With a love for dance as a young girl, Holland trained as a dancer at the London Cone Ripman (now
ArtsEd) and enjoyed success throughout her career on stage. In her youth, Holland earned the role of principal dancer in
Sunday Night at the London Palladium shows, and also performed as principal during summer seasons in
Monte Carlo and other European casino hotspots as part of an
adagio act. She also performed in many
West End productions, including
Her Excellency (1949),
Fancy Free (1951),
Rocking the Town (1956), and TV Musical Bonanza! (1957). Having always enjoyed acting in addition to dance, Holland also appeared in many theatre productions, later turning her attentions to television, playing the recurring role of Sarah Maynard in
Crossroads from 1964 to 1970. Later in her career, Holland became best known as ballroom dancer
Yvonne Stuart-Hargreaves in
Hi-de-Hi! (1980). Jimmy Perry, who co-wrote
Hi-De-Hi!, had married Holland's sister Gilda, and saw Holland's talent after she appeared in pantomimes and plays at
The Watford Palace, which he and Gilda managed together. By the time
Hi-De-Hi! came into production, Holland was suffering from serious arthritis in her hip, a common plight for dancers, and the show's choreographer noted how she would arrive for rehearsals "limping badly" but during filming she "hid it very well". Holland did not appear in the summer theatre shows of
Hi-De-Hi! partly due to this, and also being keen not to be
too heavily associated with one character. Prior to
Hi-De-Hi!, Holland appeared in
Tales of the Unexpected in the episode named "The Stinker", and
Stig of the Dump as Mrs Fawkham-Greene. She also appeared in ''
Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em as a maternity hospital receptionist. She played Miss Lavant in the TV film The Children of Dynmouth
(1987), and Madame Dupree in Lace 2'' (1985). Following the end of
Hi-de-Hi! in 1988, she appeared in
Central Television's comedy
The Upper Hand, and in an episode of
Bergerac as a music teacher. In 1992–93, she played the notorious female magistrate, Celia Littlewood, who had eyes for Miss Brahms, in
Grace and Favour, the sequel to
Are You Being Served. One of her last appearances was in one of her favourite roles as maiden aunt in
The Nutcracker in
The Royal Ballet,
Covent Garden, a role she had danced for over 20 years, from 1984 to 2008. She also had a role as a terminally ill patient in
Casualty in 2001. ==Death==