Actress Heather Chasen dies aged 92
She was not on the list.
The actress who had a long stint as Valerie Pollard in the
original Crossroads passed away yesterday, May 22nd, aged 92.
Heather Jean Chasen was born in Singapore to Agnes and
Frederick Nutter Chasen. Her father was a well-known English ornithologist who
fought as a trooper with the Norfolk Yeomanry in World War I. Her sister
Christine Elizabeth was born in 1931 but seven years later their parents’
marriage was over.
Trained at RADA Heather’s early film roles included the 1949
movie Meet the Duke while television parts came with Rediffusion’s No Hiding
Place in 1959 followed by other spots in shows such as ITC-ATV’s Danger Man in
1961, BBC One’s Dixon Of Dock Green in 1962 and her first regular part as
Caroline Kerr in BBC One’s mid-sixties soap opera The Newcomers.
The award nominated actress began her theatre career in
1960, touring with Douglas Fairbanks, Jr and Sybil Thorndike. She married John
Webster in 1949 and they had one child together, Rupert. He followed his mother
into theatre and small television parts in the sixties and seventies.
The 1970s were also a buoyant time for Heather with a lead
part opposite Stephanie Beacham in Thames Television’s daytime business drama
Marked Personal while from 1959 through to 1977 she was a regular on the hit
radio show The Navy Lark, a sitcom about life aboard a British Royal Navy
frigate named HMS Troutbridge. Other regulars included Leslie Phillips, Jon
Pertwee, Judy Cornwell and Ronnie Barker.
In 1981 she was cast in one episode of ATV’s serial
Crossroads, as a newspaper reporter. It would lead to a much bigger part.
“Well at the time
when I first joined there were some very good actors in Crossroads, I mean I
thought the standard was pretty good. I remember some time before that I was in
something called “The Newcomers”, we had longer to do it – say Crossroads took
a week, “The Newcomers” took a
fortnight. I must say we thought ourselves rather a cut above
Crossroads! But when I actually came to play it with people like Tony Adams and
Michael Turner and Sue Lloyd and Ronald
Allen, there were some very, very good characters in it and some good actors in
it and I thoroughly enjoyed it.” – Heather Chasen speaking to the Crossroads
Fan Club
In 1982 Heather took on her second, and best-known,
Crossroads role as Valerie Pollard. Valerie, a sparkling sophisticated lady
with red hair, waltzed into the Crossroads Motel in early 1982 – before Joan
Collins as Alexis Carrington put the bitch into Dynasty – as the wife of
multi-millionaire businessman J. Henry Pollard. She’d been known to have a
fling or two – and we’re not talking about the drink – so J.Henry, now a
part-owner of the motel, decided to make the complex her own personal prison.
He cancelled her credit cards and tried to show Valerie the
error of her ways by grounding her in Kings Oak. Indignant, she threatened to
divorce her powerful husband, but he pointed out that no other man would lavish
her with the kind of money and lifestyle he provided. He also, and for a time
unknown to Valerie, placed a spy at the motel to monitor his wayward wife.
Putting up with her “punishment” for straying with a number
of “pretty but brain-dead” boys -as
J.Henry viewed them – she took an active role at the motel working behind the
bar, possibly the most glamorous motel staff member in the history of the show.
It wasn’t long however before Valerie was up to mischief.
She bedded engaged Adam Chance (actor Tony Adams) – who had been previously
involved with her daughter! Her one-night of lust with Adam was just a game to
infuriate J.Henry – the showdown between Adam and Valerie voted one of the most
‘iconic’ moments in Crossroads‘ history. The scene showed that Adam could also
be a ‘super-bitch’ on par with his female counterpart.
Reaching millions of people night after night Heather soon
became a household name. Many fans of soap are often known to take such shows
as ‘real’ and in Crossroads case it was often true that viewers would call
hospitals if a character was injured or try to book a room at the motel and
some even sent in letters of application for jobs as waitresses at the
fictional night-stop.
“They [the
viewers] do expect you be that character. But you know I never had anybody be
nasty to me, people were always very, very nice and I had very nice fan mail.
And I remember once I was coming up to Birmingham and I got off the train and a
young man had been talking to me and then he got off the train after me and I
said: “You get back on the train this is not where you’re getting out is it?” And he said: “I
just want to talk to you, I want you to go out with me!” and I was about old
enough to be his mother and I said: “Don’t be so silly get back on the train I
am not like Valerie at all!”
After Crossroads Heather played Madge Bennett in Thames
Television’s Family Affairs and Lydia Simmonds – grandmother to scheming Janine
Butcher (Charlie Brooks) in EastEnders. Guest roles came in such shows as BBC
One daytime serial Doctors, and as Madame Magloire in the movie of Les
Misérables.
The news of her passing was released by long-time friend and
Coronation Street legend Amanda Barrie on social media.
“Remembering the
fabulous Heather Chasen who sadly left us yesterday. She was wonderfully
eccentric, gloriously funny, and a very special actress. There’ll never be
another like her. Will always miss her.” – Amanda Barrie
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