Letitia Dean

Actress

Birthday November 14, 1967

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Potters Bar, Hertfordshire, England

Age 56 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 1.6 m

#26139 Most Popular

1960

She starred in two series of the BBC drama The Hello Girls, set in a Derby telephone exchange in the 1960s; medical dramas Casualty and Doctors; the ITV police drama The Bill; romantic comedy Lucy Sullivan Is Getting Married, and the Channel 4 sitcom Drop the Dead Donkey as a weathergirl.

She also played a prostitute in the revival of Charles Dyer's 1960s play Rattle of a Simple Man at the Alexandra Theatre, Birmingham.

1967

Letitia Jane Dean (born 14 November 1967) is an English actress.

She is best known for her portrayal of Sharon Watts in the BBC soap opera EastEnders.

1983

Her other television roles include Grange Hill (1983–1984), Brookside (1984), The Hello Girls (1996–1998), and Lucy Sullivan Is Getting Married (1999–2000).

1984

In 1984, Dean auditioned to play one of the original characters in BBC One's new soap opera, EastEnders; she was selected for an interview on the strength of a photograph alone.

The creators of EastEnders, Tony Holland and Julia Smith, were looking for a "bouncy, attractive, oddly vulnerable young woman" to play the part of Sharon Watts, and out of the various applicants they had seen, they believed that only Dean had all of those qualities.

Dean lied about her roots to get the part.

As the casting directors were only looking for real East End actors, she falsely claimed that she was born and brought up in Hackney, east London.

The lie paid off and she got the part, clinching the deal because of her laugh, which Holland and Smith described as "the dirtiest in the world!"

1985

An original cast member from 1985 to 1995, she reprised the role from 2001 to 2006, and again from 2012 onwards.

For the role, she was awarded the British Soap Award for Outstanding Achievement in 2022.

She debuted in the role in the show's first episode broadcast on 19 February 1985.

Dean's character Sharon, the troubled and spoilt adopted daughter of landlords "Dirty" Den (Leslie Grantham) and Angie Watts (Anita Dobson), has become one of the most popular and long-running characters in the serial.

1986

The song, "Something Outa Nothing", reached number 12 in the UK Singles Chart in November 1986.

1994

She featured in one of the soap's most popular storylines in 1994, a love triangle featuring Sharon, her husband Grant Mitchell (Ross Kemp) and his brother Phil (Steve McFadden).

The plot, nicknamed "Sharongate", gave the soap one of its highest episode ratings in October 1994 with over 25.3 million viewers.

1995

A desire to pursue other acting roles prompted Dean to leave the soap in 1995.

During her first stint on EastEnders, she forayed into singing with her fellow EastEnders castmate, Paul Medford (who played Kelvin Carpenter).

A song penned for the pair as part of a plotline in EastEnders (known as The Banned) prompted the BBC to release the song as a single.

She also starred in the 1995 film England, My England, which told the story of the musician and court composer Henry Purcell.

On stage, she starred as Nurse Fay in the Joe Orton comedy play, Loot, working alongside actor Michael Elphick.

2001

Six years following her initial exit, Dean was lured back to EastEnders by producer John Yorke, reprising the role of Sharon from 2001 to 2006.

2004

In December 2004, Sunday Mirror reported that executive producer Kathleen Hutchison offered to double Dean's salary from £150,000 a year to £300,000 a year, to persuade her to remain in the show, making her one of the highest paid actresses in British soap.

2005

Her exit was announced in August 2005 and an official EastEnders press report initially stated that she was only taking a scheduled break and was due back on set later in 2006; however, this did not happen, and in June 2006 the BBC denied press speculation that there were any immediate plans for her to return to the series.

2006

Dean's character left the serial again in January 2006.

2007

In 2007, she participated in the fifth series of the BBC dance competition Strictly Come Dancing, finishing fourth.

2008

On stage, she starred in the West End production of High School Musical in 2008, and in the UK touring production of Calendar Girls in 2010.

Dean was born in Potters Bar, Hertfordshire to parents Leslie (a tailor) and Ellie Dean, in a cottage rented on the estate of English romantic novelist Barbara Cartland, known as Camfield Place.

Dean has two older brothers.

Dean's family moved to the north Buckinghamshire village of Stoke Goldington near Newport Pagnell when she was three years old.

She acquired a penchant for performing at an early age; both she and her older brother Stephen attended a local dance school, the Sylvia Mitchell School of Dance, and they also performed a dance act together on stage.

This later prompted Dean's successful application to attend the Italia Conti Academy of Theatre Arts at ten years old, and later the Sylvia Young Theatre School in Marylebone, London.

Dean began performing professionally at the age of 12, when she was cast as Pepper in the musical Annie at London's Victoria Palace Theatre.

A trained singer, she played the lead female, Sandy, in the musical Grease, and she also sang with a rock group called The Young Uns, who toured the country supporting stage acts such as Bobby Davro and Tom O'Connor.

Between the ages of 13 and 17, Dean appeared in numerous television programmes, including: Love Story; Tales Out Of School; the Matthew Kelly sitcom Relative Strangers; Grange Hill, playing a student named Lucinda Oliver; (credited as Titia Dean) and the role of Dawn in the Channel 4 soap opera Brookside.

2012

In February 2012, producer Bryan Kirkwood announced that Dean would make a second return to EastEnders, having been absent for a period of six years.

She made her return on 13 August 2012 after fleeing from her wedding to her fiancé John Hewland, with her son, Dennis Rickman Jr. and Phil Mitchell.

She is one of three remaining original cast members, along with Gillian Taylforth and Adam Woodyatt.

Away from EastEnders Dean has had various theatre and television roles.