EastEnders

Michelle Collins defends co-star who left top secret EastEnders scripts on train

Cindy Beale holding Christmas presents in EastEnders
Michelle has spoken out about an unfortunate incident (Picture: BBC/Jack Barnes/Kieron McCarron)

Michelle CollinsĀ has leapt to the defence of her EastEnders co-star who mistakingly left upcoming scripts on public transport.

The actress, 62, first appeared asĀ Cindy BealeĀ in 1988. After staging a spectacular comeback last year, sheā€™s now at the centre of a dramaticĀ ChristmasĀ plot.

In upcoming scenes, Cindyā€™s affair with her former step-sonĀ Junior KnightĀ (Micah Balfour) will beĀ exposed to their families.

Itā€™ll be the present that nobody (ok, maybe us) wants to receive this yuletide!

Ahead of an eventful festive season, Michelle has now addressed an unfortunate blunder made by one of her fellow cast last month.

Top secret information wasĀ uncovered by a member of the public, who found a number of documents for episodes that will play out over the next month.

After spotting the documents left behind by an unnamed actress on a train, he then took them home to his superfan wife in the hope they could safely return them.

Although they reportedly reached out to the star on Instagram, they failed to get in touch and instead handed them over toĀ The Sun, who went onto stage an elaborate photoshoot as they handed them over at the BBC soapā€™s Hertfordshire production base.

Anna, Gina, Junior, Elaine and George Knight sit around a Christmas table in EastEnders, looking tensely at Cindy, Ian and Peter Beale and Lauren Branning
An explosive Christmas is ahead (Picture: BBC/Jack Barnes/Kieron McCarron)

A reporter was pictured shaking hands with George Knight actor Colin Salmon outside of Walford East tube station, though it is understood that he was not the actor who misplaced them.

ā€˜Things happen,ā€™ said Michelle about the incident.

ā€˜Theyā€™ve left government documents on trains. And when youā€™re rushing and youā€™re tired.ā€Š.ā€Š. Iā€™m surprised it hasnā€™t happened more, letā€™s put it that way.ā€™

She continued toĀ Fabulous Magazine: ā€˜If Iā€™m reading my scripts on a train Iā€™ll put it in a folder.Ā But I very rarely do it, because people are nosy.Ā Iā€™ve usually got my head buried in a book.ā€™

Last year,Ā amid her return after 25 years, the show went to desperate measures to conceal her identity.

ā€˜I was far more careful when I was coming back, because obviously it was a surprise,ā€™ she admitted.

ā€˜The scripts had different names in them as well.Ā It didnā€™t have my name ā€“ it had a code name.ā€™

This device isnā€™t exclusive to Cindy Beale ā€“ Michelle has revealed that withĀ a large number of former charactersĀ returning to Walford in recent months, theyā€™re all given pseudonyms.

George Knight holding presents in EastEnders
The scripts were handed back to Colin Salmon ā€“ though he wasnā€™t the actor responsible (Picture: BBC/Jack Barnes/Kieron McCarron)
Cindy Beale looking unimpressed, standing in the snow in a large furry coat in EastEnders
Cindy was given a pseudonym in scripts to hide her identity (Picture: BBC/Jack Barnes/Kieron McCarron)

ā€˜All the old characters have a different name,ā€™ she said.

ā€˜Itā€™s quite confusing. But they do it so that if scripts get out, people donā€™t know who is involved.

ā€˜They just donā€™t want to spoil things for people.ā€™

Speaking aboutĀ Cindyā€™s explosive festive story, Michelle went on to say that the episodes are ā€˜betterā€™ than the iconic 1986 instalment which saw Den Watts (Leslie Grantham) hand his wife Angie (Anita Dobson)Ā their divorce papers.

Leslie Grantham as Dirty Den in Eastenders in the famous scene when he divorces Angie Watts, Played by Anita Dobson.

Michelle has teased that this Christmas will be ā€˜betterā€™ than 1986 (Picture: BBC Picture Archives)

ā€˜Angie, Den and the divorce set the precedentā€™ she said.

ā€˜It was so good that now itā€™s like: ā€œOh, weā€™ve got to deliver a Christmas EastEnders classic, because everyone ā€“ even people who donā€™t normally watch it ā€“ tune in.ā€

ā€˜It will hopefully be a classic EastEnders and will deliver what people want.

ā€˜You canā€™t compare it to past Christmases, but I would say this one is very different. Hopefully, people wonā€™t be disappointed.ā€™

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