV series, season 1, episode 6: "The Lost Weekend" |
1975–79 | Play for Today | Mum / Mrs Longstaff | TV play series, 2 episodes |
1976–79 | Rentaghost | Mrs Sheila Mumford | TV series, 17 episodes |
1977 | Centre Play | Lil | TV play series, season 6, episode 3: "Kipper" |
1977 | London Belongs to Me | Mrs Boon | TV series, season 1, 6 episodes |
1977 | Odd Man Out | Auntie Cissie | TV series, season 1, episode 1: "A Chip Off the Old Block" |
1978 | Parables | Mrs Shoppe | TV series, season 1, episode 4: "Another Weekend" |
1978 | Robin’s Nest | Cynthia Henderson | TV series, season 3, episode 6: "Once Two is Three" |
1979 | House of Caradus | Mrs Harris | TV series, season 1, episode 7: "Long Shadow" |
1979 | A Moment in Time | Rose | TV series, 3 episodes |
1981 | Funny Man | Mrs Gibson | TV series, season 1, episode 13: "Trumpet Voluntary" |
1981 | Lady Killers | Margaret Crossley | TV series, season 2, episode 3: "Perfect Husband" |
1981 | Angels | Mrs Marrit | TV series, season 7, episodes 15–18 |
1981–82 | Juliet Bravo | Eunice Prebble / Mrs Webster | TV series, 2 episodes |
1982 | Never the Twain | Customer | TV series, season 2, episode 6: "The More We Are Together" |
1983 | Mr Right | Mrs Grover | TV series, season 1, episodes 1–4 |
1983–85 | Brookside | Edna Cross | TV series, 103 episodes |
1986 | Casualty | Mrs Davies | TV series, season 1, episode 8: "Crazies" (final on-screen performance) |
References
- ^ a b c Profile of Betty Alberge on the 'Corrie Net' website, acting profiles of the cast through the history of the 'Coronation Street' television series. http://www.corrie.net/profiles/actors/alberge_betty.html
- ^ a b c "Betty Alberge". IMDb. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
- ^ Brookside. The First 10 Years. The Authorised History. Boxtree. Page 98 and 99
- ^ "On This Day ... 30 YEARS AGO". Liverpool Echo. 20 May 2015.
- ^ "FreeBMD Entry Info". www.freebmd.org.uk. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
- ^ "FreeBMD Entry Info". www.freebmd.org.uk. Retrieved 21 December 2021.