![]() ![]() The role involved the depiction of a real-life kidnap, in which Froggatt had to perform scenes tied up with tape around her mouth as a gag. She later appeared in another controversial role as the title character in Joanne Lees: Murder in the Outback, which first aired on Channel Ten in Australia on 18 March 2007, and was screened in Britain on ITV on 8 April 2007. Īlso in 2006, Froggatt played the sister of Myra Hindley in the ITV drama See No Evil: The Moors Murders. The two-part thriller was not broadcast on STV until November 2008, because ITV had changed its format to 60-minute time slots and Missing was two 90-minute time slots. ![]() įroggatt starred as a main character in the drama Missing, made by SMG Productions in 2006, alongside Gregor Fisher. ![]() In the same year, she played Myra in the BBC Radio 4 drama My Turn to Make the Tea by Monica Dickens. įroggatt played the role of Angelique Mahy in the ITV mini-series Island at War, which tells the story of the German occupation of the Channel Islands. The film earned a BAFTA TV Award nomination for Best Single Drama. While researching the role, she met Cable, who later contacted her to commend her on her portrayal. In 2003, Froggatt played the leading role in the controversial one-off drama Danielle Cable: Eyewitness, based on the true story of a teenage girl who witnessed the murder of her boyfriend in a reputed road rage attack. In 1999, she appeared in the first four episodes of the first series of prison drama Bad Girls, portraying teenage mother Rachel Hicks. She left the programme in 1998, when her character was written out. In 1996, Froggatt made her TV debut in the long-running ITV drama The Bill, and shortly afterwards landed the role of teenage mother Zoe Tattersall in Coronation Street. Froggatt initially joined a drama group in Scarborough, and then left her family home at the age of 13 to attend the Redroofs Theatre School in Maidenhead, Berkshire. Joanne has likened her childhood setting to the backdrop of Emily Brontë's classic novel Wuthering Heights. Her parents, Ann and Keith Froggatt, having run a corner shop, next started a rare-breed sheep farm on a smallholding near Whitby. Froggatt was born and brought up in the village of Littlebeck in North Yorkshire. ![]()
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