Sue Jenkins
Sue Jenkins (born Susan Elizabeth Jenkins; 31 July 1958) is an English actress renowned for her prominent roles in British television soap operas, particularly as Gloria Todd in the ITV soap Coronation Street from 1985 to 1988 and as Jackie Corkhill in the Channel 4 series Brookside from 1991 to 2001.[1][2] Born in Liverpool, she trained at the Shelagh Elliott-Clarke School of Dance and Drama before beginning her acting career.[3] Her other television roles include appearances in Emmerdale as Bonnie Drinkwater in 2008, Casualty, Midsomer Murders, and multiple episodes of Doctors. In 2021, she played Eileen in the "War of the Sontarans" episode of the BBC sci-fi series Doctor Who's Flux storyline.[4] In 2025, she reprised her role as Meg Mellor in BBC Radio 4's The Archers and appeared as Shelagh in the BBC drama series The Cage.[5][6] Jenkins has also worked as a director and co-founded The Actors' Lab, a training initiative for actors. She resides in Cheshire.[7] She has been married to fellow actor David Fleeshman since 28 May 1978, and the couple has three children—Emily, Richard, and Rosie—all of whom are actors; her son Richard Fleeshman also appeared in Coronation Street as Craig Harris.[8]Early life and education
Childhood and family background
Susan Elizabeth Jenkins was born on 31 July 1958 in Liverpool, England, to parents Albert Jenkins, a Liverpool Transport employee, and Marjorie Jenkins, a mail order manageress.[9][10] She grew up in a working-class household in Liverpool during the 1960s, the eldest of two daughters, alongside her younger sister Pam.[11] The family environment was modest, with her parents lacking any showbusiness background but later supporting her ambitions despite initial reservations.[10] Jenkins' early years were shaped by Liverpool's vibrant cultural scene, including memories of ferry rides across the River Mersey and the city's thriving music atmosphere, though she was too young to fully engage with phenomena like the Beatles.[10] From a shy and sensitive child, she developed a strong passion for performing arts, expressing a desire to be on stage as early as age five and avidly studying and reading plays during her childhood.[9] This interest was influenced by the local theatre traditions of Merseyside, which provided an accessible entry point into the world of performance for many young people in the region.[9] At age 11, the family relocated to Widnes in Cheshire, marking a transition from her formative Liverpool roots.[10] By her mid-teens, Jenkins convinced her parents to allow her to pursue formal drama training, beginning at the Shelagh Elliott-Clarke School of Dance and Drama in Liverpool around age 16.[10][9]Training and early influences
At around the age of 16, Sue Jenkins enrolled at the Shelagh Elliott-Clarke School of Dance and Drama in Liverpool, where she underwent three years of comprehensive training in acting, dance, and voice techniques.[9][11] This formal education provided a strong foundation in performance arts, blending practical skills with theoretical understanding to prepare students for professional stages. Jenkins' early involvement in the performing arts extended to a pantomime production of Pinocchio at age 17, an experience that not only honed her stage presence but also introduced her to David Fleeshman, her future husband and a significant personal and professional influence.[11] Complementing her school training, Jenkins drew inspiration from Liverpool's vibrant repertory theatre scene, where teachers emphasized a balance of classical methods—such as those rooted in Shakespearean verse and movement—and contemporary approaches to character development and improvisation.[9] This environment, supported by family encouragement from her childhood, fostered her versatility as a performer before her professional entry into the industry.Career
Early career in theatre and television
Sue Jenkins trained at the Shelagh Elliott-Clarke School of Dance and Drama in Liverpool, completing her studies before entering the profession.[9] Jenkins made her television debut at the age of 15, appearing as the schoolgirl Dianne Kemp in the BBC police drama Z Cars episode "Pastime," which aired on 13 May 1974.[12] In the role, she portrayed a teenage character attempting to seduce a youth club leader amid a storyline involving family tensions and local troubles in a deprived community.[13] This early appearance marked her entry into broadcasting and showcased her ability to handle dramatic, character-driven scenes from the outset of her career.[14] Following her debut, Jenkins spent the first 11 years of her professional career, from 1976 to around 1987, working extensively in British repertory theatres, where she performed a wide range of roles in productions by playwrights including William Shakespeare and Alan Ayckbourn.[15] She honed her versatility across various venues in northern England, such as the Oldham Coliseum near Manchester and other regional stages, tackling everything from classical Shakespearean works to contemporary comedies.[9] This intensive repertory experience, which also included assistant stage management duties early on, built her reputation as a reliable and adaptable stage actress before transitioning more fully to television.[9] Jenkins achieved her first major television role in 1985 when she joined the long-running ITV soap opera Coronation Street as Gloria Todd, a barmaid at the Rovers Return Inn, appearing in 231 episodes until 1988.[16] Portrayed as a lively yet troubled young woman, Gloria became embroiled in dramatic storylines, including a passionate affair with the manipulative Alan Bradley that led to emotional turmoil and betrayal.[16] Her character also navigated complex family conflicts with her father, Ted Todd, and a subsequent ill-fated relationship with factory owner Mike Baldwin, culminating in her departure from Weatherfield after embezzling £3,000 from his business.[1] These arcs highlighted Jenkins' skill in conveying vulnerability and resilience, establishing her as a prominent figure in British television during the mid-1980s.[15]Soap opera roles
Sue Jenkins achieved widespread recognition for her role as Jackie Corkhill in the Channel 4 soap opera Brookside, which she portrayed from 1991 to 2001 in 712 episodes.[8] As the resilient wife of Jimmy Corkhill and mother to their children Lindsey and Little Jimmy, Jackie embodied the struggles of a working-class Liverpool family, central to the soap's pioneering family-centered narratives.[15] The character was depicted as sassy, sharp-witted, and tough, evolving from comedic early portrayals to more dramatic depths amid social issues like unemployment, her husband's drug addiction in 1993, and domestic tensions that highlighted the harsh realities of 1990s Britain.[15] Jenkins' performance in emotionally charged scenes, such as discovering Jimmy's drug stash and their subsequent divorce, earned acclaim for its raw authenticity, contributing to the Corkhills being named Best Soap Couple at the Inside Soap Awards.[15] Jackie's arcs often tackled gritty topics, including the 1996 murder of her son Little Jimmy by drug dealers after he fled debts in France, which showcased Jenkins' powerful dramatic range in grief-stricken sequences.[17] A controversial 2000 storyline involving a lesbian love triangle drew media backlash for deviating from the character's established heteronormative family focus, with Jenkins publicly expressing reservations about its consistency during the soap's declining ratings period.[15] Building on her earlier soap experience in Coronation Street, this role solidified her as a staple of British television, emphasizing strong Northern women confronting adversity.[18] In 2008, Jenkins appeared in five episodes of the ITV soap Emmerdale as Bonnie Drinkwater, a holiday friend of Val Pollard.[19] Following her Brookside tenure, Jenkins made guest appearances in the BBC daytime soap Doctors throughout the 2000s and 2010s, portraying diverse characters such as the terminally ill traveller Brenda MacGyver in a 2009 episode opposite her daughter Emily Fleeshman, and others like a grieving widow and an adulterous housewife, often reinforcing her affinity for robust, multifaceted female roles.[20][8] These parts underscored her typecasting as resilient Northern women, allowing brief returns to soap formats without long-term commitments.[20] Jenkins' Brookside portrayal propelled her to national fame during the show's 1990s peak, when viewership hit 9 million for landmark Corkhill storylines like the "body under the patio" plot, subjecting the cast to intense tabloid scrutiny over on-screen controversies and off-screen lives.[21] The role's cultural impact lay in its reflection of Liverpool's socio-economic challenges, making Jackie an iconic figure in British soap history, though Jenkins opted to transition away from soaps after 2001, citing a desire for varied projects amid the series' winding down.[15][22]Later television and film roles
Following her prominent soap opera roles, Jenkins diversified into guest appearances and episodic television, leveraging her established reputation to secure varied parts in crime dramas and prestige series. She has appeared in multiple episodes of the BBC medical drama Casualty. In 2007, she portrayed Angie Walker, the wife of a former police officer, in the Midsomer Murders episode "Death in a Chocolate Box," where her character navigates village intrigue amid a murder investigation.[23] This role highlighted her ability to bring depth to supporting characters in long-running procedural formats. Later, in 2021, Jenkins appeared as Eileen Lewis, the mother of companion Dan Lewis, in the Doctor Who special "War of the Sontarans," contributing to the series' Flux storyline with a performance that emphasized familial tension during an interstellar conflict. That same year, she played Ma Lonsdale in episode three of the Channel 4 miniseries It's a Sin, a poignant period drama exploring the AIDS crisis in 1980s London, where her brief but impactful turn as a concerned parent added emotional layers to the ensemble narrative.[24] Jenkins has maintained a selective presence in contemporary television, balancing screen work with other projects. In September 2025, she returned to BBC Radio 4's long-running serial The Archers in the role of Meg Mellor, a character she had previously played, marking a homecoming to audio drama that underscored her longstanding affinity for radio, having recorded over 200 plays and adaptations throughout her career.[5] This reprise allowed her to explore nuanced rural storytelling through voice alone, a medium she has described as particularly rewarding for its focus on subtlety and imagination. Looking ahead, Jenkins is set to appear as Shelagh in the BBC crime drama The Cage, slated for 2026, playing a key figure in a Liverpool-set thriller involving casino heists and moral dilemmas.[6] Her later work reflects a deliberate shift toward character-driven stories across genres, from historical ensemble pieces to speculative fiction, while her radio engagements reaffirm her versatility in non-visual formats.Directing and producing work
Following her established acting career, which provided deep insights into character development and performance dynamics, Sue Jenkins began directing in the mid-2000s, focusing on theatre productions that highlighted new writing and supported charitable initiatives. Her early efforts emphasized collaborative environments to nurture actors, drawing from her own experiences on stage and screen to prioritize intellectual analysis of scripts and emotional preparation for performers.[25] In 2005, Jenkins created, produced, and directed Night of Stars 1 at the Palace Theatre in Manchester, a musical revue featuring prominent soap opera actors performing show tunes to raise funds in response to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami.[26] The event was followed by Night of Stars 2 in 2006, with the pair collectively generating over £70,000 to construct an orphanage in Thailand.[10] These productions showcased Jenkins' producing skills in coordinating high-profile talent for impactful, community-oriented theatre. Jenkins' directing portfolio expanded in the 2010s with a commitment to contemporary plays and emerging voices. In 2017, she directed Virtuoso by Bill Humble at Manchester's Three Minute Theatre, reuniting the original creative team from its 1991 television adaptation and exploring themes of artistic ambition and personal conflict.[27] The following year, she produced and directed Narcissist in the Mirror, a one-woman spoken-word piece written and performed by her daughter Rosie Fleeshman, which earned the Manchester Theatre Award for Best New Play in 2018 for its incisive examination of millennial identity and self-obsession.[28] Through these works, Jenkins has championed innovative storytelling and actor training, often integrating workshops to refine performances. In 2011, Jenkins co-founded The Actors' Lab Ltd with her daughter Emily in Salford, Greater Manchester, establishing an independent drama academy at MediaCityUK that offers part-time workshops in televisual acting techniques, audition skills, and small-scale productions to develop professional readiness among aspiring performers.[29] Complementing her stage efforts, Jenkins has extended her producing influence into audio media, narrating over a dozen audiobooks, including Annie Groves' Only a Mother Knows (2013), where her expressive delivery enhances narratives of family resilience during wartime.Personal life
Marriage and immediate family
Sue Jenkins married actor David Fleeshman on 28 May 1978.[8] The couple met while performing together at Manchester's Contact Theatre.[29] As of 2025, their partnership has endured for 47 years, marked by mutual support through the demands of acting careers, including periods of separation due to work and the shared experience of raising a family amid professional commitments.[29][30] Jenkins and Fleeshman have three children: Emily, born in 1986; Richard, born in 1989; and Rosie, born in 1992.[31] The family raised their children in Greater Manchester, prioritizing a stable home environment despite the irregular schedules of theatre and television work, such as coordinating family meals and outings around rehearsals.[29][32] The couple has long resided in Bramhall, Greater Manchester, where they balanced parenting with their professions by integrating family into everyday routines, like local dining for birthdays and holidays to foster closeness.[32] This home base allowed them to nurture their children's early years away from the spotlight, emphasizing normalcy amid their artistic pursuits.[29]Extended family and collaborations
Sue Jenkins' extended family has deeply intertwined professional lives in the performing arts, reflecting a dynastic commitment to acting that spans generations. Her three children with husband and fellow actor David Fleeshman—Emily, Richard, and Rosie—have all pursued careers in television, theatre, and stage performance, often collaborating with their parents on creative projects. This familial network has fostered opportunities for shared mentorship and joint endeavors, emphasizing skill-building over favoritism in the industry.[29] The eldest child, Emily Fleeshman, established herself as a television actress with notable roles including Emily Lawson in the Channel 4 drama Shameless (2006) and Nikki Boothe in the BBC series Still Open All Hours.[33] She co-founded The Actors' Lab, an independent drama school in Salford, alongside her parents in 2011, where the family contributes to workshops and training programs focused on practical acting techniques like improvisation and character development.[29] Emily's involvement underscores a collaborative ethos, with the Lab serving as a hub for emerging talent without relying on familial connections for advancement. Son Richard Fleeshman began his acting career at age 12, portraying Craig Harris in ITV's Coronation Street from 2002 to 2006—a role that highlighted the real-life family connection, as his mother had previously played Gloria Todd in the same series.[34] He transitioned to musical theatre with a breakout performance as Sam Wheat in Ghost the Musical, originating the role in London's West End in 2011 before making his Broadway debut in 2012, earning praise for embodying the emotional depth of the Patrick Swayze-inspired lead.[35][36] Richard's career, marked by early soap opera exposure and subsequent stage successes, highlights the supportive yet independent path encouraged within the family.[37] The youngest, Rosie Fleeshman, has focused on theatre and writing, with recent work including her award-winning one-woman play Narcissist in the Mirror, which she produced, wrote, and performed during 2017–2018 tours, earning a Manchester Theatre Award for Best New Play.[38] Jenkins directed Rosie in a 2017 production of the show at Delph's Millgate Arts Centre, exemplifying direct family collaboration in creative output.[28] Rosie's endeavors, blending performance with original storytelling, continue the family's tradition of multifaceted artistic involvement. These collaborations extend to joint workshops, such as those hosted by Jenkins and Fleeshman through The Actors' Lab and external platforms like Saga's #notgoingoutclub, where they teach improvisation, character creation, and audience engagement techniques to aspiring actors.[39] The family consistently addresses industry nepotism concerns by prioritizing merit-based training and diverse opportunities, ensuring their joint efforts contribute broadly to theatre education rather than personal gain.[29]Filmography
Selected television credits
Sue Jenkins has appeared in numerous television productions throughout her career. Selected credits are listed below in chronological order.- Z Cars (1974; 1 episode as Dianne Kemp).[12]
- Coronation Street (1985–1988; 238 episodes as Gloria Todd).[8]
- Brookside (1991–2001; 712 episodes as Jackie Corkhill).[8]
- Midsomer Murders (2007; 1 episode as Angie Walker).[8]
- Doctor Who (2005; 1 episode as Eileen).
- Emmerdale (2008; 4 episodes as Bonnie Drinkwater).[8]
- It's a Sin (2021; 1 episode as Ma Lonsdale).
- Doctor Who (2021; 1 episode as Yvonne Hartman).[8]
- The Cage (2026; TV series as Shelagh).[6][40]