Early career Perrie made her acting debut as Mrs. Casper in the 1969 film
Kes, even though she had no formal acting training. The success of
Kes led to Perrie's television career. She appeared in early episodes of several popular television shows, including children's serials
Follyfoot and
The Intruder, long-running courtroom drama series
Crown Court, and sitcom
The Cuckoo Waltz. Perrie's first regular television role was in the popular Yorkshire TV comedy series ''
Queenie's Castle'', written by
Keith Waterhouse and
Willis Hall. The sitcom starred
Diana Dors, with Perrie in second female lead playing her arch-enemy Mrs Petty, the busy-bodying residents' association secretary with conservative values. ''Queenie's Castle'' was first broadcast on bonfire night in 1970 and ran for three series over two years, with the final episode being broadcast in September 1972. Eighteen episodes were made, with Perrie appearing in nine of them.
Coronation Street Perrie's role in
Kes ultimately led to her getting the part of
Ivy Tilsley in the
soap opera Coronation Street in 1971. The show's casting director Paul Bernard had seen her in the film, and cast her without audition. She first appeared as a minor character, but the producers were sufficiently impressed with her performance to offer her a more substantial role. She became a recurring character from 1972, and was later promoted to the main cast in 1979 when the character moved into Coronation Street with her family – husband
Bert (
Peter Dudley) and son
Brian (
Christopher Quinten). The character became infamous for her interfering and acid tongue, earning her the
tabloid nickname "Poison Ivy". On 5 February 1994, without consulting her
Coronation Street bosses, Perrie had cosmetic surgery that involved having tissue from her backside injected into her mouth, to supposedly gain fuller lips. The results were unflattering, and Perrie was sacked from the show by producer Carolyn Reynolds after twenty-three years as Ivy. Perrie denied that she had been fired for having cosmetic surgery, claiming that she felt that her character had simply run its course and leaving was her decision. Her final episode aired in March 1994, and the character was killed off off-screen in August the following year. Perrie's new image was widely ridiculed by the media, something she would later regret. In 2003, by which time she had retired, she was interviewed on ITV's
Facelifts From Hell programme in which she said: "Everyone was laughing and calling me fishface. I couldn't go anywhere without the cameras following me. I don't think plastic surgery is an answer to it all, you've got to be happy with yourself."
Other works She also appeared in two television plays written by
Colin Welland, who had appeared with her in
Kes. The first, 1970's ''
Slattery's Mounted Foot, saw her playing a pub regular. In 1974 she starred as the pivotal role of a militant union leader in the BBC Play For Today factory drama Leeds United''. Upon Perrie's death, director
Roy Battersby praised her work and wrote in an obituary letter to
The Guardian newspaper: "The bravura of the performance by Lynne Perrie was, and remains, glorious". In 1976, she played Cora in
Riding South in the
BBC2 Centre Play Showcase series, and appeared alongside
Phil Daniels,
Warren Clarke,
Michael Elphick and
Kenneth Haigh in
ITV Sunday Night Drama in 1977. Perrie turned down the role of Mrs Shenton in
John Schlesinger's wartime romance
Yanks in 1978, after she was given the option of a regular contract with
Coronation Street. However, she still appeared in the film, as a speaking face in the crowd. She was credited simply as 'Woman at Railway Station'. In 1991, Perrie appeared in a celebrity edition of
Family Fortunes, in a team with
Gorden Kaye,
Buster Merryfield,
June Whitfield and
Paul Shane.
Later career Following her dismissal from
Coronation Street, Perrie had a cameo in
Mike Reid's cult adult pantomime video
Pussy in Boots as Poison Ivy, and presented the programme
Clairvoyants for ITV's
The Tuesday Special slot. In 1994, Perrie released her controversial autobiography
Secrets of The Street. The book became a bestseller, and was met with mostly positive reviews from the tabloid press. The book contained behind the scenes information about
Coronation Street, and admissions of feuds with several of her co-stars during her time on the show. Granada TV attempted to ban its publication, and Perrie had to attend court over the attempted injunction. After the publication of her book, she continued to appear as a guest on a variety of chat shows, including
Channel 4's
The Word, where (amongst other acts) she performed her own rendition of
Gloria Gaynor's "
I Will Survive". The performance was voted by the public as number 62 on Channel 4's list of
100 Greatest TV Moments from Hell, and was repeated on Channel 4's 2001 series
The Best of the Word. Perrie ended the year by performing alongside
John Inman in a lavish production of
Mother Goose at
Stockport. In 1995, she starred in the VHS ''
Lynne Perrie's Alternative Workout'', a parody of an exercise programme, in which she appeared in a series of short comedy sketches, which generally consisted of her helping toned, athletic young men out of their workout clothing. The video was a commercial failure, and deleted just two years after its release. Perrie continued to cause controversy, particularly when she appeared on the adult channel
Television X. On one of the shows, she was seen pulling down a young stripper's thong, proceeding to lick his revealed penis. In a 2004 TV interview, she addressed her appearance by stating "I never knew that the channel that I went on was called the X Fantasy Channel," and how she was encouraged by the people involved on the show to do what she did. Presenter
James Whale said: "The producers of the show shouldn't really have put an elderly woman into that situation." By 1996, Perrie had returned to the stage with a new cabaret act, and found regular work as an after-dinner speaker, which she did alongside television chat show appearances. There were various reports at the time that Perrie was set to make a television comeback as an actress, in a six-part drama to be filmed in Spain. The idea of the series was later dropped. She did visit Spain towards the end of the year to perform the
Frank Sinatra' hit "
My Way" at a televised concert. In October of the same year, Perrie was the subject of a Channel 4 documentary entitled
The Ghost of Ivy Tilsley, part of a series of programmes exploring the dark side of fame. In the film, Perrie was seen looking through newspaper cuttings and packing mementos of her career into cardboard boxes as she prepared to leave her mock Tudor house in
Salford. She had decided to return to
Yorkshire to live with her husband and care for her son with
HIV. Perrie claimed that after leaving
Coronation Street she had realised that fame was not important, stating: "I didn't really want the fame to start off with. But gradually as you get it, it's like taking drugs. The more you get, the more you want". After the programme was broadcast, Perrie appeared on the 'Ladies Night' special of BBC2's celebrity quiz show
Shooting Stars, which was notable for her being drunk live on air. On Christmas Day 1996, she starred in an advert for
Pepsi, which was part of a series of six humorous commercials in the style of
The Word, which had been axed the year before. She was seen walking down the aisle to marry a monkey at the altar. In 1997, Perrie was reunited with her screen son
Christopher Quinten when both actors appeared in an episode of
BBC Radio 4 sitcom ''
Harry Hill's Fruit Corner. At the same time, her health was poor and was deteriorating further, leaving her unable to perform. She made her last television regular appearance on the ITV daytime chat show Afternoon Live'' before retiring. Perrie claimed towards the end of her life that her health was improving. She told various journalists at the time that she was planning on making a comeback. However, in keeping with what friends described as her manic depressive character, such a comeback never materialised. Towards the end of her life, Perrie took up work as a celebrity bingo caller in
Blackpool. She also made the occasional television appearance, the last of which were two entries in
Channel 5's 'Greatest' countdown series (both in 2004),
Greatest TV Soap Moments, presented by her friend Mike Reid, and
Greatest Embarrassing TV Moments. Perrie's life and work were acknowledged at the
British Academy Television Awards in 2006. ==Personal life==