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Peggy Mitchell



 
 
Margaret Ann "Peggy" Mitchell (née Martin; previously Butcher) 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....
 in the popular 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....
. Peggy was initially played by Jo Warne
Jo Warne

Jo Warne is a United Kingdom actress, who played the original Peggy Mitchell in the BBC soap opera EastEnders, making her first appearance on 30 April 1991....
 when she first appeared in the series on 30 April 1991. Peggy was at this time seen on a recurring basis over several weeks. Peggy was reintroduced to the series in 1994, this time played by Barbara Windsor
Barbara Windsor

Barbara Ann Windsor, Order of the British Empire is an English people actress. Her best known roles are in the Carry On films and as Peggy Mitchell in the BBC soap opera EastEnders; she is now considered by many to be something of a British national institution....
. From that point forward, Peggy became a regular character, and Barbara Windsor continues to play the role to this day.

She is fiercely protective of her family and the Mitchell name, and has become famous for her catchphrase "Get outta my pub!", used when ejecting people from The Queen Victoria
The Queen Victoria

The Queen Victoria is the fictional Victorian architecture public house in the popular BBC soap opera, EastEnders. It has the fictional address of 46 Albert Square, Walford, London E20....
, of which she is the landlady.

y was introduced as a guest character in April 1991, by 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?....
.






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Margaret Ann "Peggy" Mitchell (née Martin; previously Butcher) 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....
 in the popular 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....
. Peggy was initially played by Jo Warne
Jo Warne

Jo Warne is a United Kingdom actress, who played the original Peggy Mitchell in the BBC soap opera EastEnders, making her first appearance on 30 April 1991....
 when she first appeared in the series on 30 April 1991. Peggy was at this time seen on a recurring basis over several weeks. Peggy was reintroduced to the series in 1994, this time played by Barbara Windsor
Barbara Windsor

Barbara Ann Windsor, Order of the British Empire is an English people actress. Her best known roles are in the Carry On films and as Peggy Mitchell in the BBC soap opera EastEnders; she is now considered by many to be something of a British national institution....
. From that point forward, Peggy became a regular character, and Barbara Windsor continues to play the role to this day.

She is fiercely protective of her family and the Mitchell name, and has become famous for her catchphrase "Get outta my pub!", used when ejecting people from The Queen Victoria
The Queen Victoria

The Queen Victoria is the fictional Victorian architecture public house in the popular BBC soap opera, EastEnders. It has the fictional address of 46 Albert Square, Walford, London E20....
, of which she is the landlady.

Character creation

Peggy was introduced as a guest character in April 1991, by 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?....
. The character was brought in as the mother of the already established Mitchell clan: Phil
Phil Mitchell

Phillip James "Phil" Mitchell is a long-running fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He is played by Steve McFadden....
 (Steve McFadden
Steve McFadden

Steve McFadden is an England actor who is well-known for his starring role as Phil Mitchell in the United Kingdom BBC TV drama EastEnders, since 1990....
), Grant
Grant Mitchell (EastEnders)

Grant Anthony Mitchell was a fictional character, played by Ross Kemp, in the United Kingdom soap opera EastEnders. He appeared in the series from 1990 until 1999, making brief comebacks in 2005 and 2006....
 (Ross Kemp
Ross Kemp

Ross Kemp is a BAFTA award-winning English people actor, authorjournalist and television presenter, who rose to prominence in the role of Grant Mitchell in the BBC soap opera, EastEnders....
) and Sam
Sam Mitchell (EastEnders)

Samantha "Sam" Mitchell is a fictional character. She appeared in the Great Britain BBC1 soap opera EastEnders intermittently between 1990 and 2005....
 (Danniella Westbrook
Danniella Westbrook

Danniella Westbrook is an England actor and television presenter. She is known for being the original actress to play Sam Mitchell in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders, from 1990 to 2000....
). Specifically, she played a key role in a storyline about the elopement of her daughter Sam with 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....
). Peggy was played by actress Jo Warne
Jo Warne

Jo Warne is a United Kingdom actress, who played the original Peggy Mitchell in the BBC soap opera EastEnders, making her first appearance on 30 April 1991....
 for a period of three months, but was written out upon the completion of the storyline.

The character did not make another appearance until November 1994, when she was reintroduced by Series Producer Barbara Emile
Barbara Emile

Barbara Emile is a United Kingdom television producer. Emile contributed to the BBC soap opera EastEnders for several years. She first started working on the serial as script editor underneath producer Leonard Lewis, and she began producing the programme in 1992....
 as a regular character. The actress was recast, the role being taken over by Barbara Windsor
Barbara Windsor

Barbara Ann Windsor, Order of the British Empire is an English people actress. Her best known roles are in the Carry On films and as Peggy Mitchell in the BBC soap opera EastEnders; she is now considered by many to be something of a British national institution....
, already well-known to viewers as a comic actress, notably appearing in the long-running Carry On films
Carry On films

Carry On is a long-running film series of low-budget United Kingdom comedy films, directed by Gerald Thomas and produced by Peter Rogers. They are an energetic mix of parody, farce, slapstick and double entendres....
. Scott Matthewman of The Stage
The Stage

The Stage is a weekly United Kingdom newspaper founded in 1880, available nationally and published on Thursdays. Covering all areas of the entertainment industry but focused primarily on theatre, it contains news, reviews, opinion, features and other items of interest, mainly to those who work within the industry....
 commented on the recast in 2006: "Quite the biggest — and most inexplicable — transformation is that of Peggy Mitchell in EastEnders. While Barbara Windsor has dominated the role...first appearing in [1994], the character had appeared briefly [three] years earlier, played by Jo Warne, a lady who physically is as different from our Babs as it’s possible to get."

Windsor had previously made no secret of her desire to join the cast of EastEnders. Several popular chat show hosts had made public broadcasts requesting to see Windsor on the soap, including Chris Evans on Channel 4
Channel 4

Channel 4 is a UK Public service broadcasting in the United Kingdom television broadcaster which began transmissions on 2 November 1982. Although commercially self-funded, it is ultimately publicly owned; originally a subsidiary of the Independent Broadcasting Authority , the station is now owned and operated by the #Channel Four Television...
's The Big Breakfast
The Big Breakfast

The Big Breakfast was a British light entertainment television show shown on Channel 4 each weekday morning from 28 September 1992 until 29 March 2002....
, who instructed viewers to fax or phone the BBC to plea for Windsor's instatement. However, Windsor was already in negotiations with the BBC about appearing in the serial. June Deitch, the EastEnders casting director, had met with Windsor to discuss the matter, and was convinced when Windsor declared that she would "like to play my own age for a change". At the time, the producers had already thought about reintroducing Peggy, and Windsor was cast despite originally being considered too "well-known". In an interview with the Walford Gazette, a US-based newspaper dedicated to EastEnders, Windsor commented on her casting: "I was thrilled, I could rest my tired bones working on a marvelous television show that I deeply respected. I was very excited about the possibility [of] playing this feisty lady who would come in and shake up her two boys' lives."

Windsor has been described as the biggest "name" that EastEnders has ever added to its cast, and her arrival came at a time in the show's history that has been branded its "worst creative period". Windsor has commented, "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....
 [who played Pauline Fowler
Pauline Fowler

Pauline Fowler is a fictional character from the BBC soap opera EastEnders, a long-running serial drama about working class life in the fictional London borough of Walford....
 certainly had name value but I suppose it was regarded differently because she was part of the original cast. When I was brought on [to EastEnders] the press made such a big deal. They made it seem like I was brought on to 'save' EastEnders or something , which was ridiculous...the show decided to move into the "Sharongate
Sharongate

"Sharongate" is the term used for a storyline in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders, which reached its climax on October 24 1994, attracting 25.3 million viewers....
" storyline, which gave it an enormous push, creatively and ratings-wise. Peggy was brought on as an extension of the Sharongate story because she was Phil and Grant's mum. I understand why the show was uneasy about bringing on any really well known actors because they want the audience [to] believe in and identify with the character without having any of the actor's baggage in their heads..." According to Windsor, 27 million viewers watched her first appearance as Peggy on-screen.

Characterisation and personality


Hilary Kingsley, author of The EastEnders Handbook (1991), has described Peggy as tough, with a "knack for getting her own way". She adds, "Peggy likes to think she looks much younger [than she is]. She's flash, fast-talking and nobody's fool. She has always done things her own way, and heaven help anyone who crosses her, though her bark's usually worse than her bite." When Windsor took over the role in 1994, she was unhappy with the way Peggy was being scripted. She has commented, "a few things weren't quite right about Peggy at the beginning. On a purely superficial level, the wig didn't fit right. And the clothes weren't right either. They appeared too downmarket. I was particularly worried about how the character was viewed by the producer and writers. I saw her as much ballsier than they did. I think they envisioned Peggy as this rather sad, vulnerable lady who spent all her time worrying about her children." However, early in 1995, EastEnders acquired a new executive producer, Corinne Hollingworth
Corinne Hollingworth

Corinne Hollingworth is a British television producer and executive, best known for her contributions to British soap operas, including BBC's EastEnders and Five 's Family Affairs....
, who shared Windsor's vision of Peggy. It was Hollingworth who decided that Peggy would be a central character, the new landlady of The Queen Victoria
The Queen Victoria

The Queen Victoria is the fictional Victorian architecture public house in the popular BBC soap opera, EastEnders. It has the fictional address of 46 Albert Square, Walford, London E20....
 public house
Public house

A public house, the formal name for a pub in Britain, is a drinking establishment licensed to serve alcoholic beverage for consumption on or off the premises in countries and regions of United Kingdom influence....
, one of the soap's main focal points. Hollingworth stated that Peggy was "not going to be allowed to just sit in some flat polishing her nails". Windsor has said, "It was like a dream. [Hollingworth] let me go out with the costume designer and choose Peggy's wardrobe, which needed to be a lot more flash and upmarket. Corinne and I worked on getting Peggy right and I finally began to believe...".

Windsor has described Peggy as "from the old school, the generation which doesn't put up with rubbish from anybody...She can get through practically anything because she's tough, tough, tough." The character has been classified by Rupert Smith, author of EastEnders: 20 Years in Albert Square, as a matriarch, assuming "papal infallibility. Whatever anybody does — particularly her own children — she knows better." She has also been branded a "battleaxe", "bossy" and someone who "wears her heart on her sleeve". Family-orientated, Windsor adds that "[Peggy] loves her family with a passion. Her worst qualities are that she's blinkered, sometimes wrongly passionate about her family."

It has been speculated that Windsor has based Peggy on Violet Kray, mother of the infamous East End gangsters, the Kray twins
Kray twins

Reginald "Reggie" Kray and Ronald "Ronnie" Kray were identical twin brothers, and the foremost organised crime leaders dominating London's East End during the 1950s and 1960s....
; however Windsor has denied this. Instead she claims that Peggy is based on women she has seen in East End pubs and her own mother: "women whose hair is great and their outfits are more Walthamstow market, they get it wrong slightly...Some things I've done with Peggy is from my Mum. She was one of those East End snobs. I drew on all of those experiences."

Character development

The character of Peggy has been central to numerous high-profile storylines, including a battle with breast cancer, a failed marriage to Frank Butcher
Frank Butcher

Francis Aloysius "Frank" Butcher was a fictional character in the popular United Kingdom soap opera EastEnders. He was played by the late Mike Reid ....
 (Mike Reid
Mike Reid (entertainer)

Michael Reid was an English people comedian and character actor, hailing from Metropolitan Borough of Hackney in East London, England, who is best remembered for playing the role of Frank Butcher in EastEnders and hosting the popular children's TV show Runaround ....
), and various business and family upsets.

Breast cancer

In 1996, Peggy was featured in a storyline about breast cancer. It was the first time that the soap had given one of its characters the illness, though the issue was covered much less substantially in 1987 as a means of promoting breast cancer screening
Mammography

Mammography is the process of using low-dose amplitude-X-rays to examine the human breast. The goal of mammography is the early detection of breast cancer, typically through detection of characteristic masses and/or microcalcifications....
, when Sue Osman
Sue Osman

Susan "Sue" Osman was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Sandy Ratcliff.Sue had a rough time of things in Albert Square....
 (Sandy Ratcliff
Sandy Ratcliff

Alexandria "Sandy" Ratcliff is an England actor. Ratcliff made an impression as a model and film actress in the 1970s, but she is best known for being one of the original cast members in the BBC soap opera EastEnders....
) discovered a lump on her breast, which turned out to be benign.

Peggy's breast cancer storyline was devised at the suggestion of a scriptwriter in a story conference session and, according to the production staff, it was an idea "that had been knocking about for a long time." In Lesley Henderson's book, Social Issues in Television Fiction, an EastEnders researcher explains that "A lot of illnesses [...] translate quite readily into strong dramatic material", and the experience of being hospitalised or waiting on test results is something everyone can identify with. The programme sought expert advice on "storyline visuals" from a variety of sources including cancer organisations, breast cancer charities and medical professionals. There were anticipated problems with running a breast cancer story, such as timing, characterisation, casting, and interweaving the plot with other ongoing storylines. A story editor has explained, "EastEnders is perceived as being an issue-led show, but it isn't, it's character and story-led [...] If you haven't got the character to fulfill that storyline then it won't work. You've got to be careful to make sure that the illness actually impacts on the family dynamics and the character development."

Producers decided to use Peggy Mitchell in the breast cancer storyline, conforming to a soap opera tradition of reserving strong roles for a firmly established middle-aged matriarch. The audience were familiar with Peggy's history, knew that her first husband had died from cancer, consequently making her fear hospitals and she had "the right mentality for [the story theme], which was about 'a woman who discovers a lump and then refuses to accept that anything's wrong'. An added factor was that in choosing Peggy the programme could avoid appearing too issue driven, and [the] storyline could be used as a device to expand and develop her characterisation." Additionally, as the causes of breast cancer are not attributable to risky behaviour, the disease was deemed "more attractive" in storyline terms. A member of the EastEnders production team explains, "If you take a character who smokes and they get lung cancer that would seem too issue-driven. The great thing about a character like Peggy is [her breast cancer was] quite unexpected. At the time there were lots of other issues in her life. She was a character who audiences had only seen pulling pints behind the bar. Suddenly she was in a new environment in a hospital and had a huge medical crisis to go through, so that allowed the character to grow and expand in many ways...There was also fairly major moments [...] with Peggy and [her boyfriend George Palmer
George Palmer (EastEnders)

George Palmer was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was played by Paul Moriarty .George was a dodgy dealer who owned an illegal gambling den known as Scarlet #The Market Cellar....
 (Paul Moriarty)]. She thought George wouldn't love her anymore after she'd had the operation. We were able to use the illness to take them on a new journey." In the view of the production team, Peggy's breast cancer was a catalyst, creating new dynamics and tensions amongst exisitng characters. Realism was also an issue. As a middle-aged woman, Peggy was epiodemiologically at higher risk for developing breast cancer. In 2001, it was reported that Peggy's character was one of only a few media portrayals of older females to be given the disease, and source organisations have praised EastEnders for this.

The storyline used elements of suspense, created by the use of "shared secrets" between Peggy and her daughter-in-law Tiffany Mitchell
Tiffany Mitchell

Tiffany Dawn "Tiff" Mitchell was a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Martine McCutcheon. The character was created by the writer, Tony Jordan....
 (Martine McCutcheon
Martine McCutcheon

Martine McCutcheon is an England singer, television personality and Laurence Olivier Award-winning actor. McCutcheon had minor success as one third of the pop group Milan in the early 1990s; however, it was her role as Tiffany Mitchell in BBC's EastEnders that made her a household name in the UK in 1995....
), who invented elaborate cover stories to mask Peggy's trips to hospital from her sons and partner. Tension was deliberately built for viewing pleasure, posing the questions of whether Peggy's lump was benign or malignant and whether she would die, but also in terms of Peggy's relationships, whether her children would discover the truth or if George would end their relationship. It has been suggested that "such devises [added] pathos to Peggy's treatment path. Audiences [knew] that she [was] terrified and about to discover her biopsy results, but must watch as she is casually castigated by her son Grant for pestering his wife Tiffany to accompany her to 'the dentist'." Hospital scenes were also played for narrative pace to build tension and drama.

Because "radical, body-altering" surgery on a long-running character would cause the production team ongoing problems with continuity, it was decided that Peggy would have a "less visible" lumpectomy
Lumpectomy

Lumpectomy is a common surgical procedure designed to remove a discrete lump, usually a tumor, benign or otherwise, from an affected man or woman's breast....
, rather than a mastectomy
Mastectomy

In medicine, mastectomy is the medical term for the surgical removal of one or both breasts, partially or completely. Mastectomy is usually done to treat breast cancer; in some cases, women and some men believed to be at high risk of breast cancer have the operation prophylaxis, that is, to prevent cancer rather than treat it....
. A member of the EastEnders production team explained, "We have to think about costume and what it's going to look like afterwards and what we're lumbering ourselves with [...] you have to think of that for a long-term character." Additionally, giving Peggy a lumpectomy at that stage of her disease was viewed favourably by source organisations, as it helped to spread a message that a mastectomy is not necessary in all breast cancer cases. However, the storyline was revisted several times over the next few years. In August 1997, Peggy was given the "all-clear" at her follow-up mammogram, and in March 1999 the cancer returned and she underwent a mastectomy, while in 2000 she had a breast reconstruction. It has been reported that Peggy was the first soap opera character to undergo a mastectomy. BBC Production chief executive, Matthew Bannister
Matthew Bannister

Richard Matthew Bannister is a United Kingdom radio administrator and broadcaster. After attending King Edward VII School , he graduated in law at the University of Nottingham in 1978, and joined BBC Radio Nottingham as a Station Assistant and subsequently the presenter of its speech-based breakfast show, Morning Report....
, praised Windsor's portrayal of Peggy coming to terms with a mastectomy, commenting "It's brought a good deal of comfort and help to us and a lot of other people." In October 1999, Mal Young, head of drama at the BBC, gave a speech at the Royal Television Society
Royal Television Society

The Royal Television Society is a United Kingdom-based society for the discussion, analysis and preservation of television in all its forms, past, present and future....
's annual convention using Peggy's breast cancer storyline as an example of how important and socially useful soap operas are.

Oncology nurses and consultants were involved in the making of the storyline, which was based on a real life case study. In Clive Seale's book, Health and the Media, EastEnders was praised for putting its message across without being "gruelling". It has also been praised for showing "potent scenes" of a woman coming to terms with her diagnosis, scenes that also provided "rare opportunites" to portray a cancer patient "behaving badly" and depicting "ambivalent felings (such as denial or anger)" — as it had been noted that cancer patients are typically portrayed in the media as "beatific, serene figures". When Peggy had a mastectomy, hundreds of viewers wrote to the BBC to thank producer, Matthew Robinson, for tackling "a difficult subject so sensitively". However, not all viewers were impressed with the storyline. Felicity Smart, who had undergone a mastectomy, wrote to the BBC on behalf of the Breast Carer Support Group at St Thomas' Hospital
St Thomas' Hospital

St Thomas' Hospital is a large National Health Service hospital in Lambeth, London, England. It is administratively a part of Guy?s & St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust....
 in London to say that emotionally the storyline "hit the spot", but medically it was "hopelessly inaccurate. No one pulls pints and wisecracks with customers three days after having a mastectomy." Windsor has described Peggy's breast cancer as her favourite storyline, saying that "it really opened it all up for her and it encouraged a lot of charities to get more recognition. For me that's when I felt we had got it right".

Marriage to Frank Butcher

In 1998, Peggy was romantically paired on-screen with the character Frank Butcher
Frank Butcher

Francis Aloysius "Frank" Butcher was a fictional character in the popular United Kingdom soap opera EastEnders. He was played by the late Mike Reid ....
. Their coupling was part of producer Matthew Robinson's plan to place the focus of the soap back on to the Butcher and Mitchell families, while various other long-running characters were axed following a decline in ratings. The soap was attracting 15.74 million in May 1998, as opposed to rival soap 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
16 million.

Played by Mike Reid
Mike Reid (entertainer)

Michael Reid was an English people comedian and character actor, hailing from Metropolitan Borough of Hackney in East London, England, who is best remembered for playing the role of Frank Butcher in EastEnders and hosting the popular children's TV show Runaround ....
, Frank had been a regular character in the serial from 1987-1994, and had appeared in a recurring role until 1998, when Reid agreed to return full-time. Frank's history on the show included a former marriage to another long-running matriarch, Pat Evans
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....
 (played by 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....
). Their history as lovers featured prominently in Peggy's narrative in 1998, when, after agreeing to marry Frank, Peggy was wrongly told that Frank and Pat were having an affair. A special two-hander
Two-hander

Two-hander is a term for a play or movie with only two main characters.See also * EastEnders two-hander episodesReferences ...
 episode aired in November 1998, featuring only Pat and Peggy for the entire duration. It concentrated to Peggy's reaction to the suspected affair, whilst simultaneously addressing Pat's unresolved history with Frank, and the apparent destruction of Pat's own marriage to Roy
Roy Evans (EastEnders)

Roy Evans was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was played by Tony Caunter.Roy was a gentle soul, with a forgiving nature, and all he really wanted was a quiet life....
 (Tony Caunter
Tony Caunter

Tony Caunter is a United Kingdom actor best known for his portrayal of Roy Evans in EastEnders from 1994-2003.He attended Worthing and Westcliff High Schools, before service in the RAF and training as an actor at LAMDA....
), who had also responded badly to the rumours about his wife's infidelity. The episode, written by Tony Jordan
Tony Jordan

Tony Jordan is a United Kingdom television writer.Listed as the number 1 television screen writer in the UK by Broadcast magazine and among British Broadcastings Top 20 in The Stage ....
, featured what the Sunday Mirror described as one of "the most vicious fights ever filmed by a soap", with both throwing glasses at one another and Pat slapping Peggy across the face exclaiming "YOU BITCH!" and Peggy responding by slapping Pat exclaiming "YOU COW!". According to press reports, the fight scene between the characters was "so powerful that it had to have scenes and dialogue cut so it could be screened before the 9pm watershed." Barbara Windsor was reportedly bruised during the filming. Windsor commented, "The writer didn't want a namby- pamby cat fight between two silly girls. We were throwing chairs and bottles and the adrenaline was at a high. When I saw the programme I couldn't believe how good it was. Pam and I were really proud." The Sunday Mirror described it as "one of the most impressive episodes of all time". In the climax of the storyline, both couples resolved their differences, and their relationships remained intact.
Frankpeggy99
Peggy and Frank were married on-screen on 1 April 1999. A "hen night" was thrown for Windsor with the show's make-up team, and the BBC threw a "massive" party in the show's Albert Square to celebrate the event. Actors Windsor and Reid joined fellow stars, celebrities and TV executives for a celebration on the programme's set in Elstree
Elstree Studios

Historically, the name "Elstree Studios" refers to any of several film studios that were based in the towns of Borehamwood and Elstree in Hertfordshire, England....
, Hertfordshire
Hertfordshire

Hertfordshire is a Ceremonial counties of England and Metropolitan and non-metropolitan counties of England Counties of England in the East of England region of England....
. Windsor admitted she had been so nervous before filming the wedding she was sick on set. She commented, "I broke out in spots and threw up in the vestry. I was very nervous - we were both very nervous. The day you stop getting nervous you can hold your hands up. It shows you care." The soap wedding was filmed in Harrow
Harrow, London

Harrow is a town in the London Borough of Harrow, North West London. It is a suburb situated 12.2 miles west northwest of Charing Cross. It is one of the major metropolitan centres identified in the London Plan....
, North West London
North West London

North West London is the area of Greater London to the North West of Central London . Although it is only ambiguously defined, it is the most wealthy and also the most commercially developed area of London outside of the centre, containing significant amounts of commercial & retail spacealong with other cities, such as Watford, Camden, Harrow...
 in February 1999. A bbc spokesman commented, "It is one of the best weddings Walford has ever seen but it is not problem free. There are a lot of people who do not want to see Frank and Peggy married - Grant being one of them - and it remains to be seen whether they will get through the day without a major upset. And as if the wedding is not gripping enough, there are certainly shocking revelations back at the Vic." In the eventual episode, it was actually Grant Mitchell who persuaded his mother to marry Frank - with whom he had been feuding following his accidental killing of wife Tiffany - after Peggy was having second thoughts, thinking that Frank was only marrying her out of pity. Nearly 20 million viewers watched Peggy and Frank "tie the knot".

Together Frank and Peggy ran The Queen Vic, and were involved in various family and business crises, including a "tug-of-war" for their public house with "cuckoo-in-the-nest" Dan Sullivan
Dan Sullivan

Daniel "Dan" Sullivan was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap Opera EastEnders. He was played by Craig Fairbrass.He arrived in Albert Square as Carol Jackson's latest boyfriend in 1999 and was planning to marry her after she fell pregnant with his child....
 (Craig Fairbrass
Craig Fairbrass

Craig Fairbrass is an England actor. He is known for his tall stature and distinctive Cockney accent.Fairbrass was born in Stepney, London. He made his acting debut in an episode of the television series Shelley in 1980....
). After taking time off in 2000 due to ill-health, actor Mike Reid announced that he was quitting the soap in May 2000. After Reid publicly declared that he would love Frank to have a last fling with Pat before he left, EastEnders bosses granted his wish and an affair was scripted. The pair enjoyed a liaison on a Spanish beach during a week-long August special set on the Costa Blanca
Costa Blanca

Costa Blanca refers to the over 200 kilometres of coastline belonging to the Alicante province in Spain. The name "Costa Blanca" was devised as a promotional name used by British European Airways when they launched their air service between London Gatwick Airport and Valencia Airport in 1957....
, which saw Frank and Peggy go away with Pat and Roy and Terry
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 ....
 and Irene Raymond
Irene Raymond

Irene Constance Ethel Raymond was a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Roberta Taylor.Irene was never one to be tied down by her commitments, which included her own children....
 (Gavin Richards
Gavin Richards

Gavin Richards is a United Kingdom actor, writer and director. His father is music critic Denby Richards, editor of Britain's oldest classical music magazine, Musical Opinion....
 and Roberta Taylor
Roberta Taylor

Roberta Taylor , is an England actor and author.She is best known for her roles of Irene Raymond in EastEnders, and Inspector Gina Gold in The Bill....
). A BBC spokesperson said, "Pat is obviously incredibly torn between her love for her husband, Roy, and her old feelings for Frank. She's been hurt by Frank in the past, but she's coming to realise that she still has strong feelings for him and he has made no secret of his soft spot for her. I can confirm they do enjoy a romantic kiss on the beach." On-screen, Pat and Frank's affair continued until they decided, in November 2000, to elope. In the specially extended episode marking Frank's official exit — which aired on 2 November 2000, but was Guy Fawkes Night
Guy Fawkes Night

Guy Fawkes Night is an annual celebration on the evening of the November 5. It celebrates the foiling of the Gunpowder Plot of the 5 November, 1605 in which a number of Catholic conspirators, including Guy Fawkes, were alleged to be attempting to blow up the Palace of Westminster in London, England....
 in the on-screen events — Peggy discovered the affair amidst Frank's attempt to retrieve a letter of confession, following Pat's change of heart. Robert Hanks, television critic for
The Independent
The Independent

The Independent is a United Kingdom Compact newspaper published by Tony O'Reilly's Independent News & Media. It is nicknamed the Indy, with the Sunday edition, The Independent on Sunday, being the Sindy....
, has described the events that followed: "Peggy, having discovered Frank's duplicity, put on a brave face and carried on judging the pub's Guy Fawkes competition, before denouncing the guilty pair in front of le tout Walford." After revealing their deception to a busy Queen Vic public house, Peggy slapped both Pat and Frank, rebuffed Frank's attempt at reconciliation and left him to depart the serial alone. As symbolism throughout, one of the bonfire guys, "a grinning caricature of Frank" was seen during the episode in what Hanks has described as "a lovely, mocking foil to the action". Frank's effigy
Effigy

An effigy is a representation of a person, especially in the form of sculpture.The term is usually associated with full-length figures of a deceased person depicted in stone or wood on church monuments....
 was seen being burned at the end of the episode. In December 2000, Ian Hyland of the
Sunday Mirror voted the scene in which Peggy slaps both Pat and Frank as one of the "TV fights of the year", saying "It was Peggy's speech which really made it a Bonfire Night to remember. But the slaps were equally well dispatched." Commenting on Reid's exit, Windsor has said, "We fell out when I found out he was leaving because it was a shock for me. I was really upset. I've known him 30 odd years and I really like working with him. We had a great relationship as friends as well as performers. I got my own back when I had to slap him after I found out he was fooling around with Pat. I did the slap twice as I didn't think I did it hard enough the first time."

Storylines


Backstory

Peggy Martin married Eric Mitchell in the 1960s because she was pregnant with Phil
Phil Mitchell

Phillip James "Phil" Mitchell is a long-running fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He is played by Steve McFadden....
, beginning a life of hardship. Eric, a keen boxer, worked for gangster Johnny Allen
Johnny Allen (EastEnders)

Jonathan "Johnny" Allen was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders, played by Billy Murray ....
. Johnny would taunt Eric, making him do demeaning jobs, merely because Eric was a better boxer than him. Eric fell in love with a woman called Maureen and planned to elope with her, but changed his mind, unable to desert his family, whom he grew to resent. Eric took his angst out on Peggy; he was often violent towards her and Phil, and it wasn't the glamorous life she'd hoped for. She thought about leaving when her sons, Phil and Grant
Grant Mitchell (EastEnders)

Grant Anthony Mitchell was a fictional character, played by Ross Kemp, in the United Kingdom soap opera EastEnders. He appeared in the series from 1990 until 1999, making brief comebacks in 2005 and 2006....
, were teenagers, and once even tried to seduce Johnny Allen, but he turned her down. Peggy tried to save her marriage by having another child in 1975, her only daughter Sam
Sam Mitchell (EastEnders)

Samantha "Sam" Mitchell is a fictional character. She appeared in the Great Britain BBC1 soap opera EastEnders intermittently between 1990 and 2005....
. Her relationship with Eric improved, but only temporarily, and when Kevin Masters employed Peggy to work at his minicab firm, they began a secret affair. When Eric developed cancer, Peggy gave up work to care for him, but Kevin came back on the scene promptly after Eric's death in 1985 and Peggy's children took against him.

1991-1997

Sam in particular resented Kevin's interference and constantly attempted to leave the Mitchell fold. Sam's desire to escape resulted in her eloping in 1991 (aged 16) with Ricky Butcher
Ricky Butcher

Richard Francis "Ricky" Butcher is a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. He is played by Sid Owen....
. Peggy was furious and tried to put a halt to the wedding, but was unsuccessful.

Peggy was not seen again until November 1994. Her relationship with Kevin had ended and she returned to Walford to sort out her sons, who had fallen out due to Phil's affair with Grant's wife, Sharon. She became acting landlady of The Queen Victoria
The Queen Victoria

The Queen Victoria is the fictional Victorian architecture public house in the popular BBC soap opera, EastEnders. It has the fictional address of 46 Albert Square, Walford, London E20....
 public house
Public house

A public house, the formal name for a pub in Britain, is a drinking establishment licensed to serve alcoholic beverage for consumption on or off the premises in countries and regions of United Kingdom influence....
 in March 1995, and was soon making her presence felt around 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 blamed Sharon for the mess her family was in and attempted to chase her out from Walford. Sharon signed over her share of the pub, leaving the Mitchells as the sole owners, with Peggy in charge.

In 1996, Peggy was courted by shady businessman George Palmer
George Palmer (EastEnders)

George Palmer was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was played by Paul Moriarty .George was a dodgy dealer who owned an illegal gambling den known as Scarlet #The Market Cellar....
. George's primary motive for wooing Peggy was pragmatic — he was trying to stop her petition against the Cobra Club
Scarlet (EastEnders)

R&R is the name of a fictional nightclub in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders, located at the fictional address of 4 Turpin Road.Over the years it has had several different owners and names....
 (an arm of his money laundering
Money laundering

The definition of money laundering is dependent on the jurisdiction in which the act takes place.In US law it is the practice of engaging in financial transactions to conceal the identity, source, or destination of illegally gained money....
 operation) — but he soon found that he was genuinely attracted to her, and Peggy was smitten too. George tried to protect Peggy from the illegal side of his work and for a while she remained blissfully unaware of his criminal dealings.

When Peggy discovered that Mark Fowler
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...
 was 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....
 positive in 1996, she instigated a boycott on his fruit and veg stall, refusing to eat anything he had touched, or serve him in her pub. This caused a feud between Peggy and Mark's mother Pauline
Pauline Fowler

Pauline Fowler is a fictional character from the BBC soap opera EastEnders, a long-running serial drama about working class life in the fictional London borough of Walford....
, but even she couldn't diffuse the prejudice. Mark was forced to confront the bigotry of the locals by educating them about his illness. Peggy remained uncertain, but was forced to realise that Mark might appreciate some support, when, at the end of the year, she went through her own health problems.

In December 1996, Peggy was diagnosed with breast cancer
Breast cancer

Breast cancer is a cancer that starts in the Cell of the breast in women and men. Worldwide, breast cancer is the second most common type of cancer after lung cancer and the fifth most common cause of cancer death....
. Peggy prided herself on her glamorous appearance and the discovery that she had breast cancer initially devastated her, particularly when she was told that she would have to undergo a lumpectomy
Lumpectomy

Lumpectomy is a common surgical procedure designed to remove a discrete lump, usually a tumor, benign or otherwise, from an affected man or woman's breast....
. She refused surgery and finished with George, fearing that he could not handle her illness; however, with the support of her family and assurances from George, Peggy stoicly faced up to the operation. Peggy and George got engaged and would have married if Phil had not informed his mother about George's true identity. Peggy finished with George in 1997, and he then left Walford, leaving Peggy to be menaced by masked men looking for him in his absence. After this, a furious Peggy would have nothing more to do with George.

1998-2004


In 1998, Peggy began a relationship with Frank Butcher
Frank Butcher

Francis Aloysius "Frank" Butcher was a fictional character in the popular United Kingdom soap opera EastEnders. He was played by the late Mike Reid ....
. Their blossoming romance did not go smoothly as a false rumour, spread around by Barry Evans
Barry Evans (EastEnders)

Barry Evans is a fictional character, played by Shaun Williamson. He appeared in the BBC soap opera EastEnders between 1994 and 2004. The character was portrayed as a "buffoon"....
, led Peggy to believe that Frank had been cheating on her with his ex-wife 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....
. This prompted a feud between Pat and Peggy, with the two trading arguments around the Square. Eventually, the warring women managed to call a truce and even become good friends. Peggy and Frank's relationship was met with disapproval from her two sons. Grant loathed Frank after he accidentally killed his wife, Tiffany
Tiffany Mitchell

Tiffany Dawn "Tiff" Mitchell was a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Martine McCutcheon. The character was created by the writer, Tony Jordan....
, in a car accident, and Frank and Phil had past issues concerning the torching of Frank's car lot years earlier. Despite this, Peggy married Frank in April 1999, after winning her battle against breast cancer; she was forced to undergo a mastectomy
Mastectomy

In medicine, mastectomy is the medical term for the surgical removal of one or both breasts, partially or completely. Mastectomy is usually done to treat breast cancer; in some cases, women and some men believed to be at high risk of breast cancer have the operation prophylaxis, that is, to prevent cancer rather than treat it....
 after the cancer returned. The loss of her breast (as well as Grant's objections to Frank) nearly made Peggy cancel the wedding, as she felt that her husband-to-be would find her unattractive, but she changed her mind just at the last minute, much to Frank's relief.

Peggy grew disillusioned with Walford when Grant fled to Rio de Janeiro
Rio de Janeiro

Rio de Janeiro , is the second largest city of Brazil and South America, behind S?o Paulo, and the third largest metropolitan area in South America, behind S?o Paulo and Buenos Aires....
 in October 1999, so she decided to sell the pub and emigrate to Spain
Spain

Spain or the Kingdom of Spain , is a country located in Southern Europe on the Iberian Peninsula.The Spanish constitution does not establish any official denomination of the country, even though Espa?a , Estado espa?ol and Naci?n espa?ola are used interchangeably....
. Peggy blamed Phil for Grant's departure, as the two had been involved in a violent altercation concerning Grant sleeping with Phil's wife Kathy
Kathy Hills

Katherine "Kathy" Mitchell is a fictional character that appeared in the United Kingdom, BBC, soap opera EastEnders between 1985 and 2000. She was played by Gillian Taylforth....
 before he left. Phil had always felt the least favoured of Peggy's children and had begun to resent this. The animosity between them became so bad that when Grant gave Phil his share of the Vic on Christmas Day 1999, he sold it Dan Sullivan
Dan Sullivan

Daniel "Dan" Sullivan was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap Opera EastEnders. He was played by Craig Fairbrass.He arrived in Albert Square as Carol Jackson's latest boyfriend in 1999 and was planning to marry her after she fell pregnant with his child....
 for £
Pound sterling

----The pound sterling , subdivided into 100 pence , is the currency of the United Kingdom, its Crown dependency and the British Overseas Territories of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands and British Antarctic Territory....
5, just to spite Peggy. Peggy was forced to remain in Walford and share her pub with a man she loathed. Peggy and Dan battled with each other over the running of the pub, and the two were often involved in games of one-upmanship
One-upmanship

One-upmanship is the systematic and conscious practice of making one's associates feel inferior and thereby gaining the status of being "one-up" on them....
, which only sought to increase animosity and make their working life unbearable. Eventually, Phil and Peggy called a truce, and as a reunited force, they chased Dan out of Walford.

Patfrankpeggy
More heartbreak followed for Peggy in November 2000, when she discovered that Frank was going to leave her for his ex-wife Pat. Frank wrote Peggy a letter explaining that he was leaving, but just at the last minute, Pat had a change of heart, so Frank attempted to reclaim the letter before Peggy had a chance to read it. He was too late, Peggy had already discovered it and on Guy Fawkes Night
Guy Fawkes Night

Guy Fawkes Night is an annual celebration on the evening of the November 5. It celebrates the foiling of the Gunpowder Plot of the 5 November, 1605 in which a number of Catholic conspirators, including Guy Fawkes, were alleged to be attempting to blow up the Palace of Westminster in London, England....
, when The Queen Vic was packed with most of Walford's residents, Peggy shamed the cheating duo by reading the letter to the entire pub, and then slapped both Frank and Pat in front of everyone. She threw Frank out and he left Walford without Pat. Peggy has never fully forgiven Pat for her betrayal.

Peggy spent the rest of 2000 in a depression
Clinical depression

Major depressive disorder is a mental disorder characterized by a pervasive depression , low self-esteem, and anhedonia in normally enjoyable activities....
 and began to rely heavily on tranquillisers. She attempted to forget her problems by having a family Christmas, which ended in disaster; she spent Christmas Day alone in the Vic. When Frank's daughter Janine
Janine Evans

Janine Butcher is a fictional character in the United Kingdom soap opera EastEnders. She was originally played by Rebecca Michael from 1989 to 1993, then by Alexia Demetriou from 1993 to 1996, and from 1999 to 2004 and 2008 onwards she is played by Charlie Brooks....
 taunted her about her father finding love with a new woman, Peggy began drinking heavily and, in a violent fit of rage, she smashed up the Vic with a baseball bat
Baseball bat

A baseball bat is a smooth wooden or metal Club used in the game of baseball to hit the Baseball after the ball is thrown by the pitcher . It is no more than 2.75 inches in diameter at the thickest part and no more than 42 inches in length....
. Things worsened, as in 2001, not only was Phil shot in an attempted murder
Attempted murder

In English criminal law, attempted murder is the crime of more than merely preparing to commit unlawful homicide and at the same time having a intention to cause the death of human being under the Queen's Peace....
, but Peggy was also forced to sell The Vic as Frank had left her in severe debt. She begrudgingly gave up her tenancy, but immediately regretted it when she discovered that the new owner was her enemy Sharon Watts. Peggy found it difficult to keep out of the running of the pub, even though it was no longer hers.

Meanwhile, Peggy began dating Harry Slater
Harry Slater

Harold "Harry" Slater was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was played by the late Michael Elphick.He arrived in Walford in May 2001 to visit his older brother, Charlie Slater....
. Harry owned a bar in Spain and convinced Peggy to move there with him. They got engaged, but a disgusted Peggy was forced to call it off when she discovered that Harry was guilty of sexually abusing his niece, Kat. Peggy returned to The Vic when Phil became joint owner and started dating Sharon again. Her feud with Sharon continued with both regularly sniping at each other, forcing Phil to choose between them. She ended up being the sole licensee once again in 2002, when Sharon sold her half of the Vic back to her.

Peggy was reunited with Frank again when she travelled to Spain for his supposed funeral
Funeral

A funeral is a ceremony marking a person's death. Funerary customs comprise the complex of beliefs and practices used by a culture to remember the dead, from the funeral itself, to various monuments, prayers, and rituals undertaken in their honour....
 in January 2002. She discovered he was actually alive and had faked his death to avoid debtor
Debtor

In economics a debtor is simply an entity that owes a debt to someone else, the entity could be an individual, a firm, a government, or an organization....
s. She and Frank had a chance to put their past behind them before Peggy returned to Walford. Peggy was hastily written out of the series in 2003 when Barbara Windsor was diagnosed with Epstein Barr. Peggy went to Brazil
Brazil

Brazil , officially the Federative Republic of Brazil , is a country in South America. It is the List of countries and outlying territories by total area country by geographical area, occupying nearly half of South America, the List of countries by population country, and the fourth most populous democracy in the world....
 to tend to Grant, who had been crippled in an accident. She returned briefly for the wedding of Sam and Andy Hunter
Andy Hunter

Andrew "Andy" Hunter was a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. He was played by Michael Higgs....
, in September 2004, leaving Sam in charge of the Vic. However, Sam was conned into selling the Vic to 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"....
 for a pittance.

2005—

Permanently returning to Walford in September 2005, Peggy was furious to learn that the Vic was in the possession of the Watts family. Additionally, Chrissie Watts
Chrissie Watts

Christine "Chrissie" Watts was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders, played by Tracy-Ann Oberman.She is perhaps best known for killing the character of Den Watts, her husband, in an episode that was watched by 14.34 million United Kingdom TV viewers....
, the licensee, was the woman responsible for framing Sam of Den's murder. Sam was on remand while Chrissie, the real killer, was a free woman. Peggy confronted her at Den's funeral, revealing the truth (though no one believed her); she hit Chrissie around the face, causing her to fall into Den's open grave.

As well as trying to get Sam exonerated, Peggy tried to get the pub back, igniting a feud with gangster Johnny Allen
Johnny Allen (EastEnders)

Jonathan "Johnny" Allen was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders, played by Billy Murray ....
, who also made an offer on The Vic. There was a degree of history between the two. Peggy's deceased husband, Eric, had worked for Johnny many years earlier. Johnny had mistreated Eric, which Peggy felt was the reason for Eric's violent behaviour towards her. Peggy also had knowledge of Johnny's violent past, and she exacerbated the feud by informing his daughter Ruby
Ruby Allen

Ruby Allen was a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Louisa Lytton. Her first appearance was on 18 March 2005 and her last was on 23 November 2006....
, indicating that he was also to blame for the death of Ruby's mother and sister. Johnny responded by assaulting Peggy, crushing her fingers in a door and threatening her safety unless she kept quiet. He hired a mobster to assault her, but she was saved by her sons, Phil and Grant. As well as sorting Johnny out, they were also instrumental in unveiling Chrissie as Den's real killer. Chrissie was arrested, Sam was released and Peggy returned to the Mitchells' spiritual home, the Vic.

In 2006, Peggy began an on/off romance with Jack Edwards
Jack Edwards (EastEnders)

Jack Edwards was a fictional character in the popular BBC1 soap opera EastEnders. He made his first appearance on 27 February 2006. He has a daughter called Honey Mitchell, a dog called Dalgliesh and a narrowboat called Patonia....
, the father of Honey
Honey Mitchell

Susan "Honey" Mitchell is a fictional character that appeared in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Emma Barton. She made her first appearance in the show on 22 November 2005....
, who married Peggy's nephew Billy
Billy Mitchell (EastEnders)

William "Billy" Mitchell is a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders, played by Perry Fenwick, who made his first appearance on 9 November 1998....
. However, when Peggy later discovered that Honey's newborn baby, Petal, had Down's syndrome, she declared that the couple should give the baby up for adoption. This caused friction between her and Jack, and because of their differing opinions, Jack decided to end their romance. Realising she was being unreasonable, Peggy came to accept Petal as a Mitchell.

In 2007, a series of lavish expenses (including funding for Phil and child abuser Stella Crawford
Stella Crawford

Stella Crawford was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Sophie Thompson. She left the show on 20 July 2007....
's doomed wedding; a cruise; and having the Vic redecorated by designer, Marco Bianco
List of minor EastEnders characters (2007)

The following is a list of minor characters that first appeared in the BBC soap opera EastEnders in Storylines of EastEnders #2007, by order of first appearance....
) left Peggy £40,000 in debt. She attempted an insurance scam, recruiting Sean Slater
Sean Slater

Sean Slater was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He is played by Robert Kazinsky. Sean left the Square temporarily on 27 March 2007, as Kazinsky was suspended from work for two months....
 to smash up the pub so she could illegally claim for damages. When this failed, Peggy was forced to turn to her nieces, Ronnie
Ronnie Mitchell

Veronica "Ronnie" Mitchell is a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders, a long-running serial drama about working class life in the East End of London....
 and Roxy Mitchell who had arrived for Phil's wedding and stayed since; they raised the funds for her so she could pay off the debt-collector and keep her pub.

In July 2008, Peggy went to Weymouth and met her brother-in-law Archie Mitchell
Archie Mitchell

Archibald "Archie" Mitchell is a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders played by Larry Lamb and made his first on-screen appearance on 8 July 2008....
. She and Archie began a romance, holidayed together, and then returned to Walford and announced their engagement. Archie began subtly controlling Peggy, instructing her on what to wear, how to cut her hair and how to behave. Some of her family and friends such as Ronnie and Pat have started to notice.
On the 13th November 2008, Peggy witnessed Roxy Slater's waters breaking. Roxy demanded that her father, Archie Mitchell
Archie Mitchell

Archibald "Archie" Mitchell is a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders played by Larry Lamb and made his first on-screen appearance on 8 July 2008....
 finds Sean.

In December 2008, Peggy was delighted when baby Amy returned home from hospital and was even more pleased when Phil and Suzy announced she was 'pregnant' too (though this is a lie so that Suzy could con him for money), she later asked him if they both loved each other, concerned over Ben and if the two would last with a baby.

In January 2009, After Peggy took in Janine, she stole her credit card and Janine Butcher ran 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....
s credit card up and spent a total of 12,000 pounds. After Peggy's bank called to let her know she stormed round and told Janine, Billy and Jay she knew it was one of them as she saw the items the plasma tv, the console and the flat had been done up, Peggy demanded Janine and Jay empty their pockets and it was found in Jays pocket after Janine planted it there to get him out of her way. On January 13 2009, Peggy read an article about a Massage Parlor opening on George Street after a discussion with Dot she went storming round there shouting at the woman who denied she was in charge, then she turned her back and saw a "missing" Jay get in a car and drive of, she straight away informed Janine who informed Billy. Peggy demanded all of the locals to turn up to protest against the Massage Parlour, she made a stand with Heather, Patrick and other market stall holders like Ina and Maggie. After waiting for the press to come she had a go at the worker Marissa who claimed her boss would not like it ,Peggy didnt care and the police turned up and the press .Peggy later revealed she will be telling her top council friend. Again in january janine stole peggy's purse, peggy had ago at jay for this and for his ways of organising her plant pots, then later on peggy thought and straight away shouted "janine"! She then marched round to pats and pulled her out of the taxi heading to france, pat asked what happened and peggy replied that theiving cow stole my purse, peggy then grabbed janines bag and emptied the contents finding her purse! Peggy was sorry towards Jay and fuming with Janine!

The long-running protagonist, Peggy Mitchell, has been described as one of
EastEnders' "most high-profile characters." Windsor has said "EastEnders is where my heart is, it's like my home, and this is where I see myself ending my career". In 1999, Windsor won the BBC Personality award for her role as Peggy Mitchell and in 2002, EastEnders
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....
, praised Windsor's dedication to the soap.

The character was viewed unfavourably by a proportion of viewers in 1996, when Peggy discovered that Mark Fowler (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....
) was HIV positive and subsequently mounted a hate campaign against him. Windsor has since revealed that she was initially opposed to the storyline: "[Peggy] was vicious to [Mark]. She was so naïve about the whole thing. When I got the script and it said some awful things, I couldn't believe it. It's the only time I've questioned the writers and said 'I can't believe it, people aren't like that today'. Then they sent me a survey and proved that people are actually like that. When it came to doing the scenes, I just got hold of Todd [Carty] and said, 'sorry this is Peggy!' I got the most appalling [hate] mail because of it. I had a very dear friend of mine who was dying of AIDS so it was very personal to me. The last scene I did I went straight out and got terribly drunk." Actress and writer Jacquetta May, who played the character Rachel Kominski
Rachel Kominski

Rachel Kominski was a fictional character in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Jacquetta May....
 between 1991 and 1993, has discussed the storyline and the role of women in an article about EastEnders. According to May, the scriptwriters were faced with a problem once Peggy, "a key figure of the community", was shown to exhibit such "pig-headed ignorance and appalling prejudice". In order for Peggy to be redeemed, she had to be seen to be punished, and so, the character was given breast-cancer later that year. May comments, "Peggy, malicious gossip and bigot, herself becomes the victim of a life-threatening illness. At Christmas they run a Christian forgiveness story. Peggy calls on Mark and tells him she now knows what it is like to suffer as he has. She apologises, thus underlining one of the basic tenets of the programme: underneath the skin we are all the same, human and vulnerable, and recognition of this should unite us not divide us. Along the way, a great deal of useful information about these illnesses was broadcast. So, although EastEnders endlessly repeats its conservative format, and although all issues are there primarily to feed the great hungry story-beast, its positive by-products cannot be denied."

EastEnders have received praise for the way they handled Peggy's breast cancer storyline, as she was a rare media portrayal of an older matriarchal woman with the disease. Older women are at higher risk of being diagnosed; however, in 2001, it was reported that media representation of breast cancer is skewed towards younger women in their 20s or 30s, as they are seen as "more tragic" or "more sexy" in media terms. A 2000 study by Kitzinger and Henderson showed that 94% of newspaper coverage on non-celebrity women with breast cancer were aged under 50. Source organisations working with EastEnders on the storyline have commented, "[The team] decided it was going to be [Peggy] and very rightly so. Bang on, the right age [...] perfect dramatic licence in terms of her sons that she was going to have to share this terrible news with, and how would she share it? Every female would have that problem. How would you tell your children? And they followed that with her. She was exactly the right person." The storyline also received media criticism, for their use of a breast care nurse, who was used to counsel Peggy and translate medical terminology into lay terms for viewers; a character who could provide both a dramatic and educational purpose. However, not all oncology units in the UK offer breast care nurses, and the character presented "particularly positive messages" concerning patient choice and control over treatment options. Because of this, the UK press dubbed the storyline "didactic". The stroyline was also criticised because Peggy received her cancer test results after six days, which prompted cancer charities to warn that not all patients would receive the same treatment.

In popular culture

Peggymitchell2dtv
The character of Peggy Mitchell has been spoofed
Parody

A parody , in contemporary usage, is a work created to mock, comment on, or poke fun at an original work, its subject, or author, or some other target, by means of humorous, satiric or ironic imitation....
 in the ITV
ITV

ITV is a public service broadcasting in the United Kingdom television network of British television broadcasters, set up under the Independent Television Authority to provide competition to the BBC....
 cartoon
Cartoon

The word cartoon has various meanings, based on several very different forms of visual art and illustration. The term has evolved over time.The original meaning was in fine art, and there cartoon meant a preparatory drawing for a piece of art such as a painting or tapestry....
 sketch show 2DTV
2DTV

2DTV was a satire animated television show broadcast on ITV in the United Kingdom, directed by Tim Searle.2DTV employed the same satirical style as Spitting Image, but using animation rather than puppets....
.

The character has also been spoofed by the Scottish impressionist
Impressionist (entertainment)

An impressionist is a performer whose act consists of giving the "impression" of being someone else by imitating the other person's voice and mannerisms....
 Ronni Ancona
Ronni Ancona

Veronica 'Ronni' Ancona is a Scottish Impressionist and actress of Italian/Jewish ancestry who won the Best TV Comedy Actress award at the British Comedy Awards 2003 for her work in Big Impression....
 in BBC's Big Impression
Big Impression

The Big Impression was a United Kingdom comedy sketch show. It was formerly known as Alistair McGowan's Big Impression after impressionist Alistair McGowan, but renamed The Big Impression towards the end of its run to accommodate female impressionist Ronni Ancona, who did almost as many impressions as McGowan....
. In the sketches, Ancona shuffles around on her knees to exaggerate Barbara Windsor's petite height, and she is regularly heard using the catchphrase "Get outta my pub!". Impressionist Jan Ravens
Jan Ravens

Jan Ravens is an England actress and Impressionist , famous for her voices on Spitting Image and Dead Ringers ....
 has also spoofed her in BBC's Dead Ringers, also mimic
Mimic

Biology mimicry occurs when a group of organisms, the mimics, have evolution to share common perception characteristics with another group, the models, through the selection action of a signal-receiver or dupe....
king her cheeky laugh. Commenting on Ancona's impersonation, Windsor has said "she does me brilliantly. I told her it was a great compliment. She made me realise my little hands wave around a lot."

In November 2005, Peggy appeared in a sketch for Children in Need
Children in Need

File:BBC Children in Need.svgBBC Children in Need is an annual United Kingdom charitable organization appeal organised by the BBC. Since 1980 it has raised over ?500 million....
, which was a crossover between EastEnders and The Catherine Tate Show
The Catherine Tate Show

The Catherine Tate Show is an award-winning United Kingdom television sketch comedy written by Catherine Tate who stars in all of the show's sketches, which feature a wide range of The Catherine Tate Show characters....
. The sketch featured Peggy, Little Mo Mitchell
Little Mo Mitchell

Maureen "Little Mo" Mitchell was a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was played by Kacey Ainsworth.Named after her loud, wayward grandmother, Little Mo couldn't have been more opposite....
, Stacey Slater
Stacey Slater

Stacey Slater is a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. She is played by Lacey Turner, and made her first appearance on 1 November 2004....
 and Catherine Tate as her well-known character Lauren Cooper
Lauren Cooper

Lauren Alesha Masheka Tanesha Felicia Jane Cooper is a fictional character in The Catherine Tate Show. Lauren is one of the show's main characters and is played by Catherine Tate....
. The 2006 episode of Doctor Who
Doctor Who

Doctor Who is a British Science fiction on television programme produced by the BBC. The programme depicts the adventures of a mysterious alien Time travel known as "Doctor " who travels in his space and time-ship, the TARDIS, which normally appears from the exterior to be a blue 1950s police box....
, entitled "Army of Ghosts
Army of Ghosts

"Army of Ghosts" is the twelfth and penultimate episode in the List of Doctor Who serials#Series 2 of the United Kingdom science fiction television series Doctor Who which was first broadcast on 1 July 2006....
", features a scene of EastEnders where Peggy tells the "ghost" of 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"....
 to "get outta my pub!"

External links

  • — interview with Barbara Windsor at the Walford Gazette