Try GOLD - Free

The only way I could express myself was through drama...

Sunday Express

|

June 22, 2025

SHE had a childhood that would have made Dickens weep - the only child of a mentally ill single mother with an explosive temper. But young Carol Harrison found ways to escape her horrendous home life - first through her imagination and then through the East End Mod scene.

The Small Faces, and in particular their charismatic singer Steve Marriott, opened her eyes to a different life.

"I met Stevie when I was nine or 10," Carol tells me. "My older cousins were Mods and they were his friends. We all used to go to my auntie Chrissie's house in Manor Park.

"He was wonderfully funny, a proper East End chap and so tiny - just 5ft 4. When you met Steve, it was like fireworks. He was so 'out there'. Life didn't have to be miserable."

Carol - best known for playing Louise Raymond, Grant Mitchell's mother-in-law and lover, in BBC soap EastEnders - has devoted a decade of her life to celebrating the memory of Marriott's Small Faces.

She wrote and produced the critically acclaimed 2016 stage show, All Or Nothing - The Musical, featuring hits like Itchycoo Park, Lazy Sunday, Sha La La La Lee and barnstorming 1966 chart-topper All Or Nothing itself.

Performing has helped Harrison get over her traumatic upbringing, she says.

"I realised mum wasn't normal when I was about six. She was unhappy all the time but she never got any help. She would rant and rave about everyone. I would have to stand up to that and it made me desperately unhappy too.

"I used to shut myself in the coal cupboard and dream. I got away from reality and lived in a fantasy, that was my escape.

"It's why I became an actress - the only way I could express myself was through drama."

Her mother Frances never sought help because her own aunt had been sectioned.

"She was paranoid and suffered badly from depression. It was like she was bipolar but without the manic side. People in our street used to call her 'the mad woman'."

Carol pauses and adds: "I had a breakdown when I was 18 because of it. I tried to commit suicide." She took an overdose and spent three months in a psychiatric hospital.

Growing up in Upton Park, east London, Carol dreamt of being Doris Day or Calamity Jane.

MORE STORIES FROM Sunday Express

Sunday Express

EL OF A TALENT BUT HE'S NO GAZZA!

JOHN CARVER has warned against comparing Elliot Anderson with a young Paul Gascoigne.

time to read

1 min

October 12, 2025

Sunday Express

Meghan posts rare footage of daughter Princess Lilibet

THE Duchess of Sussex has shared a heartfelt message about her daughter alongside a video of her- providing a rare glimpse of the King's grand-daughter.

time to read

1 min

October 12, 2025

Sunday Express

Sunday Express

Top Of The Pops said we had to mime ...we couldn't stop laughing

IT WAS THE first, and so far the only British chart hit sung in Latin. Steeleye Span's ethereal rendition of Gaudete, a half-forgotten 16th century Christmas carol, soared into the charts in December, 1973, surprising everyone - including the band.

time to read

5 mins

October 12, 2025

Sunday Express

Sunday Express

'Cosying up to the EU is just an act of despair...

John Longworth was enjoying a comfortable life at the heart of the UK establishment, a successful entrepreneur happily leading the British Chambers of Commerce. Yet he decided to blow it all up to help Britain escape the European Union...

time to read

5 mins

October 12, 2025

Sunday Express

TON-DERFUL STUFF AS NAT PUTS ON RECORD RUN TO STUN CUP RIVALS

NAT SCIVER-BRUNT'S record one-day international century propelled England to an 89-run victory over Sri Lanka in Colombo.

time to read

1 mins

October 12, 2025

Sunday Express

Sunday Express

Ronnie's job Satisfaction

Stones guitarist Wood on how he joined the band and why he’s so determined they keep on rolling

time to read

2 mins

October 12, 2025

Sunday Express

Gilmour moves from 'Cuppy' to real thing

HIS trademark touch and control of a football was first mastered playing 'World Cuppy' on a public park in Ayrshire.

time to read

1 mins

October 12, 2025

Sunday Express

'Life-saving' needle-free vaccinations

SCIENTISTS are developing a needle-free way for patients to vaccinate themselves against diseases by using dental floss coated with medicine.

time to read

1 mins

October 12, 2025

Sunday Express

Uni leaders 'must end antisemitism or lose funding'

UNIVERSITIES have been told to crack down on campus antisemitism or risk losing government funding.

time to read

1 min

October 12, 2025

Sunday Express

Bon Jovi hails Def Leppard 'brothers'

STARS: Def Leppard at the Hollywood Walk Of Fame. Below, Jon Bon Jovi

time to read

1 min

October 12, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size