A spokesman for her TV production company, Rollem Productions, confirmed “with profound sadness” that she died on Sunday. She was known for creating and writing the ITV series Fat Friends – which helped launch James Corden’s career. Mellor also wrote %%UKNIP_ANCHOR_0%% and drama series such as The Syndicate, Girlfriends and Band of Gold. A Rollem Productions spokesman said: “It is with profound sadness that we announce the untimely and sudden passing of our beloved friend, mentor and colleague Kay Mellor on Sunday 15 May 2022. We have %%UKNIP_ANCHOR_1%% a phenomenal talent and a true luminary. We ask that you please respect the privacy of the family and friends at this time.” Mellor began her career writing plays, worked on Coronation %%UKNIP_ANCHOR_2%% and created the award-winning children’s drama Children’s Ward. She also wrote BBC One’s women’s football series Playing The Field and in 2010 received an OBE. Fat Friends aired from 2000-2005 and gave a young Corden his first major acting role. It also starred Ruth Jones, Sheridan Smith and Alison Steadman. The BBC’s chief content officer, Charlotte Moore, paid tribute to Kay Mellor following her death, saying she was “shocked and deeply saddened” by the %%UKNIP_ANCHOR_3%%. “Kay was an outstanding writer and the creative force behind many of the nation’s best-loved television dramas,” Moore said. She wrote with such heart, humanity, humour and passion with strong female characters often taking centre stage.” %%UKNIP_ANCHOR_4%% mayor Tracy Brabin paid tribute on Twitter, writing: “Just dreadful news & difficult to take in. Sending all our love from everyone in West %%UKNIP_ANCHOR_5%% to Kay’s family, friends & colleagues. Our voice of the North, she put working-class characters at the centre of her brilliant compassionate, moving & funny %%UKNIP_ANCHOR_6%%. Such a loss.” Sir Lenny Henry, who starred in The Syndicate, tweeted: “I was saddened to hear that Kay Mellor has died. I was lucky to %%UKNIP_ANCHOR_7%% with her on the Syndicate and found her to be incredibly creative, funny and instinctive. She knew what she %%UKNIP_ANCHOR_8%% and knew how to get the best from us as actors. She will be missed. Gavin and Stacey writer Ruth Jones told the PA news agency: “She was a great mentor to me when I first started writing – and always hugely encouraging of new writers – a real testament to the idea of paying it forward. “Her series Fat Friends was a massive turning point in my career and I will be eternally grateful to her for what she did for me. “British television has lost one of its greats. Thank you Kay for all that you gave us. I cannot believe you’ve gone.” Doctor Who and It’s A Sin writer Russell T Davies posted a tribute on %%UKNIP_ANCHOR_9%%, saying: “I adored her. She taught me so much. And she was hilarious… I think of her always when I’m writing.” The Syndicate and %%UKNIP_ANCHOR_10%% Road actress Kym Marsh tweeted: “I am so so sad to hear of the passing of Kay Mellor. I had the pleasure of working with Kay briefly last year and it was an absolute honour. A huge talent, a huge personality a wonderful lady. She will be missed. Our thoughts are with her %%UKNIP_ANCHOR_11%% and friends.” Former Emmerdale actress Lisa Riley described Mellor as “the best boss to work for. while Coronation Street’s Antony Cotton noted that she “was a real trailblazer for women” ITV’s Band of Gold, which ran from 1995 to 1997 was considered a ground-breaking drama, bringing to life the lives of a group of sex workers in Bradford as they tried to take on police and gangsters in a bid to run their own street %%UKNIP_ANCHOR_12%%. It gave Hollywood actress Samantha %%UKNIP_ANCHOR_13%% one of her first major roles, later going on to star in films such as Minority Report opposite Tom Cruise. She also played Alpha in The Walking Dead. BBC One drama The Syndicate is about five members of a lottery syndicate who get a big win. Each of the four series %%UKNIP_ANCHOR_14%% a different group of people and setting, including a supermarket and a hospital. Mellor said she was inspired to write the drama because of “the times we are living in, where people are desperate and holding on to the dream of winning the lottery as the only solution available”.

Recommended for you

Must READ

More For You

More From UK News in Pictures

More From UKNIP

error: Content is protected !!