Jill Halfpenny

Actress

Birthday July 15, 1975

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, England

Age 48 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 1.57 m

#15302 Most Popular

1975

Jill Halfpenny (born 15 July 1975) is an English actress.

1989

She first garnered attention with her portrayal of Nicola Dobson in the coming-of-age drama BBC drama series Byker Grove (1989–1992), and became more widely known for her roles as Rebecca Hopkins on the ITV soap opera Coronation Street (1999–2000), Kate Mitchell on the BBC soap opera EastEnders (2002–2005), and Izzie Redpath in Waterloo Road (2006–2007).

Halfpenny began her acting career in 1989 at the age of 14 in the BBC television children's drama series Byker Grove, filmed in the Benwell area of Newcastle upon Tyne.

1999

Her other early work included a recurring role as Kelly in Peak Practice in 1999, plus appearances in Dalziel and Pascoe, Barbara and Coronation Street on television, and theatre with the acclaimed Hull Truck Theatre Company.

2002

In 2002, Halfpenny took the major role of Kate Mitchell in the BBC One soap opera EastEnders, in which her character was introduced as a police officer sent to honey trap Phil Mitchell; after Kate's cover was blown, she quit the police force, married Phil and opened a nail salon.

2004

She won the second series of the television dance contest Strictly Come Dancing in 2004.

In 2004, Halfpenny participated in the BBC One pro-celebrity ballroom dancing competition Strictly Come Dancing, dancing with professional Darren Bennett.

The couple won the competition after receiving the full 40 marks from the judges in the final.

On 14 December 2004, Halfpenny and Darren Bennett made an appearance on stage at the Royal Variety Performance, which took place at the London Coliseum.

In a special one-off Christmas programme which pitted the Strictly Come Dancing champions (and other top performing couples) from series one and two against each other, Halfpenny and Bennett were crowned as Champions of Champions.

2005

Halfpenny's final scenes were broadcast in January 2005, after her character was axed.

In December, it was announced that she would take the role of Roxie Hart in the West End musical Chicago, starting in January 2005.

In 2005, Halfpenny appeared in The Bodies, a new play adapted from an Émile Zola novel by Peter Flannery at the Live Theatre, Newcastle, opposite her real-life husband, actor Craig Conway.

In 2005 and 2006, Halfpenny appeared in pantomimes at the Theatre Royal, Newcastle.

2006

She was the guest presenter for and performed in the first show of the BBC four-part series The Sound of Musicals in January 2006, and played Roxy Ball in Shameless in an episode broadcast on 31 January 2006.

In 2006, Halfpenny made a guest appearance in an episode of The Catherine Tate Show.

From spring 2006, Halfpenny appeared in the BBC One school-based drama series Waterloo Road as drama teacher Izzie Redpath, a role for which she won the TV Quick Award for "Best Actress".

Her character was killed-off at the end of the second series.

2007

In 2007, Halfpenny appeared as the narrator of Freaky Eaters for BBC Three and Fat Man's Warning for Channel 4.

She narrated a short film advertising how the National Lottery helps the North East, created by students at the Lord Lawson of Beamish School as part of a competition.

The film they created won the competition.

Halfpenny married fellow actor Craig Conway in 2007; together they have a son, Harvey.

2008

From the beginning of February 2008, a pregnant Halfpenny played Spike Milligan's long-suffering manager, Norma Farnes, alongside Michael Barrymore, in Surviving Spike at the Theatre Royal, Windsor.

2009

Halfpenny starred in the West End production of Calendar Girls from 28 July to 31 October 2009, and then played the part of Paulette Bonafonté in the West End company of Legally Blonde, which opened in January 2010, with previews beginning in December 2009.

2010

She played the part until late October 2010, and she was succeeded by Denise van Outen.

For this role, Halfpenny won the WhatsOnStage.com Theatregoers' Choice Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Musical and the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Performance in a Supporting Role in a Musical.

The couple divorced in 2010.

2012

Halfpenny made a guest appearance in the Canadian series Murdoch Mysteries, appearing in episode one of the fifth series, first broadcast in 2012.

In March 2012, she starred in a revival of Mike Leigh's 1977 play Abigail's Party at the Menier Chocolate Factory in London.

In April that year, the show played at the Theatre Royal, Bath, before transferring to the West End, at Wyndham's Theatre, where it ran from May to September.

2014

Other notable credits include Babylon (2014), In the Club (2014–2016), Humans (2015), Three Girls (2017), Dark Money (2019), and The Long Shadow (2023).

In 2014, Halfpenny starred in the BBC drama In the Club, which returned for a second series in 2016, and Channel 4's Babylon.

In September 2014, along with Tim Healy, Halfpenny narrated the history of the north-east of England as part of the ceremony for the Great North Run.

2015

In 2015, she starred in Way Upstream by Alan Ayckbourn at Chichester Festival Theatre, and in the same year starred in the first series of Humans.

2017

Since 2017, she has been a radio broadcaster for BBC Radio 2, working alongside Sara Cox.

2018

In 2018, she covered the Good Morning Sunday show for August.

In 2018, she was cast to perform in The Girl on the Train stage adaptation in Leeds, which premiered at the West Yorkshire Playhouse in May that year.

In 2024, she played the role as Helen in the play A Taste of Honey at the Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester which was directed by Emma Baggott.

2019

In 2019, Halfpenny shared her grief on a podcast, following the death of her partner Matt Janes in 2017.

He died aged 43 after suffering a heart attack at the gym.