Spriggs did not work regularly on television until the mid-1970s. She was in
Frederic Raphael's
The Glittering Prizes (1976), starred as Eleanor Pressett in the BBC drama
We, the Accused (1980), played Connie, the head of a battling South London family in the thirteen-part drama
Fox (1980), was Martha in
Tales of the Unexpected (1980) and was the formidable Nan in the ITV comedy series
Shine on Harvey Moon (1982–85). She appeared in three plays by
Alan Bennett:
Afternoon Off (1979),
Intensive Care (1982) and
Our Winnie (1982). She played Calpurnia and Mistress Quickly for the BBC's Shakespeare series, appeared in
Doctor Who in the 1987
Sylvester McCoy serial
Paradise Towers, and was the titular witch in the
Children's BBC series
Simon and the Witch (1987). In 1990, she was one of the God-fearing gossips in the BBC adaptation of
Jeanette Winterson's
Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit and in 1992, was in television versions of
Kingsley Amis's
The Old Devils and
Angus Wilson's
Anglo-Saxon Attitudes. In 1994, she played the midwife Mrs Gamp in the BBC's adaptation of
Charles Dickens's
Martin Chuzzlewit and was Mrs Cadwallader in
Middlemarch by
George Eliot. She continued to work on television, in series like
Heartbeat,
Midsomer Murders (playing a murder victim in the pilot episode of the series in 1997 and returning in 2006 as the character's identical twin sister) and
Poirot. She was the subject of
This Is Your Life in 1998, when she was surprised by
Michael Aspel at Shepperton Studios. Her early film appearances included
Work Is a Four-Letter Word (1968) and ''
3 into 2 Won't Go'' (1969), both directed by Peter Hall. Her later character roles included Mrs Jennings in
Emma Thompson's Oscar-winning adaptation of
Sense and Sensibility (1995), a role for which she was nominated for a
BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role (losing out to co-star
Kate Winslet) and the Fat Lady in ''
Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (2001). Her final film was Is Anybody There?'' (2008) with
Michael Caine, released shortly after her death. ==Personal life and death==