Joanna Monro

Joanna Monro (born 1956) is a British actress and former television presenter who, in the 1980s, appeared on the BBC show That's Life! with Esther Rantzen.

In 1974 she appeared in the Doctor Who story Planet of the Spiders, followed by a lengthy spell as 'Anna Newcross' in the BBC soap opera Angels. For three years in the mid 1980s she was a regular in the BBC children's sketch show Fast Forward, and was a member of the BBC's Radio Drama Company.[1]

In the 1990s, she played the conniving Mrs Lyons in the musical Blood Brothers on Broadway and in the West End, and was on the 1995 London cast recording as well as The International Cast Album (with Petula Clark). She also appeared in the episode 'The Photographer' (1999) in the first BBC series of People Like Us (which aired 1999-2001).

She performed as "Rosie" in Mamma Mia!. She was in the International Tour for 2 years then joined the London cast for a period of 5 years at The Prince of Wales Theatre then at the Novello Theatre.[2] She appeared in character on 31 December 2008 in a West End special edition episode of The Weakest Link on BBC One. She was the 'strongest link', winning over £14,000 which she donated to breast cancer research, beating Summer Strallen.

In 2017 she played the part of "June" in Sandi Toksvig's play "Silver Lining" which toured the UK.[2]

Monro appeared in the 2018 feature film Sink.

Radio

DateTitleRoleDirectorStation
15 June 1998Stations of the CrossNed ChailletBBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
17 March 2003The Case of the Perfect CarerJeremy MortimerBBC Radio 4
10 April 2010The Believers[3]Toby SwiftBBC Radio 4 Saturday Play
30 April 2010The Weighing Room[4]StewardToby SwiftBBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
15 March 2011Small Acts of Kindness[5]AnnieToby SwiftBBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
3 May 2011Lost Property: The Wrong Label[6]Mrs JonesJessica DromgooleBBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
17 May 2011Lost Property: A Telegram from the Queen[7]Ella MayJessica DromgooleBBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
gollark: This seems... okay, I guess: https://www.mathsisfun.com/calculus/limits.html
gollark: It doesn't. The actual value of this is what it goes to as h approaches 0, and that isn't necessarily 0.
gollark: I see.
gollark: And presumably know about this more than me.
gollark: As you exist.

References


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