Phoenix's big break came in 1948, when she played
Sandy Powell's wife in the
Mancunian Film Studios film
Cup-tie Honeymoon, followed by a summer season in
Blackpool with
Thora Hird in the show
Happy Days. Exposure led to more serious work with
Joan Littlewood's
Theatre Workshop at the
Theatre Royal, Stratford East. She also worked as a writer for ventriloquist
Terry Hall and comedian
Harry Worth. Some undistinguished film work followed in
Blood of the Vampire (1958) and
Jack the Ripper (1959) and in 1960, she returned to Manchester with her ambition all but spent. Phoenix's fortunes improved when she was given her best known role as
Elsie Tanner, the devil-may-care divorcée who lived at No. 11 in
Coronation Street. By this time, she had changed her name from Pilkington to Phoenix, after the
mythological bird that rose from the ashes. She featured in the programme from 1960 to 1973 and again from 1976 to 1984. Her character became known for her fiery red hair and was described by
Prime Minister James Callaghan as "the sexiest thing on television". During her periods of absence from the series, she failed in her attempts to find suitable alternative roles. She left the series for the final time in January 1984, having filmed her last scenes during November 1983, her 60th birthday. In the story, her character moved to Portugal to meet up with an old flame until 2004 when the character died in a car crash (off screen). Phoenix's profile gained her a part in the British film
The L-Shaped Room (1962) in which she played a prostitute and which also featured her future husband
Anthony Booth in a small role. She was the subject of
This Is Your Life in 1972 when she was surprised by
Eamonn Andrews on the set of
Coronation Street.. After her final departure from
Coronation Street, she appeared in a one-act television play,
Hidden Talents, in 1986. At this time, she was suffering from advanced
lung cancer; in the play, she played a woman dying of cancer. That same year, she also starred in short-lived
sitcom Constant Hot Water, playing a
Bridlington landlady. In 1985, she was interviewed for a magazine by long-time fan, the singer
Morrissey, who also featured her on the cover of one of
the Smiths' singles, "
Shakespeare's Sister". ==Personal life==