en Ö÷²¥´óÐã Genome Blog Feed News, highlights and banter from the team at Ö÷²¥´óÐã Genome – the website that shows you all the Ö÷²¥´óÐã’s listings between 1923 and 2009 (and tells you what was on the day you were born!) Join us and share all the oddities, archive gems and historical firsts you find while digging around… Sun, 25 Oct 2015 10:00:00 +0000 Zend_Feed_Writer 2 (http://framework.zend.com) /blogs/genome The Sunday Post: Life before Dot Sun, 25 Oct 2015 10:00:00 +0000 /blogs/genome/entries/8dc0241c-ed97-4956-884b-1ac380b0d9fb /blogs/genome/entries/8dc0241c-ed97-4956-884b-1ac380b0d9fb Michael Osborn Michael Osborn

Actress June Brown is inextricably linked with playing one character, the instantly recognisable Dot Cotton (later Branning) in EastEnders for the past 30 years.

She wasn’t actually in the first episode of EastEnders. Dot was originally brought in as a support character for her dastardly son Nick, in July 1985.

But Dot - the god-fearing woman who is never one to gossip - went on to become a much-loved figure at the centre of Walford life, with connections to both original and new characters to grace Albert Square.

Brown is now 88 and her career has almost exactly matched the development of TV in the UK. You can on screen through the Genome listings.

The actress made her playing Aisla Crane in a TV adapation of Edgar Wallace's crime thriller The Case of the Frightened Lady (below). Brown was also rewarded with this photo and caption in the magazine along with co-star Enid Lindsey.

June Brown followed up her initial success with more theatre for the screen, including an adaptation of in 1959. She played the character of Chica, but this time wasn't featured in a photograph which accompanied the listing.

She went on to take roles in a variety of leading programmes during the 1960s, including  on a number of occasions, Z Cars and outings of The Wednesday Play.

The flow of appearances continued into the 1970s, including a part in four-parter The Time Warrior opposite Jon Pertwee, while she was seen in a number of dramas that were a far cry from the grit of Albert Square.

Brown played a substantial role in (below), a 15-part costume drama set in Edwardian London in which she played the heroine's mother, Mrs Leyton. The actress showed her mettle in another period piece, with the Tudor setting of Mark Twain's The Prince and The Pauper which screened in 1977.

Four years later she was again in costume in era-straddling, cross-generational children's television drama,  - her last major listing before the domination of Dot.

As recalled in last week's Sunday Post, Angels was a major, long-running TV - and it just so happens that June Brown was in the first episode of its second series.

But Brown is forever to be thought of as Dot, and has hundreds of listings for EastEnders. The soap opera was initially teased in the Radio Times with lines from that episode's dialogue - and Dot landed her in March 1986: 'No law against a bloke visiting his own wife, is there, Dot?'

When simpler plot summaries took their place, Dot has been regularly mentioned and continues to be to this day. In 2008, Brown's performance in a unique single-handed episode of EastEnders won her a Bafta nomination.

June Brown continued to pursue an acting life outside of EastEnders. In 2000 she starred in the lavish adaptation of Mervyn Peake's fantasy drama as the deliciously named character Nannie Slagg (below). 

What else has Brown featured in and what about performances that weren't on the Ö÷²¥´óÐã? Can an actor escape their best-known creation? Let us know what you think in the space below.

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