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Everything about Barbara Windsor totally explained

Barbara Ann Windsor, MBE (born Barbara Ann Deeks on 6 August 1937) is an English actress. Her best known roles are in the Carry On films and as Peggy Mitchell in BBC soap opera EastEnders, and she's now considered as something of a "national institution".

Early life

Born in Shoreditch, London in 1937, Windsor was the only child of a costermonger and dressmaker, John and Rose Deeks. She passed the 11 plus exam with high marks, and her mother paid for her to have elocution lessons. She trained at the Aida Foster School in Golders Green, making her stage debut at 13 and her West End debut in 1952 in the chorus of the musical Love From Judy.
   Her first film appearance was in The Belles of St Trinian's in 1954. She joined Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop at the Theatre Royal, Stratford East, coming to prominence in their stage production Fings Ain't Wot They Used to Be and Littlewood's film Sparrows Can't Sing in 1963, achieving a BAFTA nomination for Best British Film Actress. She also appeared in the 1964 film comedy Crooks in Cloisters and in the sitcoms The Rag Trade and Wild, Wild Women.

Carry On films

However, Windsor came to real prominence with her portrayals of a 'good time girl' in nine Carry On films – beginning with Carry On Spying and ending with Carry On Dick – and several TV and compilation specials between 1964 and 1977.
   Her most famous scene was in Carry On Camping during which she was doing outdoor aerobic exercises and her bikini top flew off.
   From 1973 to 1975 she appeared with several of the Carry On team in the smash West End revue Carry On London!. During this time, she'd a well-publicised affair with her co-star, Sid James.
   However, she was identified with the Carry On films for many years afterwards and this sometimes restricted the variety of roles she was allowed to play in her later career.

Theatre career

She also starred on Broadway in the Theatre Workshop's Oh! What a Lovely War and received a 1965 Tony Award nomination for Best Featured Actress in a Musical. She also appeared in Lionel Bart's famous musical flop Twang! (directed by Joan Littlewood) and in the musical Come Spy with Me with Danny La Rue.
   In 1970 she landed the role of music hall legend Marie Lloyd in the musical-biopic Sing Rude a Song. In 1972 she appeared in the West End in Tony Richardson's The Threepenny Opera with his then wife, Vanessa Redgrave. In 1975 toured the UK, New Zealand and South Africa in her own show, Carry On Barbara!, and followed this with the role of Maria in Twelfth Night at the Chichester Festival Theatre.
   In 1981 she appeared in a production of Joe Orton's classic black comedy Entertaining Mr Sloane at the Lyric Hammersmith Theatre, directed by her friend Kenneth Williams. She reprised the role for a national tour in 1993.
   Barbara Windsor was the recipient of the inaugural Rear of the Year title in 1976.

EastEnders

In the 1980s and early 1990s, Windsor continued to perform in pantomimes and summer season comedies (usually playing on her Carry On persona) and also toured the UK in her own one-woman show. Her private life made the news at this time, mainly because of the criminal activities of her first husband, Ronnie Knight, who eventually fled to Spain after bank-robbery charges were filed against him.
   However, in 1994, Windsor's professional fortunes picked up when she was asked to take over the role of Queen Vic landlady and mother of the Mitchell boys, Peggy Mitchell, in the BBC soap EastEnders. She quickly became a fans' favourite and the series also showcased her dramatic acting ablities, which had rarely been allowed to flourish before. For this role, she received the Best Actress award at the British Soap Awards in 1999.

Recent years

In 1999 she made her record debut with fellow EastEnders cast member Mike Reid with a version of The More I See You. The year 2000 was a brilliant one in terms of accolades for Windsor. She was made an MBE in the Millennium Honours List, was inducted into the first BBC Hall of Fame and had a waxwork of her unveiled at Madame Tussauds. She also published her autobiography, All of Me.
   After a debilitating case of the Epstein-Barr virus saw her take a two-year long absence from EastEnders from 2003 to 2005, with just a brief return for two episodes in 2004, she rejoined the cast on a full-time basis in the summer of 2005 and signed a one year contract. She appeared briefly in the 2006 Doctor Who episode "Army of Ghosts" as Peggy Mitchell in a fictional episode of EastEnders.
   Windsor examined her family tree in the first episode of the third series of the documentary series Who Do You Think You Are?, which aired on 6 September 2006, in which she traced her family tree back eleven generations to John Golding, the great-great-grandfather of the famous painter John Constable, making him Windsor's fourth cousin six times removed.

Marriages

Barbara Windsor has married three times:
  1. Ronnie Knight (married 2 March 1964, divorced January 1985)
  2. Stephen Hollings (married 12 April 1986 in Jamaica, divorced 1995)
  3. Scott Mitchell (married 8 April 2000)
As well as her affair with James, she also had liasions with footballer George Best and singer Maurice Gibb. She was also romantically linked to the gangster Reggie Kray in the 1960s. Her present husband Scott is 25 years her junior.
   In her autobiography, All of Me, Windsor openly talks about her five abortions, the first three of which took place before the age of 21, and the last occurring when she was 42.
   She was a real life landlady when she ran a pub at Winchmore Hill, Buckinghamshire with her second husband Stephen Hollings. She was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1992.

Further Information

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