Coral Atkins
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Coral Rosemary Atkins (13 September 1936 – 2 December 2016) was an English actress who opened and ran a home for disadvantaged children. She cared for 37 children over a period of 26 years.


Biography

Atkins was born in
Richmond upon Thames The London Borough of Richmond upon Thames () in southwest London forms part of Outer London and is the only London borough on both sides of the River Thames. It was created in 1965 when three smaller council areas amalgamated under the London ...
, Surrey. Her parents were Eric D. Atkins and Lilian L. Millson. The family moved to Bucklebury when she was young, and she attended Shaw House School in Newbury before returning to London. During
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposing ...
Atkins and her sister, Sylvia Vivian Atkins (1933–1990) were evacuated from London to rural England. In her memoir, Atkins stated that she and her sister had been beaten and neglected by caregivers. Atkins began appearing on British television in the 1960s; her television credits included episodes of '' The Sweeney'', in which she played Brenda Keever the wife of a career criminal, ''
Dixon of Dock Green ''Dixon of Dock Green'' was a BBC police procedural television series about daily life at a fictional London police station, with the emphasis on petty crime, successfully controlled through common sense and human understanding. It ran from 19 ...
'', ''Deadline Midnight (TV series), Deadline Midnight,'' ''No Hiding Place'', ''Survivors (1975 TV series), Survivors, The Avengers (TV series), The Avengers'' and ''The Likely Lads.'' She also starred as Ruth Jameson in ''Emmerdale''. Her best-known role was that of Sheila Ashton in the 1970s drama series ''A Family at War''. Atkins became interested in helping needy children after being invited to open a fair at a children's home in Manchester in 1970. She was upset at the level of deprivation and distress that she witnessed, and it reminded her of her childhood trauma as a wartime evacuee. That same year, Atkins bought and renovated a thatched cottage called "Crossways" and sought funding to run it as a home. In 1971 she started taking in disturbed and needy children, all under the age of 10 and some as young as 18 months. She had no training or education in related fields, so she educated herself through reading books by psychiatrist R. D. Laing and studying child psychology and psychotherapy. During the 1980s, Atkins made occasional performing appearances, such as in the BBC One series ''Flesh and Blood'' in 1980. She also lobbied for funding and other support to run the home, such as a promotion run by a pharmacy to seek donations. In 1987 she was offered free use of Gyde House, an Edwardian architecture, Edwardian mansion in the Cotswolds which had more recently been used as an orphanage. She moved 15 children from Crossways into the mansion and local authorities sent her additional children to care for. Some of the children had experienced severe abuse, and attacked the house by setting parts of it on fire, or graffiti-ing the walls. In 1990, Atkins published her memoirs as ''Seeing Red.'' The following year, Atkins adapted the book into eight episodes for radio, which were broadcast on BBC Radio 4. In 2000, ITV (TV network), ITV dramatised the story in a TV drama of the same name, starring Sarah Lancashire as Atkins. She was also the subject of an episode of the Thames Television show ''This Is Your Life (British TV series), This Is Your Life'' in 1994. In 1997, she was severely injured in a car crash and had to give up running the children's home.


Personal life

Atkins was married to British actor Jeremy Young. After divorcing him, she had a six-year relationship with film director Peter Whitehead (filmmaker), Peter Whitehead, with whom she had a son, Harry Whitehead. Atkins died in West Berkshire Community Hospital, Thatcham, West Berkshire on 2 December 2016, from cancer.


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Atkins, Coral 1936 births 2016 deaths People from the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames British television actresses British memoirists Deaths from cancer in England British women memoirists 20th-century British businesspeople