- List of EastEnders television spin-offs
-
EastEnders is a popular British soap opera that has aired on BBC One since 19 February 1985. Several spin-off shows have been made, some of which are episodes that look at the history of some of the characters by flashbacks. Others have been a lead-up for a character's eventual return to the show, and some have followed characters who had departed from the show in an overseas setting. Like off-set episodes, these spin-offs are set outside the usual location of Albert Square. Documentaries have also aired, particularly for the 10th, 15th, and 20th anniversaries of the show looking back at the history of the show's inception, its characters and storylines.
Contents
Spin-off episodes
Civvy Street
This episode first aired on 22 December 1988 and was set during the second World War in the period between 1939 to 1945. The episode was written and directed by the creators of EastEnders, Tony Holland and Julia Smith. It looked back at the early life of the residents of Albert Square and featured a young Lou Beale, Ethel Skinner and Reg Cox, who was a minor character found dead in the first ever episode of EastEnders in 1985. Holland was most upset to discover that Dot Cotton had been too young during the war to be featured as a useful character and also complained that the major events of the war occurred in the wrong order for effective drama.[1] Lou and Albert Beale were celebrating their marriage in Walford, and planning their happy life together when war was declared. Albert was conscripted into the army, leaving Lou and her three children, Kenny, Harry and Ronnie, behind. Lou's family rallied around including her mother, sister Flo and she also had a gang of friends including young Ethel, dodgy Reg and pub landlords Ray and Lil to keep her company. Lou worried that Albert would not return from war intact, and the episode saw her propositioned by another man in his absence, but she managed to stay faithful and she and Albert were reunited. Ethel's parents were killed by an enemy bomb while she was sheltering with Lou in Walford East tube station. Ethel was also torn between the amorous advances of a GI and her admirer William Skinner.
The Return of Nick Cotton
This episode first aired on 1 October 2000 and was a lead-up to the return of Nick Cotton as a regular character later that year. It was written by Matthew Graham and directed by Chris Bernard. The episode followed Nick as he has just been released from prison. Fast forward to 10 weeks later and he was living in a squat in North London. He then had a dream where his dead father, Charlie, appeared and warned him that something terrible is about to happen to him. He was told by a black gay couple living in the squat with him that seeing your own dead relatives in your dreams was a bad sign but Nick was not worried. He then decided to meet up with his son Ashley and ex-wife Zoe and went to Zoe's brother Eddie asking about where Zoe lives. He also had some mean-looking thugs, one named Colin on his trail who had a score to settle with him. He met up with Ashley who revealed he and Zoe were living with Zoe's new boyfriend. The thugs discovered Nick's whereabouts and showed up at Zoe's house trying to break in. To escape them Ashley and Nick got into a stolen convertible car and drove off. Zoe pleaded with Ashley not to go with Nick knowing he would be a bad influence but Ashley did not listen. Then just before the end of the episode Nick and Ashley were discussing where to go from here and Nick predictably said "Let's go visit Ma." So they decided to travel around for a bit before their eventual return to Walford.
Ricky & Bianca
This two-part episode aired on 13 and 20 May 2002 and was a lead-up to Ricky Butcher's return later that year as a regular character. It was written by Simon Ashdown. The episode saw Ricky reunite with his ex-wife Bianca Jackson and son Liam in Manchester. Bianca had been in Manchester doing an arts degree for the past two and a half years and was struggling to look after Liam.
Ricky discovered she had been working in a nightclub and had stolen money from the manager Vince. Ricky ended up getting caught in the middle of all of this along with his new girlfriend Cassie. After he got Bianca out of trouble, they had a one-night stand during which Bianca conceived their daughter Tiffany. Ricky told Cassie he didn't really love her, he was still in love with Bianca. Cassie managed to manipulate Bianca into thinking that she and Ricky would never be happy together, and Bianca made the difficult decision to leave Liam with Ricky, feeling that he'd be a better parent than she would, and left in a taxi.
Dot's Story
This episode first aired on 2 January 2003 and followed Dot Branning to Wales to visit the family she stayed with during World War II. Through a series of flashbacks, we see Dot being evacuated, and her experiences of evacuation. Her Aunty Gwen and Uncle Will featured in the episode.
Perfectly Frank
This episode aired on 13 September 2003 and followed Frank Butcher as he set up a seedy nightclub and a car valeting service in Somerset after returning from Spain where he was last seen in 2002. When Frank is sent a car to valet by the local gangster named Reg Priest, his assistant finds a dead body in the boot. Frank and his club staff try to find a way to avoid the police asking questions and fall foul of Reg so they throw the body into the water over the side of the pier. The episode was written by Tony Jordan.
Pat and Mo
This episode first aired on 1 April 2004 and revealed what caused the feud between Pat Evans and Mo Harris that still lasts to this day. Pat and Mo meet at the grave of Pat's brother and Mo's husband, Jimmy, and reminisce about old times through a series of flashbacks. Mo's brother, Stan Porter also appeared in the episode.
Documentary shows
EastEnders Revealed
EastEnders Revealed
Part of the title sequence used for EastEnders Revealed.Format Documentary Country of origin United Kingdom Production Running time 30 minutes/60 minutes Broadcast Original channel BBC Choice
BBC Three
BBC OneOriginal run 20 December 1998 – present EastEnders Revealed is a factual entertainment programme that looks back at the storylines, characters and stars of EastEnders. It first aired in 1998 as part of the new BBC digital channel (BBC Choice) line-up. EastEnders Revealed was the only BBC Choice programme to last the entire life of the channel, and was carried over to its replacement BBC Three where it continues to this day. It has been presented by Gail Porter, Harriet Saxton, Jayne Middlemiss, Edith Bowman, Colin Murray, Melanie Sykes and Tracy-Ann Oberman.
The episodes are 30 or 60 minutes in length and, on occasions, have been broadcast on the BBC's flagship channel, BBC One. This is usually after a major storyline has been taking place in EastEnders, for example when Leslie Grantham (Den Watts) returned to the show in 2003, when Wendy Richard (Pauline Fowler) left and when Peggy Mitchell (Barbara Windsor) left.
List of titled episodes
Episode title Subject(s) of episode Original airdate "Grant Mitchell Revealed" Grant Mitchell 25 October 1999 "Ricky Butcher Revealed" Ricky Butcher 20 April 2000 "Frank Butcher Revealed" Frank Butcher 2 November 2000 "Sharon Watts Revealed" Sharon Watts 19 July 2001 "Dot to Dot" Dot Branning 20 August 2001 "Slaters Revealed" The Slater family 10 October 2001 "Truemans Revealed" The Trueman family 12 November 2001 "Mel Revealed" Melanie Owen 3 December 2001 "The Jacksons Revealed" The Jackson family 14 January 2002 "Being Peggy Mitchell" Peggy Mitchell 11 February 2002 "Trouble Man: A Steve Owen Special" Steve Owen 1 March 2002 "The Fowlers" The Fowler family 1 April 2002 "Mel Leaving Special" Mel Owen 12 April 2002 "Angie And Me" Angie Watts 22 April 2002 "Through Kat's Eyes" Kat Moon 9 September 2002 "Jamie Mitchell" Jamie Mitchell 10 October 2002 "And Sparks Will Fly" Trevor Morgan 4 November 2002 "A Year In The Life Of Sam Mitchell" Sam Mitchell 17 January 2003 "Mark Fowler" Mark Fowler 13 February 2003 "Laura Beale Unwrapped" Laura Beale 18 February 2003 "Being Barry Evans" Barry Evans 17 March 2003 "The Coming of Age of Sonia Jackson" Sonia Fowler 6 May 2003 "Walford's Brat Pack" Vicki, Gus, Spencer, Kelly, Zoe, Martin 20 June 2003 "The Dr. Trueman Show" Anthony Trueman 11 July 2003 "Dirty Den Returns" Den Watts 26 September 2003 "The Life and Crimes of Martin Fowler" Martin Fowler 14 October 2003 "In Bed with Garry Hobbs" Garry Hobbs 18 November 2003 "Lean, Mean, Deadly Janine" Janine Evans 1 January 2004 "Alfie's Story" Alfie Moon 2 January 2004 "Blood Feud: The Watts vs. The Mitchells" The Watts and Mitchell families 12 February 2004 "The Real Billy Mitchell" Billy Mitchell 20 February 2004 "The Rise and Fall of Janine Butcher" Janine Evans 26 February 2004 "Natalie Evans" Natalie Evans 22 March 2004 "Squaring up to the Ferreiras" The Ferreira family 26 March 2004 "The Growing Pains of Spencer Moon" Spencer Moon 4 May 2004 "Sonia and Martin - Love Conquers All" Martin and Sonia Fowler 11 June 2004 "Kelly Taylor - Working Girl" Kelly Taylor 1 July 2004 "The Real Paul Trueman" Paul Trueman 23 July 2004 "Sam Mitchell - Happy Ever After?" Sam Mitchell 16 September 2004 "The One and Only Dot Cotton" Dot Branning 30 September 2004 "Andy Hunter - Hunter's Prey" Andy Hunter 9 December 2004 "Little Mo's Big Story" Little Mo Mitchell 26 December 2004 "Ian Beale - The Real Deal?" Ian Beale 3 February 2005 "The New Moons" Alfie, Spencer and Nana Moon 17 February 2005 "The Growing Pains of Zoe Slater" Zoe Slater 17 March 2005 "The Curse of the Queen Vic" The Queen Victoria 31 March 2005 "The Make-up of Kat Moon" Kat Moon 27 May 2005 "Meet the Millers" The Miller family 31 May 2005 "Growing up in Walford" Walford's youths 14 June 2005 "Jim & Dot - When Opposites Attract" Jim and Dot Branning 16 August 2005 "Chrissie Watts: Victim or Villain?" Chrissie Watts 22 September 2005 "The Duchess Returns" Peggy Mitchell 4 October 2005 "Goodbye, Pauline" Pauline Fowler 1 January 2007 "The Secret Mitchell" Danielle Jones 3 April 2009 "The Sins of Archie Mitchell"[2] Archie Mitchell 26 December 2009 "Whitney's Story"[3] Whitney Dean 22 March 2011 EastEnders Xtra
EastEnders Xtra
Part of the title sequence used for EastEnders Xtra.Format Interactive entertainment series Starring Angellica Bell Country of origin United Kingdom No. of episodes 10 Production Running time 15-20 minutes per episode Broadcast Original channel BBCi Original run February – May 2005 EastEnders Xtra was an interactive entertainment series based on EastEnders. It was first available to viewers in February 2005, which coincided with the 20th anniversary of EastEnders. Television viewers could watch the show by pressing the red button on their television remote, at 8.30pm on Monday nights. The programme was presented by CBBC presenter Angellica Bell and was approximately 15 to 20 minutes in length. It was primarily aimed at younger fans of EastEnders. It featured games and interviews with cast members, looked behind the scenes and allowed viewers to take part in quizzes on their mobile phones. The series was produced by Simon Hall. The theme and music used within the show was a rocked up version of the EastEnders theme tune.
The series ran for ten weeks, featuring ten episodes in total:
- In the first episode, Tracy-Ann Oberman who played Chrissie Watts in EastEnders co-presented the show. Oberman explained to the viewers that The Queen Victoria pub uses exterior and interior sets for filming. Perry Fenwick who plays Billy Mitchell took part in "Extractor", a part of EastEnders Xtra which asks cast members a series of questions.
- In the second episode, Nabil Elouahabi who played Tariq Larousi co-presented the show.
- In the third episode, Pooja Shah who played Kareena Ferreira co-presented the show.
- In the fourth episode, Jemma Walker who played Sasha Perkins co-presented the show.
- In the fifth episode, Natalie Cassidy who played Sonia Fowler co-presented the show.
- In the sixth episode, Ameet Chana who played Adi Ferreira co-presented the show.
- In the seventh episode, Cliff Parisi who plays Rick 'Minty' Peterson co-presented the show.
- In the eighth episode, Joe Swash who played Mickey Miller co-presented the show.
- In the ninth episode, Mohammed George who played Gus Smith co-presented the show.
Other documentaries
EastEnders Family Album was a special documentary which first aired on 13 February 2000 to coincide with the 15th anniversary of EastEnders. Narrated by Wendy Richard (Pauline Fowler), the documentary looked back at some of the most memorable storylines and characters in the show and featured interviews with past and present cast members.
EastEnders: The Whole Truth was a series of five documentary episodes, three pre-recorded and two live, broadcast every day from 2–6 April 2001, presented by Gaby Roslin. The first three, pre-recorded episodes were broadcast at 12:00pm, whereas the two live episodes were broadcast before the main EastEnders shows on those days. EastEnders: The Whole Truth examined the "Who Shot Phil?" storyline, including interviews with several cast members. Episode 5 was broadcast before the assailant, Lisa Fowler, was revealed to the public, and episode 6 gauged the reaction the following evening.
A-Z of EastEnders was a documentary broadcast on the twentieth anniversary of EastEnders in 2005 and presented by Jonathan Ross.
Since 1 December 2006, a new breed of behind-the-scenes programmes have been broadcast on BBC Three. These are all documentaries related to current storylines in EastEnders, in a similar format to EastEnders Revealed, though not using the EastEnders Revealed name. The include clips from the series and interviews with the show's cast and crew as well as TV critics such as Sharon Marshall. Documentaries have included:
- EastEnders Unveiled: A Weddings Special, 1 December 2006, giving an insight into how the show's weddings are produced, and took a look at the past weddings of Walford. It was broadcast straight after the wedding of Ian Beale and Jane Collins.[4]
- EastEnders Sweethearts: The Story of Martin and Sonia, on 2 February 2007, following the departure of Martin and Sonia Fowler.[5]
- EastEnders Scandals: The Wicks Family, 9 March 2007, coinciding with Kevin Wicks's return to Walford.[6]
- EastEnders Feuds: The Beales vs. The Mitchells, 18 May 2007, examining the feud between Ian Beale and Phil Mitchell and going behind the scenes of episodes broadcast on 17–21 May.[7]
- EastEnders Vixens: The Rise and Fall of Stella, 20 July 2007, following the death of Stella Crawford and looking at the various female characters in EastEnders past and present.[8]
- EastEnders Affairs: Max and Stacey, 1 November 2007, looking at the relationship between characters Stacey Slater, her fiancé Bradley Branning and his father Max Branning.[9]
- EastEnders Christmas Fall Outs, 26 December 2007, looking back at Christmas episodes and going behind the scenes of 2007's Christmas episodes.[10]
- EastEnders Ricky and Bianca, 4 April 2008, constructed in aid of the return to EastEnders by Ricky Butcher (Sid Owen) and Bianca Jackson (Patsy Palmer), looking back on the relationship of the two characters.[11]
- EastEnders: Whodunnits, 31 October 2008, showing infamous whodunnit storylines such as the murder of Reg Cox.
- EastEnders: Comebacks, 31 December 2008, celebrating the return of Nick Cotton.
- EastEnders: The Return of Sam Mitchell, 11 September 2009, in conjunction with the return of character Sam Mitchell, played by Danniella Westbrook.[12]
- EastEnders: The Two Faces of Lucas, 26 November 2009, looks at the character of Lucas Johnson, played by Don Gilet, as well as other characters who have had a "turning point" in their storyline.[13]
- EastEnders: The Greatest Cliffhangers, a three-part series on BBC Three, featuring 100 cliffhangers from the first 3918 episodes to find out which character had the most endings. It aired as part of the show's 25th anniversary celebrations. The first part aired on 26 January 2010, the second on 2 February 2010 and the third on 16 February 2010. The character turned out to be Phil Mitchell.
- EastEnders Live: The Aftermath, 19 February 2010, a special show hosted by George Lamb after the show's first live episode on the 25th anniversary.[14]
- EastEnders: Christian and Syed, 26 April 2010, following the reveal of Syed Masood's affair with Christian Clarke and the departure of his wife Amira.[15] The programme also looked at other gay, lesbian and bisexual characters from EastEnders' history.
- EastEnders: The Murders of Lucas Johnson, 30 July 2010, looked at the story of Lucas Johnson and other character deaths from EastEnders' history.[16]
- Peggy Mitchell - Queen of the Vic, 10 September 2010, looked at ten moments from Peggy Mitchell's time in the show.[17] The episode was broadcast on BBC One following Peggy's departure.
- EastEnders: Kat and Alfie's Return, 24 September 2010, followed the return of Shane Richie and Jessie Wallace as Alfie and Kat Moon. It looked at their history as well as Kat's family, the Slaters, and also went behind the scenes of the fire at The Queen Victoria.
- EastEnders: The Greatest Weddings, 11 and 12 November 2010, a two-part documentary counting down the top 50 weddings from EastEnders history.[18]
- EastEnders: Farewell Stacey, 28 December 2010, documenting the story of Stacey Slater following her departure.
- EastEnders: Greatest Exits, 7 July 2011, discussing the ways characters leave the series, ending with the five best.
- EastEnders: The New Moons, 6 October 2011, followed the storyline involving Michael and Eddie Moon following Eddie's departure. It also looked at the arrivals of the new members of the Moon family, and the other fathers that have been on the Square.
Charity specials
In 1993, a charity special crossover between EastEnders and the science fiction television series Doctor Who entitled Dimensions in Time was made in aid of the charity Children in Need. It ran in two parts on 26 and 27 November 1993 and was filmed on the EastEnders set. It featured several of the stars of the programme at the time. Another Children in Need special, Pudding Lane was broadcast in a series of five minute instalments throughout the 26 November 1999 telethon. It relocated the then current EastEnders characters to Pudding Lane in 1666, during the events leading to the Great Fire of London.
In 2003, a special was made for Comic Relief named OzEnders which the chararacters did a spoof remake of The Wizard of Oz. In 2005, the characters Peggy Mitchell, Stacey Slater and Little Mo Mitchell appeared alongside Catherine Tate's character Lauren Cooper for a Children in Need sketch. Various EastEnders cast members have also appeared in sketches for Children in Need, performing songs with various themes. In 2007, they sang songs from The Beatles' Sgt Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band, in 2008 they performed songs from West End musicals and in 2009 they performed renditions of classic songs produced by Motown Records. In 2011, they performed songs by Queen and recreated famous scenes from their videos.[19]
EastEnders and rival soap opera Coronation Street took part in a crossover episode for Children in Need on 19 November 2010, called "East Street". The EastEnders cast who took part in the mini-episode were Laurie Brett (Jane Beale), Charlie G. Hawkins (Darren Miller), Kylie Babbington (Jodie Gold), Nina Wadia (Zainab Masood), John Partridge (Christian Clarke),[20] Diane Parish (Denise Johnson), Nitin Ganatra (Masood Ahmed), Jamie Borthwick (Jay Brown), Shane Richie (Alfie Moon), Jessie Wallace (Kat Moon), Ricky Norwood (Fatboy) and Shona McGarty (Whitney Dean).[21]
Other specials
On 10 August 2001, the BBC threw a gala party at the Television Centre in West London, which was attended by many EastEnders cast members. Part of the event was documented by the hour-long television show EastEnders: It's Your Party, hosted by Jonathan Ross. It featured several interviews with the cast.
Two musical themed Christmas specials, both titled EastEnders Christmas Party, aired on Christmas Eve 2003 and 2004, which had the cast and crew of EastEnders singing, dancing and performing short comedy sketches. Many former cast members also returned for the special episodes.
EastEnders themed game shows
A one-off special episode of the quiz show A Question of Sport called A Question of EastEnders was broadcast on BBC One on 15 February 2000 to mark EastEnders' 15th anniversary on 19 February 2000. The special was hosted by Gaby Roslin, and had two teams, each led by a team captain; Wendy Richard (who played Pauline Fowler) and Adam Woodyatt (Ian Beale). On Richard's team were Blue Peter presenter Katy Hill and stand-up comedian Harry Hill. Woodyatt's team consisted of Michelle Collins, who previously played Cindy Beale in EastEnders, and Jeremy Spake, who became famous for appearing in the television docusoap Airport. There were eight rounds and Woodyatt's team won with 36 points to Richard's 16.
A special edition of The Weakest Link aired in February 2010 for EastEnders's 25th anniversary and featured past and present EastEnders cast including Adam Woodyatt (Ian Beale), Larry Lamb (Archie Mitchell) and John Partridge (Christian Clarke). It was won by Laurie Brett, who plays Jane Beale.
See also
- List of EastEnders spin-off characters
- EastEnders: E20, an Internet spin-off
References
- ^ Brake, Colin (1995). EastEnders: The First 10 Years: A Celebration. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-37057-2.
- ^ Green, Kris (1 December 2009). "'EastEnders': The Sins of Archie Mitchell". Digital Spy. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/soaps/s2/eastenders/scoop/a189376/eastenders-the-sins-of-archie-mitchell.html. Retrieved 1 December 2009.
- ^ "Whitney's Story". BBC Programmes. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00ztfpq. Retrieved 22 March 2011.
- ^ "Behind-the-scenes special for 'Enders wedding", Digital Spy. URL last accessed 2006-11-10
- ^ "EastEnders Sweethearts", bbc.co.uk. URL last accessed 2008-02-28
- ^ "EastEnders special", bbc.co.uk. URL last accessed 2008-02-28.
- ^ "New show looks at EastEnders feud", Metro. URL last accessed 2007-04-13.
- ^ "Stella Special". BBC.co.uk. 28 June 2007. http://www.bbc.co.uk/eastenders/news/news_20070628.shtml. Retrieved 2007-06-30.
- ^ "EastEnders Affairs: Max and Stacey". BBC.co.uk. 16 October 2007. http://www.bbc.co.uk/eastenders/news/news_20071002.shtml. Retrieved 2007-10-22.
- ^ "Walford festive highlights screened". The Press Association. 2007-11-21. http://ukpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5ijjseY0EZbkNQ035HWYA_tu3sbRA. Retrieved 2007-11-22.
- ^ "EastEnders Ricky and Bianca". digitalspy.co.uk. 4 March 2008. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/soaps/a90816/bbc-three-plans-ricky-and-bianca-special.html.
- ^ Green, Kris (10 August 2009). "BBC Three to air 'EastEnders' Sam Mitchell special". Digital Spy. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/soaps/a170510/bbc-three-to-air-eastenders-sam-mitchell-special.html. Retrieved 10 August 2009.
- ^ Green, Kris (11 November 2009). "'EastEnders': The Two Faces of Lucas". Digital Spy. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/soaps/s2/eastenders/scoop/a186342/eastenders-the-two-faces-of-lucas.html. Retrieved 11 November 2009.
- ^ Green, Kris (3 February 2010). "George Lamb to front 'Enders Live: The Aftermath'". Digital Spy. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/soaps/s2/eastenders/scoop/a201192/george-lamb-to-front-enders-live-the-aftermath.html. Retrieved 3 February 2010.
- ^ Green, Kris (26 April 2010). "BBC Three's Christian and Syed 'Enders special". Digital Spy. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/soaps/s2/eastenders/scoop/a216633/bbc-threes-christian-and-syed-enders-special.html. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
- ^ Green, Kris (8 July 2010). "'EastEnders': The Murders of Lucas Johnson". Digital Spy. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/soaps/s2/eastenders/scoop/a240225/eastenders-the-murders-of-lucas-johnson.html. Retrieved 8 July 2010.
- ^ Kilkelly, Daniel (9 September 2010). "'EastEnders': Peggy, Queen of the Vic". Digital Spy. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/soaps/s2/eastenders/scoop/a275399/eastenders-peggy-queen-of-the-vic.html. Retrieved 9 September 2010.
- ^ Lou (2 November 2010). "Which Walford wedding rings your bells?". BBC Online. http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/eastenders/2010/11/fave-walford-wedding.shtml. Retrieved 3 November 2010.
- ^ "EastEnders cast are Queen Vic". The Sun (News Group Newspapers). 8 November 2011. http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/showbiz/tv/3920583/EastEnders-cast-are-Queen-Vic.html. Retrieved 11 November 2011.
- ^ Love, Ryan (8 November 2010). "Soaps - News - 'Enders, Corrie 'CIN' crossover confirmed - Digital Spy". Digital Spy. Digital Spy. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/soaps/s2/eastenders/news/a286665/enders-corrie-cin-crossover-confirmed.html. Retrieved 13 November 2010.
- ^ Kilkelly, Daniel (17 November 2010). "In Pictures: 'Enders, Corrie crossover". Digital Spy (London: Hachette Filipacchi UK). http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/soaps/s2/eastenders/news/a288267/in-pictures-enders-corrie-crossover.html. Retrieved 17 November 2010.
External links
- EastEnders: Civvy Street at the Internet Movie Database
- EastEnders: The Return of Nick Cotton at the Internet Movie Database
- EastEnders: Ricky and Bianca at the Internet Movie Database
- EastEnders: Perfectly Frank at the Internet Movie Database
- EastEnders: Dot's Story at the Internet Movie Database
- Pat and Mo: Ashes to Ashes at the Internet Movie Database
- A Question of EastEnders at the Internet Movie Database
- EastEnders Family Album details
EastEnders History · Awards and nominations · In popular culture Characters Crew members Julia Smith · Tony Holland · Simon May · Mike Gibbon · Michael Ferguson · Leonard Lewis · Barbara Emile · Corinne Hollingworth · Jane Harris · Matthew Robinson · John Yorke · Louise Berridge · Kathleen Hutchison · Kate Harwood · Diederick Santer · Bryan KirkwoodLocations Storylines The Banned · The Firm · "Sharongate" · "Who Shot Phil?" · "Get Johnny Week" · "The Secret Mitchell" · "Who Killed Archie?"Episodes Off-set episodes · Two-handers · Episodes in Ireland · "Pretty Baby...." · "EastEnders Live" · "Queen Vic Fire Week"Families Spin-offs Music EastEnders portal Categories:- EastEnders lists
- EastEnders spin-offs
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