In 1970, Kelsall moved to
Alresford, Hampshire, where she initially continued her teaching career, also inspiring
Colin Firth to begin his acting career. She continued to direct plays for this company until at least 2006. On 31 March 1981, her play
The Reason of Things, produced by YTV, was networked by ITV. In 1982, she wrote the script for an episode of
The Agatha Christie Hour. She had two further plays networked in 1984,
Sweet Echo on 22 January, produced by Yorkshire, and
Grand Duo on 29 July, produced by
LWT. Her play
The Index Has Gone Fishing, made by
Central Television and filmed in
Pershore, Worcestershire, In 1987 she wrote an episode of the BBC drama series
One by One. She also wrote six episodes of
Emmerdale Farm in the spring of 1981, and six further episodes that autumn. Her most recent television work credited by the
British Film Institute consists of three episodes of
Heartbeat in the mid-1990s. She is also the author of a number of books based around
How We Used to Live, and of a number of stage plays which have appeared in print. In 2010, she presented a retrospective of the
How We Used to Live series at Hebden Bridge's 500th anniversary festival. In December 2017, she spoke to a local history society on the history of her home. ==References==