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Pauline Fowler

 
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Pauline Fowler



 
 
Pauline Fowler (née
Married and maiden names

A married name is the family name adopted by a person upon marriage, and in speaking of the many cultures where the practice is traditional for women, the maiden name is the family name that the married name replaces....
 Beale) is a fictional character
Fictional character

A character is any person, persona, identity, or entity that exists in a The arts. The process of conveying information about characters in fiction is called characterisation....
 from the BBC soap opera
Soap opera

A soap opera is an ongoing, episodic work of dramatic fiction presented in Serial format on television or radio. Programs described as soap operas have existed as an entertainment long enough for audiences to recognize them simply by the term soap....
 EastEnders
EastEnders

EastEnders is a popular and award-winning television soap opera, first broadcast in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 19 February 1985. It currently ranks within the top of the most watched shows in the United Kingdom....
, a long-running serial drama about working class
Working class

Working class is a term used in academic sociology and in ordinary conversation to describe, depending on context and speaker, those employed in specific fields or types of work....
 life in the fictional London borough of Walford
Walford

Walford is a fictional London borough of East London, England in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. The name suggests a conflation of Walthamstow and Stratford, London, both real places in East London....
. The character is no longer part of current storylines, but was played by actress Wendy Richard
Wendy Richard

Wendy Richard, Member of the Order of the British Empire was an England actor best known for playing List of Are You Being Served? characters#Miss Shirley Brahms in Are You Being Served? and Pauline Fowler in EastEnders....
 between 1985 and 2006. Pauline was created by scriptwriter Tony Holland
Tony Holland

Tony Holland was an England television writer best known as a writer and co-creator of the BBC soap opera EastEnders....
 and producer Julia Smith
Julia Smith

Julia Smith was an England television director and television producer....
 as one of EastEnders' original characters. She made her debut in the soap's first episode on 19 February 1985, and remained for twenty-one years and ten months, making her the second longest-running original character, surpassed only by Ian Beale
Ian Beale

Ian Albert Beale is a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He is played by Adam Woodyatt and is the only character to have appeared since the first episode on 19 February 1985 continuously....
.

Pauline's storylines focus on drudgery, money worries and family troubles.






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Encyclopedia


Pauline Fowler (née
Married and maiden names

A married name is the family name adopted by a person upon marriage, and in speaking of the many cultures where the practice is traditional for women, the maiden name is the family name that the married name replaces....
 Beale) is a fictional character
Fictional character

A character is any person, persona, identity, or entity that exists in a The arts. The process of conveying information about characters in fiction is called characterisation....
 from the BBC soap opera
Soap opera

A soap opera is an ongoing, episodic work of dramatic fiction presented in Serial format on television or radio. Programs described as soap operas have existed as an entertainment long enough for audiences to recognize them simply by the term soap....
 EastEnders
EastEnders

EastEnders is a popular and award-winning television soap opera, first broadcast in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 19 February 1985. It currently ranks within the top of the most watched shows in the United Kingdom....
, a long-running serial drama about working class
Working class

Working class is a term used in academic sociology and in ordinary conversation to describe, depending on context and speaker, those employed in specific fields or types of work....
 life in the fictional London borough of Walford
Walford

Walford is a fictional London borough of East London, England in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. The name suggests a conflation of Walthamstow and Stratford, London, both real places in East London....
. The character is no longer part of current storylines, but was played by actress Wendy Richard
Wendy Richard

Wendy Richard, Member of the Order of the British Empire was an England actor best known for playing List of Are You Being Served? characters#Miss Shirley Brahms in Are You Being Served? and Pauline Fowler in EastEnders....
 between 1985 and 2006. Pauline was created by scriptwriter Tony Holland
Tony Holland

Tony Holland was an England television writer best known as a writer and co-creator of the BBC soap opera EastEnders....
 and producer Julia Smith
Julia Smith

Julia Smith was an England television director and television producer....
 as one of EastEnders' original characters. She made her debut in the soap's first episode on 19 February 1985, and remained for twenty-one years and ten months, making her the second longest-running original character, surpassed only by Ian Beale
Ian Beale

Ian Albert Beale is a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He is played by Adam Woodyatt and is the only character to have appeared since the first episode on 19 February 1985 continuously....
.

Pauline's storylines focus on drudgery, money worries and family troubles. The matriarchal stalwart of the fictional London community of Albert Square
Albert Square

Albert Square is the fictional location of the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. It is ostensibly located in the equally fictional London borough of Walford in London's East End of London....
, she is portrayed as a stoic, opinionated, battle-axe — a family-orientated woman who alienates her kin due to overbearing interference. Pauline's marriage to the downtrodden Arthur
Arthur Fowler

Arthur George Fowler was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. The father of The Beale/Fowler family, he was played by Bill Treacher....
 was central to the character for the first eleven years of the programme, culminating with his screen death in 1996. She was used for comedic purposes in scenes with her launderette
Self-service laundry

A self-service laundry is a facility where clothes are washed and dried. They are known in the United Kingdom as launderettes or laundrettes, and in the United States, Canada, and Australia as laundromats or washaterias....
 colleague, Dot Branning
Dot Branning

Dorothy "Dot" Branning is a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera, EastEnders, played by June Brown.Dot first appeared in EastEnders in July 1985 and has worked as a launderette assistant for most of that time along with Pauline Fowler....
, and scriptwriters included many feuds in her narrative, most notably with her daughter-in-law, Sonia
Sonia Fowler

Sonia Ann Fowler was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Natalie Cassidy and made her first appearance on 21 December 1993....
, and Den Watts
Den Watts

Dennis "Den" Watts was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders, played by actor Leslie Grantham. He became well-known for his tabloid nickname, "Dirty Den"....
, a family-friend who got her daughter Michelle
Michelle Fowler

Michelle Fowler was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by actress Susan Tully.Although she was one of the brighter people in Walford, that didn't stop Michelle making some huge mistakes during her time in Albert Square....
 pregnant at just 16. A famous episode in 1986, which included Pauline discovering that Den was the father of Michelle's baby, drew over 30 million viewers, and was listed at #36 in The Times
The Times

The Times is a daily national newspaper published in the United Kingdom since 1785 when it was known as The Daily Universal Register.The Times and its sister paper The Sunday Times are published by Times Newspapers Limited, a subsidiary of News International....
1998 list of "Top 100 cult moments in Film". Actress Wendy Richard announced Pauline's retirement from the serial in 2006, and the character was killed off in a "whodunnit?" murder storyline, with Richard making her final appearance on 25 December 2006.

Pauline was a staple in the UK press during her time in
EastEnders, representative of the symbiosis between Britain's soaps and tabloid newspapers. Widely-read tabloids, such as The Sun and Daily Mirror, would routinely publish articles about forthcoming developments in Pauline's storylines. Critical opinion on the character differs. She has been described as a "legend" and a television icon
Cultural icon

A cultural icon can be an , a symbol, a logo, picture, name, face, person, or building or other image that is readily recognized, and generally represents an object or concept with great cultural significance to a wide cultural group....
, but was also voted the 35th "most annoying person of 2006" (being the only fictional character
Fictional character

A character is any person, persona, identity, or entity that exists in a The arts. The process of conveying information about characters in fiction is called characterisation....
 to appear on the list). The character is well-known even outside of the show's viewer-base, and away from the on-screen serial, Pauline has been the subject of television documentaries, behind-the-scenes books, fictional tie-in novels and comedy sketch shows.

Character creation


Background

Pauline Fowler is one of the original twenty-three characters invented by the creators of
EastEnders, Tony Holland
Tony Holland

Tony Holland was an England television writer best known as a writer and co-creator of the BBC soap opera EastEnders....
 (1940–2007) and Julia Smith
Julia Smith

Julia Smith was an England television director and television producer....
 (1927–1997). Holland had drawn on his own London background for inspiration, naming three of the original characters after his own relatives, specifically his aunt Lou and her children, Holland's cousins, the fraternal twins Pete and Pauline. This family setup of a woman named Lou Beale
Lou Beale

Louise Ada "Lou" Beale was a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Anna Wing. The character was also played by Karen Meagher in the 1988 EastEnders special, List of EastEnders spin-offs#EastEnders: Civvy Street, set during the Second World War....
, with twin children Pete
Pete Beale

Peter "Pete" Beale was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was played by Peter Dean, and made his first appearance in the programme's first episode, on 19 February 1985....
 and Pauline, was recreated on-screen as the first family of
EastEnders, the Beales and Fowlers
The Beale/Fowler family

The Beale/Fowler family is a fictional family in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders.For years before the show began, the family consisted of Albert Beale and Lou Beale and their three children, Kenny Beale and twins Pauline Fowler and Pete Beale....
.

Pauline's original character outline as written by Smith and Holland appears in an abridged form in their book,
EastEnders: The Inside Story
EastEnders books

This is a list of books about or relating to the United Kingdom soap opera EastEnders....
.

Casting

From the beginning, Smith considered the role ideal for Wendy Richard
Wendy Richard

Wendy Richard, Member of the Order of the British Empire was an England actor best known for playing List of Are You Being Served? characters#Miss Shirley Brahms in Are You Being Served? and Pauline Fowler in EastEnders....
, whom she had worked with on the 1960s BBC soap,
The Newcomers
The Newcomers (TV series)

The Newcomers was a late 1960s BBC soap opera which dealt with the subject of a London family, the Coopers, who moved to a housing estate in the fictional country town of Angleton....
; Holland and Smith decided to approach her about the role, even though their casting policy was not to use “stars” — Richard was already well known in the UK for playing glamorous roles, such as Shirley Brahms
List of Are You Being Served? characters

This is a list of characters that appeared in the BBC British sitcom Are You Being Served?, that aired from 1972 to 1985. A number of the characters later reappeared in the 1990s sitcom Grace & Favour....
 in the successful sitcom,
Are You Being Served?
Are You Being Served?

Are You Being Served? was a long-running British sitcom broadcast from 1972 to 1985. It was set in the men's and women's department of Grace Brothers, a large, fictional London store....
At their first meeting, Tony Holland informed Richard that they were planning a programme that would not "duck social issues but would be a hard-hitting drama including teenage pregnancy, drugs, racial conflict, prostitution, rape, mental illness, homosexuality, alcoholism, and muggings among its subjects." In order to carry such controversial storylines, Richard was told that "powerful characters to whom things just naturally happened" had been invented, and two families, the Fowlers and the Beales, were to form the core of the soap's narrative. In her autobiography, Richard states, "If I accepted, my character was to be Pauline Fowler. A middle-aged mother of two teenagers, with a late baby on the way, Pauline worked part-time at the launderette, voted Labour
Labour Party (UK)

The Labour Party is a political party in the United Kingdom. Founded at the start of the 20th century, it has been since the 1920s the principal party of the Left-wing politics in England, Scotland and Wales, but not Northern Ireland, where it has only recently organised again....
 and supported Arsenal
Arsenal F.C.

Arsenal Football Club are an English professional association football club based in Holloway, London, North London. They play in the Premier League and are one of the Football records in England#Most successful clubs overall in Football in England, having won thirteen Football League First Division and Premier League titles and ten FA Cup...
. She was married to Arthur, who was out of work and was really a bit of a failure, not much good at anything in life." Richard thought it sounded like a challenging role.

There were initial fears that Richard's glamorous image would not work for the character and Smith also feared that Richard would be apprehensive about playing Pauline, who would be anything but glamorous, but these fears were swept aside when Richard announced that she was sick of glamour and wanted to play her own age. Richard has commented, "although it would be such a huge transformation of my screen image, it was after all my twenty-fifth year in showbusiness, and I'd realised that I couldn't go on playing dolly birds forever … I knew right away I would be mad to turn down the part of Pauline."

After she accepted the role, Richard was told by Julia Smith that she would have to change her appearance, to make it more in keeping with Pauline's unglamorous lifestyle. This included having her hair cut. Richard has commented, "I was very proud of my long hair, which had taken me years to grow. I hadn't had it cut short for nineteen years but reluctantly, I agreed … I cried my eyes out for the rest of the day after that traumatic hair cut." From September 1984, Richard was involved in pre-production of the series, covering every angle, from hair, costume design and make-up to organising the set interior of her character's screen house. Richard has said that Pauline had been given extensive biographical detail, including minute specifics, such as her fictional time of her birth: "It was vital that we should get to know our own characters intimately and so the cast initially sat together in family groups to learn our lines and bond with our 'relations' … it was essential to develop the rapport that families, who'd been together for years, would naturally have." Richard's casting was considered to be "a giant leap of faith" by co-creators Holland and Smith, but one that ultimately "landed on its feet", because Pauline went on to be one of the longest running characters in
EastEnders
history, remaining with the show for nearly twenty-two years.

Character development and impact


Lineage and personality

The character of Pauline was a cornerstone of EastEnders; the linchpin
Linchpin

A linchpin, or lynchpin, is a fastener used to prevent a wheel or other rotating part from sliding off the axle it is riding on. It may be named after Nathaniel Lynch, the English mechanic who first patented its use in 1727, but Merriam Webster and other dictionaries date its use to the 13th century Middle English word "Lynspin"....
 of the Fowler/Beale family around whom the soap was originally structured. At the beginning of the serial in 1985, Pauline was a 40 year old married mother, with two teenage children, Mark
Mark Fowler

Mark Albert Fowler was a fictional character in the popular United Kingdom BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was originally a semi-regular character played by David Scarboro from 1985-1987, but the role was recast in 1990 and played by Todd Carty when Scarboro committed suicide in 1988, and Carty remained in the role until the character was w...
 and Michelle, and another child on the way. The fictional history of her younger years has been told via behind-the-scenes books such as EastEnders: The Inside Story, and the second tie-in novel by Hugh Miller
Hugh Miller (writer)

Hugh Miller is a television script writer and author. He was born in Scotland in 1937.For several years he worked as a film maker, making documentaries, but settled in Warwick in 1972....
, Swings and Roundabouts, which explains that Pauline was born and raised at 45 Albert Square, where she lived for her entire life. She married Arthur Fowler in 1965, raising her own children in the same house where she grew up.

Whereas most of the other female characters in EastEnders were portrayed in a somewhat more glamorous working class way, Pauline Fowler was the exception to the rule, being the sole character to represent the "homely and domestic" side of the Beale family. As the serial progressed, the character altered from her original outline. Instead of being the jolly, warm character she was during the show's early years, she became a sombre battle-axe, hardened by a life of misery in Albert Square. Other characters refer to her as "Fowler the growler", and in the Evening Gazette she was described as "the Boadicea of battle-axes." The initial change in her demeanor is traced back to the death of her mother, Lou Beale
Lou Beale

Louise Ada "Lou" Beale was a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Anna Wing. The character was also played by Karen Meagher in the 1988 EastEnders special, List of EastEnders spin-offs#EastEnders: Civvy Street, set during the Second World War....
 (Anna Wing
Anna Wing

Anna Wing is an England actress. She has had a long career in television and theatre.She was born in Metropolitan Borough of Hackney, London, and started out as an artist's model and later, during the Second World War, worked in East End of London hospitals....
), a fierce dowager, who ruled over her family with a "rod of iron". Following Lou's screen funeral in July 1988, Pauline retorts, "Shut up Arthur Fowler, no one interrupts Pauline Beale when she's in full flow," a line that was used similarly by Lou in the episode that preceded her own death. This parallel symbolised the transference of the family's matriarchal role from Lou to Pauline. Wendy Richard has indicated that both she and show creator, Julia Smith, had always intended for Pauline to become like her mother, and former EastEnders executive producer John Yorke
John Yorke

John Yorke is currently the Controller of BBC Drama Production.He attended Newcastle University. He joined the BBC in the late 1980s, working initially in radio as a studio manager and then as a producer on BBC Radio 5....
 has commented on the importance of the lineage between the two characters: "[Pauline] endures, stoically and heroically, whatever life may throw at her, just as her mother did before her. This sense of lineage is vitally important, too. Pauline has been in the show since its start and was handed the role of matriarch on Lou Beale's death."

Early storylines

In the first episode, it is revealed that Pauline, aged 40, is pregnant with her third child. The character’s pregnancy quickly became a prominent storyline within the series. Pauline, against her mother's opposition, is determined to keep the baby. The storyline was used to spread a public message on the increased risk of genetic defects in late pregnancies, with Pauline undergoing amniocentesis
Amniocentesis

Amniocentesis , is a medicine procedure used in prenatal diagnosis of chromosomal abnormalities and fetal infections , in which a small amount of amniotic fluid, which contains fetal tissues, is extracted from the amnion or amniotic sac surrounding a developing fetus, and the fetal DNA is examined for genetic abnormalities....
 tests. The storyline culminates in the birth of the serial’s first baby, Martin
Martin Fowler (EastEnders)

Martin Albert Fowler was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was played by James Alexandrou from 1996 to 2007....
, in July 1985.

Pauline’s early storylines concentrate on family and money troubles: coping with her husband Arthur’s redundancy, mental breakdown and imprisonment; eldest son Mark’s delinquency; and daughter Michelle’s teenage pregnancy.

In 1989, the character was used to highlight another important gynaecological health issue, fibroids. The storyline sees Pauline ignoring health problems, such as chronic fatigue, and using homeopathic remedies
Homeopathy

File:LedumPalustre15CH.jpgHomeopathy is a form of alternative medicine first expounded by Samuel Hahnemann in 1796, that treats a disease with heavily diluted preparations created from substances that would ordinarily cause effects similar to the disease's symptoms....
 rather than seeking medical assistance. Her fibroids are discovered by chance, when the character Ricky Butcher
Ricky Butcher

Richard Francis "Ricky" Butcher is a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. He is played by Sid Owen....
 (Sid Owen
Sid Owen

Sidwell Owen is an England actor, most famous for playing the role of Ricky Butcher in the BBC One soap opera EastEnders, which he appeared in from 1988 until 2000, 2002 until 2004 and then again from March 2008....
) knocks her down in his Austin Mini. In the 1989 Boxing Day
Boxing Day

Boxing Day is a bank holiday or a public holiday in the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Hong Kong, and countries in the Commonwealth of Nations with a mainly Christian population....
 episode, Pauline spends time in hospital, recovering from a necessary hysterectomy
Hysterectomy

A hysterectomy is the surgery removal of the uterus, usually performed by a gynaecology. Hysterectomy may be total or partial . It is the most commonly performed gynecological surgical procedure....
. Wendy Richard has since revealed that the storyline had originally been scripted differently. Before the outcome of Pauline’s illness was screened, producers had decided that the character was to be killed off with cancer. This was a decision that had been made by the show’s boss, Mike Gibbon
Mike Gibbon

Mike Gibbon is an English television producer and Television director.He is best known for directing and producing the BBC televised soap opera, EastEnders....
, to refresh the format by replacing some of the serial’s older characters. The scriptwriters went as far as giving Pauline a mystery illness. The newly-appointed executive producer, Michael Ferguson
Michael Ferguson (director)

Michael Ferguson is a United Kingdom script writer, television director and television producer. Ferguson has been described as a ?long term champion of realistic popular drama?....
, decided to scrap the original storyline, believing that Pauline, as one of the soap’s original characters, was too valuable an asset to lose. The storyline was rewritten and the character was given a different gynaecological ailment that was treatable.

Marriage to Arthur

Pauline's marriage to the luckless Arthur
Arthur Fowler

Arthur George Fowler was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. The father of The Beale/Fowler family, he was played by Bill Treacher....
 is central to her character. The dynamics of the relationship were clear from the beginning of the programme, with Pauline depicted as the matriarchal force that holds the Fowler family together, while Arthur is depicted as weak, emotionally unstable and easily dominated by the stronger females of his family. Writer Jacquetta May, who once played Rachel Kominski
Rachel Kominski

Rachel Kominski was a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Jacquetta May....
 in the programme, has commented that "[Pauline and Arthur] represented the matriarchal relationship of strong woman/weak man... Arthur, only sporadically employed and disabled by a breakdown, often behaved like a little boy, while Pauline had to make the decisions and keep the family functioning in the face of poverty and unemployment, teenage pregnancy and depression."
Paul Arth Fryin
Pauline and Arthur were generally seen as the most stable couple in the show, so Arthur's affair
Adultery

Adultery is the voluntary sexual intercourse between a marriage and another person who is not his or her spouse, though in many places it is only considered adultery when a married woman has sexual relations with someone who is not her husband and in others it is only considered adultery when a married woman has sexual relations with someon...
 with Christine Hewitt
Christine Hewitt

Christine Hewitt was a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Elizabeth Power.Christine was a lonely divorc?e who became besotted with Arthur Fowler while he tended her garden....
 (Lizzie Power
Elizabeth Power

Elizabeth "Lizzie" Power is a United Kingdom actor. Power began her career in repertory theatre and went on to appear in several West End theatre Musical theatre....
) came as a shock to viewers. The storyline was long running, beginning early in 1992 with the introduction of lonely divorcee Christine, who employs Arthur to tend to her garden. A romance between Arthur and Christine steadily develops throughout the year, facilitated by Pauline's lengthy absence — she is called abroad to tend to her crippled brother Kenny
Kenny Beale

Kenneth "Kenny" Beale was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was played by Michael Attwell. He also appeared in the EastEnders books#Novels by Hugh Miller , and appeared in the 1988 List of EastEnders television spin-offs episode entitled List of EastEnders television spin-offs#EastEnders: Civvy Street, tho...
 in early June, and she does not return until late September — in reality, Wendy Richard had to be temporarily written out of EastEnders to allow her to act in Grace and Favour
Grace and favour

A grace and favour home is a residential property owned by a monarch by virtue of their position as head of state and leased rent-free to persons as part of an employment package or in gratitude for past services rendered....
. The build-up to the affair contains many twists and turns, starting with Arthur’s rebuff of Christine’s advances, then a confrontation between Pauline and Christine, which convinces Pauline of Arthur’s innocence and leaves her feeling "strangely sorry for the pathetic, lonely figure, who obviously drank too much". The episode in which Arthur finally gives into temptation and sleeps with Christine aired on Christmas Eve 1992; it was labelled "The Bonk of the Year" by the British press, and was watched by 24.3 million viewers. In 2005, it was reported as the eleventh most highly viewed UK television programme of all time.

The storyline continued throughout 1993 as Christine makes greater demands on Arthur, threatening to tell Pauline about their affair unless he does so himself. In September 1993, the situation finally reaches a climax on-screen. The scriptwriters had many conferences about ways in which Pauline would find out about the affair; "should she work it out herself or should some third party tell her the truth?" In the end it was felt that Arthur should tell her himself, and when he does, Pauline becomes violent and hits him in the face with a frying pan. Although the audience had witnessed Pauline and Arthur rowing many times, this was something different, "an act of betrayal on a massive scale." Series production manager, Rona McKendrick, has commented on this "iconic" scene: "It was one of the few times when you saw Pauline really, really let rip... you really felt the anger, understood the anger and realised why she went as far as she did." This episode (written by Tony McHale
Tony McHale

Tony McHale is a United Kingdom actor, screenwriter and television director who has the dubious honour of being best known as a "stooge" to Jeremy Beadle on Game For A Laugh and later, Beadle's About....
 and directed by Keith Boak
Keith Boak

Keith Boak is a United Kingdom television director, best known for his work on several popular continuing drama series during the 1990s and 2000s....
) was chosen by writer Colin Brake
Colin Brake

Colin Brake is an England television writer and script editor best known for his work for the BBC Television on programs such as Bugs and EastEnders....
 as the episode of the year in EastEnders: The First Ten Years
EastEnders books

This is a list of books about or relating to the United Kingdom soap opera EastEnders....
 and is described by Wendy Richard as "Pauline's crowning moment."

For a while it seems that EastEnders "most solid" marriage is over, but Arthur spends the rest of 1993 trying to convince Pauline that it is worth saving and they eventually reconcile. However, more tragedy follows, when Arthur is framed by a conman, Willy Roper
Willy Roper

Willy Roper was a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was played by Michael Tudor-Barnes from June 1995 to June 1996....
 (dubbed "Wicked Willy" by the British press), and wrongfully imprisoned for embezzlement in 1995. The storyline captured the public's imagination and a nationwide "Free Arthur Fowler" campaign was launched. "Arthur Fowler Is Innocent" T-shirts were produced and a single was even released in the UK singles chart
UK Singles Chart

The UK Singles Chart is compiled by The Official UK Charts Company on behalf of the British record industry. The chart week runs from Sunday to Saturday, with the chart being printed in Music Week magazine , ChartsPlus , and published online on various sites ....
 promoting the campaign.
Pauline Arthur Eastenders
Arthur's imprisonment was a precursor to the final exit of actor Bill Treacher
Bill Treacher

Bill Treacher is an England actor.Treacher grew up in the East End of London. After his National Service in the Royal Air Force, he worked as a steward with Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company, where he saved enough money to attend drama school....
, who decided to leave
EastEnders after 11 years playing Arthur. While Arthur goes to pieces in prison, Pauline is heavily embroiled in the storyline pertaining to his eventual release. For several months viewers witnessed Willy attempt to woo Pauline, but she eventually uncovers his deception and then resorts to uncharacteristic seduction
Seduction

In sociology, seduction is the process of deliberately enticing a person to engage in some sort of behavior, frequently sexual in nature. The word seduction stems from Indo-European roots and means literally "to lead astray." As a result, the term may have a positive or negative connotation....
 to gain his confession. A critic for the
Sunday Mirror commented, "Pauline Fowler deserves a Golden Cardie Award for her performance in EastEnders. The way which she extracted a confession from Willy Roper over the money he stole was nothing short of brilliant." Arthur is exonerated, but his joyful reunion with Pauline is brief, as an injury he sustained in prison leads to a brain haemorrhage and he dies shortly after his release. His death ends an 11 year screen marriage, the longest run of any marriage in the serial.

Importance of family

Pauline remains a family-oriented character throughout the course of the show. A "fiercely loyal, but overbearing mother"; sheltering and taking on the major responsibilities of her children and frequently stressing the importance of family. She is portrayed as a traditionalist, with strict rules and beliefs — the first to criticise, but also the first to defend her children, often interfering in their issues and causing rifts in their relationships. The quintessential matriarch, she has also been compared with Queen Elizabeth
Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom

Elizabeth II is the queen regnant of sixteen independent states known as the Commonwealth realms: Monarchy of the United Kingdom, Monarchy of Canada, Monarchy of Australia, Monarchy of New Zealand, Monarchy of Jamaica, Monarchy of Barbados, the Bahamas, Grenada, Papua New Guinea, the Monarchy of the Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, Saint Lucia, Sain...
, with the storylines in the fictional Albert Square, mirroring the troubles of England
England

native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
 as a whole. In
Monarchies: What Are Kings and Queens For, the author points out similarities between the matriarchal nature of Pauline's character, and that of the Queen. "Both exhibit a rich mix of suffering and duty. Pauline has tried to bring up her family as best she can, even though it hasn't always been easy. Her offspring have caused her nothing but trials and tribulations; her husband has been wayward at times and caused her several eyebrow-raising moments. But Pauline has steadfastly carried on ..."

Early storylines between Pauline and her two teenage children, Mark and Michelle, show her to be a doting mother, forgiving of Mark’s wayward behaviour, and supportive when Michelle decides to become a teenage mum. Pauline is devoted to her twin brother Pete
Pete Beale

Peter "Pete" Beale was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was played by Peter Dean, and made his first appearance in the programme's first episode, on 19 February 1985....
, dutiful to her mother Lou
Lou Beale

Louise Ada "Lou" Beale was a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Anna Wing. The character was also played by Karen Meagher in the 1988 EastEnders special, List of EastEnders spin-offs#EastEnders: Civvy Street, set during the Second World War....
, allegiant to her husband Arthur, and a shoulder for her nephew, Ian
Ian Beale

Ian Albert Beale is a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He is played by Adam Woodyatt and is the only character to have appeared since the first episode on 19 February 1985 continuously....
, to cry on. Wendy Richard commented in 1990, "It's important for her to keep the family together. That's why when her problem son Mark suddenly came home [in 1990], it was like her winning the pools
Football pools

Football pools, often referred to as "the pools", are football betting pools based on predicting the outcome of top-level association football matches set to take place in the coming week....
 ... She had to take a lot of shocks from Michelle and I think she coped remarkably well."

As the serial progressed, Pauline contends with a plethora of family upsets, which include many deaths — her mother Lou in 1988, brother Pete in 1993 and husband Arthur in 1996 — as well as her elder son Mark's
Mark Fowler

Mark Albert Fowler was a fictional character in the popular United Kingdom BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was originally a semi-regular character played by David Scarboro from 1985-1987, but the role was recast in 1990 and played by Todd Carty when Scarboro committed suicide in 1988, and Carty remained in the role until the character was w...
 fatal battle with HIV
HIV

Human immunodeficiency virus is a lentivirus that can lead to AIDS , a condition in humans in which the immune system begins to fail, leading to life-threatening opportunistic infections....
. After a year long build-up, Mark is shown to reveal his HIV status to his stunned and devastated parents in an episode that aired on Boxing Day
Boxing Day

Boxing Day is a bank holiday or a public holiday in the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Hong Kong, and countries in the Commonwealth of Nations with a mainly Christian population....
 1991, attracting 19 million viewers. Wendy Richard has given her interpretation of Pauline’s reaction to Mark’s news: “To say she was shell-shocked was an understatement and, not knowing enough about HIV, she and Arthur were worrying that their eldest son might die from Aids at any moment.” The HIV plot had many ramifications for the character of Pauline, as she struggles to come to terms with her son's condition. It was also instrumental in raising public awareness about the illness, which was still the subject of much ignorance when
EastEnders tackled it in 1991. When the storyline initially aired, more people went for a HIV test
HIV test

HIV tests are used to detect the presence of the human immunodeficiency virus in blood serum, saliva, or urine. Such tests may detect HIV antibodies, antigens, or RNA....
 in Britain than at any other time. Wendy Richard commented: "The storyline with Mark Fowler, when he announced he was HIV positive, was really well done. People have to be aware that HIV and Aids are not exactly the same thing. The Minister of Health who was in power at that time wrote a letter complimenting us for the way that we had put the information across."

The HIV storyline came to an end on-screen in 2003, when executive producer Louise Berridge
Louise Berridge

Louise Berridge is a United Kingdom television producer and script editor. She is best known for being the executive producer of BBC's EastEnders between 2002 and 2004....
 decided to axe Mark Fowler. In the serial, Mark discovers his HIV medication is failing, but instead of allowing Pauline to witness his deterioration, he leaves to spend the remainder of his life traveling. Richard has classed Mark's exit as her most difficult storyline, commenting: "I was so genuinely upset that Todd Carty, who played Mark, was going I could barely get my lines out for want of crying — but everybody said I acted it well. It was, I think, ten per cent acting and 90 per cent me crying my eyes out because I was being selfish and didn't want Todd to go." Mark, who had appeared intermittently for 18 years, was eventually killed off-screen in 2004, dying of an AIDS-related illness.

In the latter years of her time in the soap, Pauline changes from a caring mother into a more inflexible battle-axe. Pauline’s relationship with Martin is often shown to be strained by Pauline’s refusal to release control over his life. Though initially a teenage delinquent, following Mark’s death in 2004, Martin becomes Pauline’s "dutiful son", forced to put his mother’s wishes above those of his wife — a recurring theme within the serial. Eventually, this causes a rift between the two characters. When Martin goes against his mother’s wishes in 2006 and rekindles a romance with his adulterous ex-wife Sonia, Pauline cuts him out of her life. Television personality Paul O'Grady
Paul O'Grady

Paul James O'Grady Order of the British Empire is an England comedian and television & radio presenter, who achieved fame as the creator of comic drag character #Lily Savage , a vampish Birkenhead woman....
 addressed Pauline’s refusal to "share her son like a normal mother", commenting, "she’s suspicious of anybody that comes into the family who wants to take her son away from her. She has already lost one son; she has lost her husband, so she’s hanging onto the last [son] like a mother tiger with her cub."

Friends and enemies

The character’s narrative also included various feuds, most notably with the soap’s lothario
Lothario

Lothario is a character in the play The Fair Penitent , by Nicholas Rowe . In the play, Lothario seduces and betrays Calista. The word lothario has thus entered the English language as an eponym: a lothario is a handsome, seductive ladies' man....
 Den Watts
Den Watts

Dennis "Den" Watts was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders, played by actor Leslie Grantham. He became well-known for his tabloid nickname, "Dirty Den"....
, a family-friend who gets Pauline's daughter Michelle pregnant at the age of 16.
EastEnders pulled in the biggest television audience of the 1980s when over 30 million people watched the 1986 Christmas Day episode in which Pauline discovers that Den is the father of her granddaughter, Vicki
Vicki Fowler

Victoria Louise "Vicki" Fowler was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Emma Herry from 1986 to 1988, then by Samantha Leigh Martin from 1988 to 1995, but Scarlett Johnson is the most recent actress to play her, from 2003 to 2004....
. Wendy Richard has commented on the hostility between the characters "once Pauline realised that Dennis was Vicki's father, she was out to get him one way or another" and actor Leslie Grantham
Leslie Grantham

Leslie Michael Grantham is a United Kingdom actor best known for playing "Dirty" Den Watts in the BBC soap opera EastEnders from 1985 to 1989 and again from 2003 to 2005....
, who played Den, added "from then on it was out and out war, which was great!" An array of confrontations between Den and Pauline occur, as she tries to force him to leave Walford and keep him away from her family. The feud appears to end in 1989 when the character Den is shot and presumed dead, but it is ignited once again in 2003 when Den is re-introduced, 14 years after he supposedly died. 2005 saw Den killed off for the final time, and although Pauline is not directly responsible for killing him, the item used to bludgeon him to death turns out to be her dog-shaped iron doorstop, which has been described as “a nice touch of pathos”.

Another well known feud was with the Mitchell matriarch Peggy Mitchell
Peggy Mitchell

Margaret Ann "Peggy" Mitchell is a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. Peggy was initially played by Jo Warne when she first appeared in the series on 30 April 1991....
 who held a big grudge against Pauline's son Mark due to the fact he was HIV. Pauline also resented Peggy's sons Phil and Grant while the Mitchell's often had issues with Paulines family including her sons Mark and Martin and her nephew Ian who's mum Pauline's sister-in-law married Phil in 1995. Throughout the years Pauline often made spiteful comments towards Peggy which sometimes wound Peggy up.

A large proportion of the character's scenes take place on the set of Walford's launderette, where Pauline works as an assistant for almost the entire duration of her time in
EastEnders. Here, Pauline is frequently featured with another long-running protagonist, fellow launderette colleague, Dot Branning
Dot Branning

Dorothy "Dot" Branning is a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera, EastEnders, played by June Brown.Dot first appeared in EastEnders in July 1985 and has worked as a launderette assistant for most of that time along with Pauline Fowler....
. The two characters share one of the soap's most enduring screen friendships and their scenes together are often used to provide humour. Particular emphasis is placed on their differences, which lead to numerous petty squabbles and in 2004 sees them "buried alive" underneath a collapsed fairground ride, in the midst of a cake-selling war. However, Pauline and Dot are most frequently shown gossip
Gossip

Gossip is idle talk or rumor, especially about the personal or private affairs of others. It forms one of the oldest and most common means of sharing facts and views, but also has a reputation for the introduction of errors and other variations into the information thus transmitted....
ing, reminiscing about the past, or sharing their woes in the launderette. The duo has been described by television personality Paul O'Grady
Paul O'Grady

Paul James O'Grady Order of the British Empire is an England comedian and television & radio presenter, who achieved fame as the creator of comic drag character #Lily Savage , a vampish Birkenhead woman....
 as a "fabulous double-act": "Dot's probably Pauline's one and only confidant. Pauline eventually will break down and tell Dot things that she'd never tell anybody else."

Pauline is shown to be particularly hostile to the various female characters that feature in her sons' lives, and she epitomises the archetypal
Archetype

An archetype is an original model of a person, ideal example, or a prototype after which others are copied, patterned, or emulated; a symbol universally recognized by all....
 “mother-in-law from hell”. One of Pauline’s most notable feuds is with her youngest son Martin’s wife, Sonia
Sonia Fowler

Sonia Ann Fowler was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Natalie Cassidy and made her first appearance on 21 December 1993....
. Animosity between the characters begins in 2000, when Sonia gives birth to Pauline’s grandchild and decides to give the baby Chloe
Rebecca Miller (EastEnders)

Rebecca Chloe Miller was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Jade Sharif....
 (later renamed Rebecca) up for adoption. In the storyline, Pauline tries unsuccessfully to fight for custody, leading Sonia to retort “YOU want to bring up Chloe? You couldn't bring up phlegm!” The feuding over Chloe is revisited in storylines throughout 2005 and 2006, when first Pauline is shown to visit her adopted granddaughter against Sonia and Martin’s wishes, and then, following Sonia’s lesbian affair with Naomi Julien
Naomi Julien

Naomi Julien was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Petra Letang and first appeared in the soap on 15 August 2005....
, Pauline refuses to give Sonia access to the child after Martin regains custody. Critic for
The Guardian
The Guardian

Sorry, no overview for this topic
, Grace Dent
Grace Dent

Grace Dent is an England journalist, author and broadcaster. Dent is well known in the UK as a columnist for newspapers and magazines, she is also a prolific television critic and author....
, commented “At one point, you couldn't move around Walford for hitmen and gangsters, but now they've all been written out ... leaving Pauline Fowler to reign the square like sodding
Sod (disambiguation)

Sod can refer to:* Sod, another word for turf, or a piece of turf.* Sod , a term used mainly in British English and somewhat offensive.SOD or S.O.D....
 Pablo Escobar
Pablo Escobar

Pablo Emilio Escobar Gaviria, , gained world infamy as a Colombian People drug lord and became so wealthy from the drug trade that in 1989 Forbes listed him as the seventh richest man in the world....
 in a sky-blue tabard and ski-pants, decreeing who can see their own kids, who can drink where and what everyone's eating in the cafe so as they won't spoil their teas. If I was Sonia, I'd have ransacked the hospital's dangerous drugs box by now and given that old crone a renal meltdown.” Various rows, slaps and insults were featured between the characters, caused by Pauline's continuous interference in Sonia's relationships with Martin and Rebecca. As Martin began to cede, allowing Sonia access to their daughter, Pauline was shown to concoct ever more elaborate ways to obstruct Sonia's involvement.

During her latter years in
EastEnders, Pauline is rarely without her Cairn Terrier
Cairn Terrier

The Cairn Terrier is one of the oldest terrier List of dog breeds, originating in the Scotland Scottish Highlands and recognized as one of Scotland's earliest working dogs, used for hunting burrowing prey among the cairns....
, Betty. The dog is a stray taken in by the Fowler family in 2004, who quickly becomes Pauline's inseparable sidekick. Wendy Richard has since revealed that it was her decision for Pauline to own a Cairn: "When EastEnders asked if Pauline should have a dog I said it had to be a Cairn Terrier — and Betty joined us! She's wonderful, she loves me and I love her." In the on-screen story, the dog is named after Pauline's aunt Betty, but in reality, Wendy Richard named her after Molly Sugden's fictional character Betty Slocombe
List of Are You Being Served? characters

This is a list of characters that appeared in the BBC British sitcom Are You Being Served?, that aired from 1972 to 1985. A number of the characters later reappeared in the 1990s sitcom Grace & Favour....
, who appeared along with Richard's Shirley Brahms in the sitcom,
Are You Being Served!

Second marriage

Pauline&joe
Several eligible bachelors are shown to express their interest in Pauline over the years, including the characters Derek Taylor in 1987, Danny Taurus in 1993, Jeff Healy
Jeff Healy (EastEnders)

Jeff Healy was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was played by Leslie Schofield. Jeff was an atheist who disapproved of his son being a vicar....
 (who proposes) in 1999, Eddie Skinner
Eddie Skinner

Edward "Eddie" Skinner was a fictional character in the United Kingdom soap opera EastEnders. He was played by Richard Vanstone.Eddie arrived in Walford on 18 September 2000 on the day of his aunt Ethel Skinner's funeral and later began lodging with the Fowlers at number 45, along with his daughter, Kerry....
 in 2000, and Terry Raymond
Terry Raymond

Terrence Gordon "Terry" Raymond was a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was played by Gavin Richards. Terry was initially introduced briefly in 1996 as the drunken father of Tiffany Mitchell and Simon Raymond ....
, who she goes on a blind date with in 2001. However, the character remains staunchly faithful to her late husband's memory, refusing to let the relationships progress beyond companionship. In 2001 Derek Harkinson
Derek Harkinson

Derek Harkinson was a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was played by Ian Lavender. He first appeared in 2001.Derek was a childhood friend of Pauline Fowler....
 (Ian Lavender
Ian Lavender

Arthur Ian Lavender, better known as Ian Lavender, is an England stage, film and television actor, best known for his role as Private Frank Pike in the BBC comedy series Dad's Army....
) is introduced, an old school friend of Pauline's. Initial scripts indicated that Derek was being groomed as a romantic interest for Pauline, which she is shown to welcome. However, the storyline takes a twist when he reveals, to her shock, that he is gay
Homosexuality

Homosexuality refers to human sexual behavior or same-sex attraction between people of the same sex or to homosexual orientation. As a sexual orientation, homosexuality refers to "having sexual and romantic attraction primarily or exclusively to members of one?s own sex"; "it also refers to an individual?s sense of personal and social identi...
. 2002 sees Derek move in with the Fowler family, unconventionally settling into the show as a replacement father figure for Mark and Martin and as Pauline’s best friend.

In 2005 Pauline embarks on a romance with a new character, Joe Macer
Joe Macer

Joseph "Joe" Macer was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was played by Ray Brooks , and made his first appearance on 19 August 2005....
 (Ray Brooks), whom she meets at salsa
Salsa (dance)

Salsa is a dance for Salsa music created by Spanish language-speaking people from the Caribbean and their immigrant communities in the US. Salsa dancing mixes African and European dance influences through the music and dance fusions that are the roots of Salsa: Cuban SonGuaguanc?, Spanish Rumba, Boogaloo, Pachanga, Guaracha, Plena, Bomba, ....
 classes. A relationship develops, and despite her initial trepidation, Pauline remarries in 2006, after almost a decade alone. Pauline's marriage to Joe was an attempt to give the character a "new lease of life", and her wedding day was screened to coincide with
EastEnders
21st anniversary. Richard was openly opposed to her character remarrying, but she was eventually convinced by the executive producer and battled, successfully, for Pauline to keep the "Fowler" surname. However, in July 2006, Wendy Richard announced that she was leaving EastEnders; she quit due to "creative differences" with the show's producers regarding Pauline's remarriage, which she felt was "disloyal" to her character's beloved first husband, Arthur. According to an interview in The Sun, Richard commented, "I think it's the most terrible shame, I really do. I thought in my heart of hearts it was wrong ... I just couldn't believe that Pauline would remarry — anybody ... I would have stayed a bit longer if Pauline hadn't got married." Richard felt that she did not have the same chemistry with Ray Brooks, who played Joe, as she did with Bill Treacher, who played Arthur. She refuted producers' opinions that Pauline and Joe "looked good together" and felt that she and Brooks had to work very hard to turn them into a "realistic-looking couple."

Within the storyline, just two months after the wedding, Pauline's marriage is shown to sour after she discovers Joe's criminal past. Their relationship steadily deteriorates throughout the year, and in December 2006 Pauline ends the marriage — removing her wedding ring and informing Joe that he "was half the man that Arthur had been, that she had never really loved him and that their sex life was a sham." The resulting row sees Joe insult Pauline's family — suggesting that her "perfect marriage" with Arthur was "nothing but a fantasy" and brandishing Mark "diseased", Michelle a "scrubber" and Arthur a "con" — to which Pauline responds by smashing a plate over his head. Wendy Richard commented, "It was not just the memory of Arthur that stopped the marriage to Joe being a success. He was proven to be a weak and untruthful man. That is what caused the marriage to be a non starter. Pauline was not mean to Joe, he used her ... and lied to her."

Deception, reclusiveness and death

Viewers saw the slow build-up to Pauline's climactic exit throughout the latter part of 2006. The character's bitter decline involves depression, pretending to have a brain tumour
Brain tumor

A brain tumor is an abnormal growth of cells within the brain or inside the skull, which can be cancerous or non-cancerous .It is defined as any cranium tumor created by abnormal and uncontrolled Mitosis, normally either in the brain itself , in the cranial nerves , in the brain envelopes , skull, pituitary and pineal gland, or spread from...
 to scupper the revived relationship between her son Martin
Martin Fowler (EastEnders)

Martin Albert Fowler was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was played by James Alexandrou from 1996 to 2007....
 and his ex-wife Sonia
Sonia Fowler

Sonia Ann Fowler was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Natalie Cassidy and made her first appearance on 21 December 1993....
, marital breakdown, and finally ostracism
Ostracism

Ostracism was a procedure under the Athenian democracy in which a prominent citizen could be exile from the city-state of Athens for ten years....
 after Martin and the rest of Albert Square discover her lie. Having successfully alienated everyone around her, Pauline plans to go to America to join her daughter. Wendy Richard commented on the reasons behind Pauline's actions: “she cannot forgive. For anyone to hurt a member of her family so badly is incomprehensible to Pauline. She is a good, but unforgiving woman. Sonia is more than just a thorn in Pauline's side. She is angry because she feels Martin has let her down in returning to Sonia. She feels he could have discussed it with her more and talked her round for the sake of Rebecca. Pauline will blame her decision to leave on Sonia — another way of punishing Martin. Even though she is really hurting over leaving Rebecca, Pauline is determined to go. She realised she never really loved Joe, he has lied to her too many times ... Although I know Pauline better than anyone, even I cannot fathom out why she made up the brain tumour story."

The character is killed off in a "shocking" and dramatic storyline, which aired on Christmas Day 2006 and was watched by an estimated 10.7 million viewers. It was the second most highly watched programme of the day. The episode sees Sonia denouncing Pauline as "sick" for not wanting to share her son with the woman he loved, to which Pauline retorts, “I’ll tell you what’s sick. You. Daughter of a scrubber, lesbian, under-age mother who gave away her own baby.” The row culminates with Sonia slapping Pauline, causing her to fall to the floor and break the Fowler fruit bowl — "the enduring symbol of her family, which smashed, significantly, into smithereens.” Though Pauline resolves to stay and reunite with her family in the end, she does not get the chance, as she collapses and dies in the middle of Albert Square, leaving both characters and viewers in uncertainty about the cause of her demise.

The Christmas Day episodes, written by Simon Ashdown
Simon Ashdown

Simon Ashdown is a United Kingdom television writer. He is probably best known as being a British Academy of Film and Television Arts award-winning EastEnders writer....
, drew on the show’s early history to mark the occasion of Pauline's exit, which was particularly emphasised by the use of flashback vocal snippets of several members of Pauline's deceased family. The critic for The Times
The Times

The Times is a daily national newspaper published in the United Kingdom since 1785 when it was known as The Daily Universal Register.The Times and its sister paper The Sunday Times are published by Times Newspapers Limited, a subsidiary of News International....
, Tim Teeman, commented that "Wendy Richard as Pauline had the air of the departing diva, queen of all she had loved, lost and laid waste to, her face set in a silent snarl." In addition, her parting scene with the other EastEnders long-serving "grand dame" Dot Branning
Dot Branning

Dorothy "Dot" Branning is a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera, EastEnders, played by June Brown.Dot first appeared in EastEnders in July 1985 and has worked as a launderette assistant for most of that time along with Pauline Fowler....
 (played by June Brown) has also been praised, with Teeman commenting: "The really choking scene came in the launderette between Pauline and Dot ... Here the two grand dames had worked, bitched and consoled for years. Richard and the wonderful June Brown played their final encounter as intensely as the characters deserved."

Richard herself has been less complimentary about her alter ego's departure. She has spoken of her disappointment regarding Pauline's "changing character" and "depressing final storyline". In an interview with the Biography Channel
The Biography Channel

The Biography Channel is an United States digital cable television channel owned by A&E Network and based on the Biography . A version of the channel also airs on ONO and Telef?nica in Spain and on Sky Digital and cable television in the United Kingdom, a version of the channel also broadcasts in Canada owned by Rogers Media and in Austral...
 she explained: "I did say, promise me you won’t make Pauline nasty before she goes, and unfortunately they did ... I wasn’t too happy with the way it was done. They were changing Pauline’s character ... Pauline would never have remarried. She would have remained a widow, sitting in that chair in the corner. That’s what [show creator] Julia Smith wanted, and that’s what I felt was right, so I resigned ... I think it’s a shame because the Fowlers have gone completely now ... There was so much history with that family."

The storyline — dubbed "who killed Pauline?" by the British press — continued into 2007, as first Pauline's funeral is interrupted by the police in order to perform an autopsy on her body, and then Pauline's nemesis Sonia is arrested for the murder. It is later revealed that the killing blow had actually come from Pauline's husband Joe, who breaks down and confesses to Dot that he had rowed with Pauline on Christmas Day (off-screen) and, in a fury, struck her across the head with a frying pan, causing a brain haemorrhage that claimed her life. The plot's eventual climax in February 2007 led to the exits of several established characters connected with Pauline. This included Martin, Sonia, and Joe, who is dramatically killed off after confessing to Pauline's murder, by falling out of the Fowlers' first floor window while trying to apprehend a hysterical Dot. Pauline is cremated, and her ashes buried at Arthur's graveside, by Dot, in an episode that aired in June 2007. As a final tribute to Pauline and Wendy Richard, the BBC aired a special television programme, EastEnders Revealed
EastEnders Revealed

EastEnders Revealed is a factual entertainment programme that looks back at the Storylines of EastEnders, List of characters from EastEnders and stars of BBC One's long running soap opera EastEnders....
: Goodbye Pauline
, which provided an emotional look back at Pauline's pivotal storylines during her time in Walford. It also reunited Wendy Richard with prior cast-mates Todd Carty
Todd Carty

Todd Carty is an Irish-born UK-based actor and director, who has grown up on television screens in a variety of roles in the UK. His stage work has varied from pantomime to serious drama, as well as radio plays, voice overs, commercials, and narrations....
 and James Alexandrou
James Alexandrou

James Alekos Alexandrou is an England actor of Greece descent.He was educated in Waltham Forest at Chingford Foundation School. He was later a pupil at the Young Actors Theatre #Anna Scher Theatre before landing the role of Martin Fowler in the BBC One soap opera EastEnders in 1996....
 (Mark and Martin respectively), and featured character commentary and tributes from television critics and EastEnders actors such as Anna Wing
Anna Wing

Anna Wing is an England actress. She has had a long career in television and theatre.She was born in Metropolitan Borough of Hackney, London, and started out as an artist's model and later, during the Second World War, worked in East End of London hospitals....
 and Pam St. Clement
Pam St. Clement

Pamela "Pam" St. Clement is an England character actor. She has played Pat Evans in the BBC soap opera EastEnders since 1986, and is now one of the programme's longest-serving cast members....
 (Lou and Pat
Pat Evans

Patricia "Pat" Evans is a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. She has been played by Pam St. Clement since 12 June 1986, just over a year after the show first aired....
). During the programme — which aired on New Year's Day
New Year's Day

New Year's Day is the first day of the new year. On the modern Gregorian calendar, it is celebrated on January 1, as it was also in ancient Rome ....
, 2007 — Wendy Richard reflected upon how "proud" she was of her character, commenting: "Pauline had everything in life thrown at her and I think she coped with it very well. It showed how people deal with their problems ... She wasn't always grumpy ... she did have lots of laughs, but sadly people don't seem to remember that, which is a shame ... they still harp on about her wearing her cardigans and Pauline stopped wearing cardigans three years after EastEnders started. She is a good woman, she's a kind woman, a loving woman and all she ever thought about was her family. That was the most important thing in her life."

Reception

Pauline is the second-longest running character to feature in EastEnders and one of only two original characters to remain in the show for almost 22 years. Her baggy woolly cardigan and long-suffering nature have led to her being labelled as a soap institution, a "soap legend" and a "television icon". Actress Wendy Richard was awarded an Order of the British Empire
Order of the British Empire

The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire is a United Kingdom order of chivalry established on 4 June 1917 by George V of the United Kingdom....
 MBE medal in 2000 by Queen Elizabeth
Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom

Elizabeth II is the queen regnant of sixteen independent states known as the Commonwealth realms: Monarchy of the United Kingdom, Monarchy of Canada, Monarchy of Australia, Monarchy of New Zealand, Monarchy of Jamaica, Monarchy of Barbados, the Bahamas, Grenada, Papua New Guinea, the Monarchy of the Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, Saint Lucia, Sain...
 at Buckingham Palace
Buckingham Palace

Buckingham Palace is the official London residence of the British monarch. Located in the City of Westminster, the palace is a setting for state occasions and royal entertaining, and a major tourist attraction....
, and when the Queen visited the set of EastEnders in 2001, Wendy Richard was the first actress introduced, and then accompanied Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh

The Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh is the husband of Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom since 20 November 1947, and her prince consort since 6 February 1952....
 on their tour of the set.

Despite being popular with many, the character of Pauline has also garnered much criticism over the years. Persistent criticism has been given to the character's dowdy attire, particularly the perception that she rarely wears anything but a baggy cardigan; a claim that Wendy Richard herself categorically disputes. In addition, Pauline has also received much criticism for her miserable demeanour — "a face like a month of wet weekends" and "a voice that could curdle milk." She has been described as the "Wicked Witch of Walford" and "a character who became a byword for downtrodden haggery."

Lucy Mangan, the culture critic from The Guardian
The Guardian

Sorry, no overview for this topic
 newspaper, summed up the character: "Pauline Fowler is surely one of the oddest soap creations ever. She is a character without humour, charisma or indeed any redeeming features who became progressively, unrelentingly miserable ... She was presumably intended to be the anchoring force for EastEnders, but because of the writers' unprecedented decision to break with traditional narrative rules and give her not a single redeeming feature, she became more of a sucking chest wound than the heart of the show." This opinion is perhaps shared by a proportion of viewers, as Pauline was voted the 35th most annoying person of 2006 in a BBC Three
BBC Three

BBC Three is a television channel from the BBC broadcasting via digital cable, Freeview , IPTV and Satellite television platforms. The channel is described by the BBC as an outlet for 'New drama, talent, comedy, films, and accessible news'....
 poll, being the only fictional character to appear on the list. In a Radio Times
Radio Times

Radio Times is the BBC's weekly television and radio programme listings magazine. It also provides on-line listings....
 poll of over 5,000 people in 2004, 13% chose Pauline Fowler as the soap character they would most like to see retired. She came third in the poll, behind EastEnders Den Watts
Den Watts

Dennis "Den" Watts was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders, played by actor Leslie Grantham. He became well-known for his tabloid nickname, "Dirty Den"....
 (17%) and
Coronation Street
Coronation Street

Coronation Street is an award-winning soap opera created by Tony Warren. It is one of the longest-running television programmes in the United Kingdom, first broadcast on 9 December 1960, made by Granada Television and broadcast in all regions of ITV almost throughout its existence....
's Ken Barlow (15%).

Although it had been suggested that Pauline's presence in
EastEnders was largely peripheral for some time, the news of her departure in 2006 was met with dismay by fans and soap journalists alike. In a report for BBC News
BBC News

BBC News, formerly BBC News and Current Affairs, is the department within the BBC responsible for the corporation's news-gathering and production of news programmes on BBC television, radio and online....
, one viewer commented "it's so sad, because I've watched her for 20 years. She's such a large character", and another said "If she goes then I think
EastEnders is finished." BBC controller of continuing drama, John Yorke
John Yorke

John Yorke is currently the Controller of BBC Drama Production.He attended Newcastle University. He joined the BBC in the late 1980s, working initially in radio as a studio manager and then as a producer on BBC Radio 5....
, commented "Richard occupies a huge place in people's hearts", and executive producer Kate Harwood
Kate Harwood

Kate Harwood is a United Kingdom television producer. She is currently the Head of Series and Serials at the BBC.Kate graduated from the University of Birmingham with a degree in Drama before becoming an Arts Council Trainee director with Century Theatre and then Literary Manager of the Royal Court Theatre....
 said, "For many years Wendy simply was
EastEnders for the audience and Pauline's indomitable nature typified the grit and fight that embodies the EastEnders
spirit ... We thank her for everything she has done for the show."

Inside Soap
Inside Soap

Inside Soap is a weekly United Kingdom magazine, released every Tuesday, which covers current and future storylines in soap operas shown in the United Kingdom....
 editor, Steven Murphy, said that the fact Pauline has been such an "enduring staple" will make it hard for fans to cope with her departure. "It's huge in soap terms ... She's a character people love to hate — you just assumed she would be there forever." When addressing the repercussions that Pauline's exit would have on the soap, Murphy had this to say: "characters like Pauline are like glue, because they're connected to so many other characters and they can help hold stories together. In terms of that [EastEnders] has very few of those now." Jonathan Hughes, editor of All About Soap
All About Soap

All About Soap is a fortnightly United Kingdom magazine, released on Tuesday. Storylines of the shows it covers are from soap operas shown in the United Kingdom and from Australia....
 magazine, added "[Pauline's] an absolute legend ... You can't imagine the show without her ... People will miss her because she's been such an important part of EastEnders for so many years." However, not all viewers were sorry to hear of the character's retirement, with one commenting "How can you have someone like Pauline Fowler on the television for 21 years? It's the best thing that's ever happened to television [getting rid of her]. Kill her off? I would have blown her up years ago". Pauline's exit in December 2006 was described by The Times critic, Tim Teeman, as a landmark episode and a "significant sayonara". He described scenes between Pauline and Dot as "the most moving in a soap this year" and added that "it was a delight to finally alight on an episode ... that was so satisfying." Conversely, Pauline's exit was described as a "mess" by Kevin O'Sullivan, critic of the Sunday Mirror newspaper. He branded the character's final scene unconvincing and badly acted, commenting: "the appropriately feeble scene brought down the curtain on 20 terrible years of Wendy Richard's low-quality performances. We shall not see her like again. If we're lucky! ... I'm certain millions didn't tune in to say farewell to sour- faced Pauline. No, they were just checking to make sure she was really dead."

To mark Pauline's 22 year reign in EastEnders, Wendy Richard was awarded with a 'Lifetime Achievement' award at the British Soap Awards
British Soap Awards

The British Soap Awards is an annual awards ceremony to honour the best of British soap operas.The first event began in 1999 and takes place in May each year....
 in May 2007. The award was presented by Todd Carty
Todd Carty

Todd Carty is an Irish-born UK-based actor and director, who has grown up on television screens in a variety of roles in the UK. His stage work has varied from pantomime to serious drama, as well as radio plays, voice overs, commercials, and narrations....
, who played her on-screen son Mark. Carty described Richard as the "heart and soul of EastEnders" and hailed her as an inspiration to everyone in the EastEnders cast. Richard was moved to tears when she collected the award.

In popular culture and other media

When the series was launching in 1985, since Wendy Richard was the most recognisable actor from the original cast, she and her character Pauline were used heavily to promote EastEnders in the media. Wendy Richard, in character as Pauline, was chosen to narrate a special "dial-a-soap" service for EastEnders. Run by British Telecom, the facility allowed people who had missed an episode to ring a number and get an instant update, up to 88 seconds long. It was the first television show to provide such a service. Between 1985 and 2006, Pauline was featured in numerous EastEnders related merchandise and promotional material, including calendars, cast-cards, annuals, novels, a knitting pattern book and a greeting card.

The well-known character of Pauline Fowler has also been referenced in various television programmes, unrelated to the EastEnders universe. In 1997 she was mentioned in an episode of the successful BBC drama This Life
This Life

This Life was a BBC television drama, produced by World Productions and screened on BBC Two, running for two series in 1996 and 1997 and a reunion special in 2007....
. Two key characters, Anna and Ferdy, watch an episode of EastEnders on television and mock Pauline's hysterics and her well-documented tendency to wear cardigans. The character was also regularly spoofed in the BBC comedy sketch show, The Real McCoy
The Real McCoy (TV series)

The Real McCoy was a BBC Television comedy show which ran from 1991 to 1996, featuring an array of talented black and Asian comedy stars performing material aimed at an across-the-board black audience....
 (1991–1995). One of the show's recurring sketches featured a spoof version of EastEnders, with black comedians taking over roles of well known EastEnders characters, who frequent a pub called Rub-a-Dub. The comedian Llewella Gideon
Llewella Gideon

Llewella Gideon is a British-based comedian, actress and writer....
 played the role of Pauline. The sketches placed considerable emphasis on the character's high-pitched voice and her tendency to whine. The character's fashion sense has also been referred to in BBC Two
BBC Two

BBC Two is the second major terrestrial television channel of the BBC, aimed at a wide range of subject matter and interests, and specialising in intelligent yet popular programme genres....
 sitcom Beautiful People
Beautiful People (UK TV series)

Beautiful People is a British comedy drama television series based on the memoirs of Barneys creative director Simon Doonan. The first of six episodes aired on BBC Two on 2 October 2008....
 (2008).

See also

  • Fowlers in Ireland
    EastEnders episodes in Ireland

    EastEnders episodes in Ireland were three singular transmissions of the BBC soap opera EastEnders that were filmed on location in Dublin, Ireland, and broadcast in 1997....


External links