
EastEnders anniversary: 40 years of affairs, faked deaths, and sisters who are really mothers
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adminDisastrous weddings, pub brawls, love-rat scandals, serial killer neighbours and the absolute impossibility of ever having a quiet Christmas. Life in soapland is not for the fainthearted.
For 40 years, viewers have watched EastEnders for exactly this kind of drama. Now, the BBC show is celebrating its milestone birthday with an “unmissable” week of episodes – including a live special and the chance for some audience participation.
Ross Kemp is returning as Grant Mitchell, we’ll see Walford legend Natalie Cassidy’s final scenes as Sonia, and the identity of Cindy’s Christmas Day attacker will be revealed.
See? Nothing good ever comes of spending Christmas at home in soapland. (And for anyone who thought Cindy died in prison in 1998, she came back from the dead in 2023 after actually spending time in witness protection. Keep up!).
In an Albert Square first, viewers this week will get the chance to vote on whether Denise Fox (played by Diane Parish) should reunite with her estranged husband Jack Branning (Scott Maslen), or pick her secret lover Ravi Gulati (Aaron Thiara).
These latest shenanigans follow four decades of TV that has hooked viewers since the very first episode aired on 19 February 1985. So let’s take a look at some of the show’s most shocking, explosive and poignant moments, as we raise a glass, Queen Vic style, to EastEnders at 40.
Cue the doofs…
Dirty Den’s divorce papers

Anita Dobson as Angie Watts and Leslie Grantham as Dirty Den. Pic: BBC 1986
You can’t talk about EastEnders’ biggest moments without mentioning Christmas 1986, when 30 million people tuned in to see the womanising Dirty Den serving wife Angie with divorce papers, after discovering she had been faking a terminal illness.
“Happy Christmas, Ange…”. Brutal. It remains the highest viewed soap episode in British history. Den was later shot and killed, or seemingly killed, by a man hiding in some daffodils, before returning from the dead. Only to be killed again.
Mark’s HIV

Todd Carty as Mark Fowler, telling parents Pauline and Arthur about his HIV diagnosis. Pic: BBC 1991
During the height of the HIV epidemic in the 1990s, Mark Fowler became the first mainstream British TV character to be diagnosed with HIV. EastEnders producers worked with the Terrence Higgins Trust charity to ensure his diagnosis and illness was portrayed accurately on screen.
The groundbreaking storyline was viewed by millions, helping to change attitudes about the virus when fear and misinformation was rife, the charity said. After leaving Walford in 2003, his family was informed of Mark’s death the following year.
Sharongate
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People in soapland really need to learn not to spill all their darkest secrets when there are recording devices lying around. In 1994, the story of Sharon’s affair with Phil Mitchell, brother of her husband Grant, came out when Grant found her accidentally recorded confession – and subsequently played it to everyone in the Queen Vic, before beating Phil to a pulp. And it wasn’t even Christmas!
Tiffany’s death

Martin McCutcheon as Tiffany and Ross Kemp as Grant. Pic: BBC/Brian Ritchie 1998
Poor Tiffany. Did she not know marrying a Mitchell brother was never going to end well? On New Year’s Eve (like Christmas, a dangerous time) 1998, Tiffany was planning to leave with daughter Courtney while Grant was locked up on charges of attempting to murder her.
However, he got out. “Bail. Ever heard of it?” As Big Ben bonged, Grant left the Vic with Courtney, with Tiffany begging as she followed him. During a struggle, she was knocked over into the snow… and then Frank Butcher turned the corner in his car. RIP Tiff.
Ian marries Mel… but not for long
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No one really believed it when glamorous Mel got together with odious Ian Beale. The victim of an unsuccessful attempt by his first wife Cindy to kill him via hitman, Ian was probably Walford’s most pathetic man. But Mel thought his daughter, Lucy, had cancer, so didn’t have the heart to walk away.
It wasn’t long before she discovered Ian had been lying, as he feared (quite rightly, to be fair) she didn’t love him. Following their New Year’s Eve wedding ahead of the new millennium, the fireworks popped and Big Ben bonged (again) as Mel walked out.
Pat, Peggy and Frank

Pam St Clement as Pat, Barbara Windsor as Peggy and Mike Reid as Frank. Pic: BBC/Adam Pensotti 2000
One of EastEnders’ most famous love triangles, the tangled love lives of Pat, Peggy and Frank carried storylines for several years.
In the early 1990s, Frank and Pat were married – until he fled Walford after inadvertently causing the death of a homeless man killed in a fire at his car lot, started by Phil so Frank could claim on the insurance. Pat moved on with the more stable Roy Evans, while Frank found love with Peggy Mitchell.
But! Frank and Pat couldn’t hide their true feelings, and later started an affair – leading to one of the soap’s most memorable scenes when Frank showed up on Pat’s doorstep, naked except for a spinning bow tie and a grin. Frank later went on to fake his own death, while Pat also had an affair with Patrick Trueman – which occasionally involved pineapple rings and whipped cream, she revealed in one episode.
Sonia’s baby

Natalie Cassidy as Sonia, unexpectedly giving birth at home. Pic: BBC/ Adam Pensotti 2000
For most people, having a baby shouldn’t come as a surprise, but that’s what happened to Sonia when, aged 15, she went from feeling a bit under the weather to giving birth to Martin Fowler’s baby in a matter of minutes. Baby Chloe (later Rebecca) was given up for adoption, but later returned to her birth parents and returned to Albert Square as a teenager in 2014.
Who shot Phil?

Steve McFadden as Phil Mitchell: Pic: BBC 2001
Here’s Phil again, this time round the victim of a whodunnit shooting. No longer simply a love rat, by the 2000s he had become one of the soap’s arch villains – and the mortal enemies had started to amass. Was it Mark Fowler, Ian Beale, Dan Sullivan or Steve Owen? Those who don’t know but are planning to catch up, look away now. Spoiler alert: it was his ex, Lisa Shaw. And don’t worry, Phil survived.
‘You aint my muvva!’

Michelle Ryan as Zoe and Jessie Wallace as Kat Slater. Pic: BBC/Adam Pensotti
What a year for EastEnders. Just a few months later, this bombshell was revealed: Kat Slater was not, in fact, one of Zoe Slater’s big sisters, as she had grown up believing, but actually her mother. It all came out after an argument about Zoe going to Spain to live with her Uncle Harry, who had abused Kat as a teenager and was actually Zoe’s father.
Quite a lot to take in. The final seconds of the episode go down in EastEnders legend, with Zoe turning to scream at Kat. “You can’t tell me what to do, you aint my muvva!”… “Yes I am!”. Soap gold.
Little Mo hits Trevor with an iron

Kacey Ainsworth as Little Mo and Alex Ferns as Trevor. Pic: BBC 2001
The physical and mental abuse of Little Mo by her manipulative husband Trevor was difficult to watch. The storyline came to a head at the end of 2001, starting with some particularly horrific scenes on Christmas Day. On New Year’s Eve, unable to take it anymore, she hit him over the head with an iron.
At first, Mo thought she had killed Trevor, but it wasn’t the case, and she later went to prison for attempted murder. After subsequently being released on appeal, Trevor later went on to hold her hostage and start a house fire – culminating in her rescue, and his death. Good riddance.
Death of Steve Owen

Martin Kemp as Steve Owen. Pic: BBC
Played by Martin Kemp of Spandau Ballet fame, Steve Owen became one of EastEnders’ most famous villains. Murder? His ex, Saskia – check. Burying the body in the woods and framing someone else for it? Check. Nemesis to the Mitchell brothers? Check. And dodgy dealings involving a nightclub? Check. (There’s always a nightclub).
Steve met his maker as he attempted to leave Walford with wife, Mel (formerly of Mel and Ian), along with Lisa and Mark, and Lisa’s daughter, Louise. But as Steve drove off with Louise in the car and Phil (Louise’s father) giving chase, he ended up crashing into a motorbike and a wall. He did do the right thing in the end, saving Louise by passing her out the window to Phil – but was engulfed as the car exploded into a fireball in March 2002.
Death of Dirty Den (again)

No, not Atomic Kitten, but a trio who were equally as big in the noughties: Sam Mitchell (Kim Medcalf), Chrissie Watts (Tracy-Ann Oberman) and Zoe Slater (Michelle Ryan). Pic: BBC 2005
After Dirty Den’s return in 2003 (he had survived the 1989 shooting and been living in Spain), it wasn’t long before he started to make enemies once again. Trying to stop his son Dennis and adopted daughter Sharon’s relationship by getting Zoe pregnant and convincing her to pretend the baby was Dennis’s was the last straw for wife, Chrissie. Plus, Den also slept with Sam and conned her out of her share of the Vic.
This all culminated in Chrissie, Zoe and Sam confronting Den, with Zoe hitting him over the head with a doorstop – and Chrissie finishing off the job (unbeknownst to Zoe, but that’s another story). In true soap style, Den was buried in the pub’s cellar and concreted over. Nice.
‘If only he’d worn slip-on shoes’

Charlie Brooks as Janine, Shaun Williamson as Barry. Pic: EastEnders/YouTube
Another iconic EastEnders villain, Janine Butcher was known for many evil deeds – but will always be best remembered for pushing newlywed husband Barry off a cliff during their honeymoon in the Scottish Highlands.
After calling him a mug, telling him their relationship was fake and she had married him for money, Barry half-slipped, was half-pushed – and Janine left him for dead. Afterwards, as she played the grieving widow, she gave the immortal line: “If only he’d worn slip-on shoes.”
Stacey and Max’s affair
![Eastenders at 40: Bradley Branning [Charlie Clements], Stacey Branning [Lacey Turner], Max Branning [Jake Wood] on Christmas Day 2007. Pic: BBC/ Adam Pensotti 2007](https://e3.365dm.com/25/02/768x432/skynews-eastenders-40th-anniversary_6831838.jpg?20250217181204)
Charlie Clements as Bradley, Lacey Turner as Stacey and Jake Wood as Max. Pic: BBC/ Adam Pensotti 2007
Hot-headed Stacey Slater getting together with quiet Bradley Branning was yet another unlikely soap coupling. It seemed to work… until she went and spoiled it all by having an affair with his bad-boy father, Max. The scandal was exposed on Christmas Day 2007 when a kiss with Max – on her wedding day, for Gawd’s sake – was played out to the family after accidentally being caught on camera.
The couple split but reunited in 2009, only for their story to end in tragedy when Bradley fell to his death from a roof after becoming a prime suspect in the murder of wrong’un Archie Mitchell (another whodunnit storyline). Leading Stacey to confess to Max just seconds later that actually: “He didn’t do it… it was me.”
Dot Cotton’s monologue

June Brown as Dot Cotton. Pic: Alamy 1991
Albert Square stalwart and chain-smoking hypochondriac Dot Cotton will be remembered for many memorable scenes and storylines, exploring complicated themes including euthanasia, when she helped Ethel die, cancer, and homophobia. Played by June Brown, Dot found happiness and wed Jim Branning in 2002, but it was her career-criminal son, Nick Cotton – or ‘Nasty Nick’ – who always ruled her heart.
Brown became the only soap actor to single-handedly lead an entire episode in 2008, when Dot reflected on her life as she recorded a message for Jim while he was in hospital recovering from a stroke. The performance earned her a BAFTA nomination.
Denise’s ‘death’

Don Gilet as Lucas and Diane Parish as Denise. Pic: BBC 2010
As we mentioned her earlier in reference to the 40th anniversary storylines this week, you might have realised that Denise is not dead. But for a short time in 2010, the residents of Albert Square believed she was – after her husband Lucas hid her in a basement and faked her suicide. There was a funeral and everything!
Mick discovers Shirley is his mum

Danny Dyer as Mick Carter, Linda Henry as Shirley Carter. Pic: BBC/ Jack Barnes 2014
Mick believed Shirley was his sister. Sound familiar? Yep, just like Zoe Slater, Mick discovered his sister was in fact his real mum – and on Christmas Day, of all times!
Who killed Lucy?

Hetti Bywater as Lucy Beale. Pic: BBC 2015
Another Beale, another whodunnit. This time it was Ian’s daughter Lucy at the centre of the story. Months after her death, her killer was revealed in a flashback episode to be… none other than her 10-year-old half-brother, Bobby. In other news for the Beales in 2015, Kathy Beale returned from the dead – yes, another one! No, she didn’t really die in that car crash in South Africa all those years ago. It was all an insurance scam, of course.
Peggy’s final scenes

Peak Peggy: Barbara Windsor as the Queen Vic queen on her wedding day to Frank (Mike Reid) in 1999. Pic: PA
As the Mitchell matriarch and the Queen Vic’s most beloved landlady, Peggy Mitchell is an EastEnders legend. Diagnosed with breast cancer, there was no explosion or dramatic car chase or big reveal, but instead one of the most poignant scenes in the soap’s history as Peggy chose to die on her own terms in 2016.
Visited by Pat from beyond the grave, following the character’s own death from cancer four years earlier, the pair reminisced and spoke about her choice. “I will go as I have lived,” she said. “Straight back, head held high, like a queen.”
Ronnie and Roxy drown

Samantha Womack and Rita Simons, who played sisters Ronnie and Roxy, at the 2014 National Television Awards. Pic: PA
What’s more shocking than killing off one of the Square’s most famous sisters? Killing them both off at the same time. On New Year’s Day 2017, viewers watched as a drunk Roxy jumped into a closed swimming pool on the day of Ronnie’s second wedding to Jack. When she didn’t resurface, Ronnie jumped into save her, only to become weighed down by her wedding dress underwater – as Jack read Cinderella to the children.
Lola’s death

Danielle Harold as Lola Pearce, Jamie Borthwick as Jay Mitchell. Pic: BBC
After being diagnosed with a brain tumour in 2022, Lola died in heartbreaking scenes the following year. Her death was the culmination of a storyline that involved a lot of work with brain cancer charities to ensure her illness and final days were portrayed realistically.
Danielle Harold, who played Lola, won the best leading performer at the British Soap Awards for her work on the storyline, just a week after her on-screen death.
EastEnders will mark its 40th anniversary with an hour-long special tonight, followed by a full live episode tomorrow
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Entertainment
Harper Lee mystery: Is there a To Kill A Mockingbird prequel and true crime novel ‘waiting to be published’?
Published
3 hours agoon
October 20, 2025By
admin
One of Harper Lee’s surviving relatives says it’s possible there could be major unpublished works by the author still to be discovered, following the release of eight of her previously unseen short stories.
Describing the mystery around a manuscript titled The Long Goodbye, which Lee wrote before To Kill A Mockingbird, Lee’s nephew, Dr Edwin Conner, told Sky News: “Even the family doesn’t know everything that remains in her papers. So, it could be there waiting to be published.”
Dr Conner says Lee submitted a 111-page manuscript, titled The Long Goodbye, after writing Go Set A Watchman in 1957.
The retired English professor explains: “It’s not clear to me or to others in the family, to what extent [The Long Goodbye] might have been integrated into To Kill a Mockingbird, which she wrote immediately after, or to what extent it was a freestanding manuscript that is altogether different and that might stand to be published in the future.”

Lee researched Reverend Maxwell’s death, but no book was ever published. Pic: AP
A second mystery exists in the form of a true crime novel, The Reverend, which Lee was known to have begun researching in the late 1970s, about Alabama preacher Reverend Willie Maxwell who was accused of five murders before being murdered himself.
Dr Conner said: “The manuscript of a nonfiction piece, that according to some people doesn’t exist, according to others who claim to have seen it, does [is also a mystery]. We don’t know where it is, or whether it is, really.
“That could be a surprise that has yet to be revealed if we discover it and it’s published, which is a real possibility.”
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He believes much of the manuscript was written in his family home and says his mother, Louise, who was Lee’s older sister, saw a “finished version of it” on the dining room table.
Dr Conner says there are “others who just as fiercely say no, it was never completed”.

A C Lee (L) – the inspiration for Atticus Finch with his grandchildren, including Edwin Conner (C), in 1953
‘She did want to publish these stories’
There has long been debate over why Lee published just two books in her lifetime.
To Kill a Mockingbird came out in 1960. Selling more than 46 million copies worldwide, translated into more than 40 languages and winning a Pulitzer Prize, it’s arguably the most influential American book of the 20th century.
Fifty-five years later, Lee published a sequel, Go Set A Watchman, written ahead of Mockingbird, but set at a later date.
Then aged 88, and with failing health, there were questions over how much influence Lee had over the decision to publish.
Asked how happy she’d be to see some of her earliest work, containing early outlines for Mockingbird’s narrator Jean Louise Finch and the story’s hero Atticus Finch, now hitting the shelves, Dr Conner says: “I think she’d be delighted.”

A previously unseen image of one of Lee’s short story transcripts. Pic: Harper Lee Estate
He says Lee had presented them to her first agent, Maurice Crane, at their first meeting in 1956, “precisely because she did want to publish these stories”.
And while dubbing them “apprentice stories,” which he admits “don’t represent her at her best as a writer,” he says they show “literary genius of a kind”.
Notoriously private, he says the stories – which were discovered neatly typed out in one of Lee’s New York apartments after her death – offer “deeply enthralling new glimpses into her as a person”.
Never marrying or having children, he says Lee maintained a degree of privacy even with her family: “You never saw her complete personality… We thought we knew her, we thought we’d seen everything, but no, we hadn’t.”

George W Bush awards Lee with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2007. Pic: Reuters
‘That’s it, I’m not giving any more interviews’
While describing her as a “complicated woman,” he insists Lee was far from the recluse she’s frequently painted as.
He says: “In company, she was most of the time delightful. She was a lively personality, she was funny, witty, and you would think she was very outgoing.”
But Lee was known to have struggled with her success.
Dr Conner explains: “She never ever wanted fame or celebrity because she suspected, or knew, that would involve the kind of uncomfortable situations in public situations that she found just no satisfaction or pleasure in”.
He says while in the early years of Mockingbird Lee gave interviews, the wild success of the book soon rendered such promotion unnecessary, leading her to decide: “That’s it, I’m not giving any more interviews”.
While he admits she was subsequently much happier, he goes on: “Not that she was a recluse, as some people thought. She wasn’t at all a recluse, but she didn’t enjoy public appearances and interviews particularly. She wanted the work to speak for itself.”

Truman Capote and Harper Lee in April 1963. Pic: AP/The Broadmoor Historic Collection
‘Deeply hurt’ by Truman Capote
Famously close to Truman Capote, one of the pieces in Lee’s newly released collection is a profile of her fellow author.
Dr Conner says that piece – a love-letter of sorts, describing Capote’s literary achievements – is all the more remarkable because at the point Lee wrote it in 1966, when she and Capote “were not even on speaking terms”.
He says Lee “probably knew [Capote] better than any other person alive when that was written”, adding, “she did love him as a friend very much, even when he was not speaking to her”.
Friends since childhood – and the prototype for the character of Dill in Mockingbird – Capote later hired Lee to help him research his 1965 true crime novel In Cold Blood.
Despite his book’s relative success, Dr Conner believes Capote was “bitter” over the fact Mockingbird far eclipsed it in accolades and recognition.
“He had been writing for much longer. He felt that he was at least as good as she was, and he was very envious of her success”.
Dr Conner says Lee was “deeply hurt” at Capote’s rejection of her, never speaking about him in later life.
Recalling his own meeting with Capote many years later, Dr Conner says he “got a personal sense of how [Capote] could charm the socks off of anybody, male or female”.
He says it was noteworthy that while Capote asked about his mother, who he had been fond of, he “never once mentioned” Harper.
Sky News has contacted Lee’s lawyer and the executor of her estate, Tonya Carter, for comment.
The Land of Sweet Forever: Stories and Essays, by Harper Lee is on sale from Tuesday
Entertainment
No more investigations into ‘non-crime hate incidents’ after Linehan case, Met Police says
Published
9 hours agoon
October 20, 2025By
admin
Metropolitan Police is to stop investigating “non-crime hate incidents” to “reduce ambiguity” after prosecutors dropped a case against Graham Linehan.
Linehan, 57, will face no further action after being arrested over his social media posts about transgender people.
The Father Ted and IT Crowd creator said his lawyers had been told the case wouldn’t proceed. The Crown Prosecution Service confirmed the move.
Linehan, 57, was arrested on suspicion of inciting violence when he landed at Heathrow from his home in the US on 1 September.
The incident drew criticism of the police and government from some politicians and free-speech campaigners.
Met Police said today it would stop investigating “non-crime hate incidents” to “reduce ambiguity” and “provide clearer direction for officers”.
Posting on X, Linehan announced : “After a successful hearing to get my bail conditions lifted (one which the police officer in charge of the case didn’t even bother to attend) the Crown Prosecution Service has dropped the case.
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“With the aid of the Free Speech Union, I still aim to hold the police accountable for what is only the latest attempt to silence and suppress gender critical voices on behalf of dangerous and disturbed men.”
The union said it had hired a “top flight team of lawyers to sue the Met for wrongful arrest, among other things”.
“The police need to be taught a lesson that they cannot allow themselves to be continually manipulated by woke activists,” it added.
A Crown Prosecution Service spokesperson confirmed it had reviewed the case file and decided “no further action” would be taken.

Linehan said he had to be taken to hospital on the day of his arrest. Pic: PA
In one of his posts, Linehan wrote: “If a trans-identified male is in a female-only space, he is committing a violent, abusive act. Make a scene, call the cops and if all else fails, punch him in the balls.”
Another was a photo of a trans-rights protest, with the comment “a photo you can smell”, and a follow-up post saying: “I hate them. Misogynists and homophobes. F*** em.”
A Met Police statement after the case was dropped acknowledged “concern” around Linehan’s arrest.
It added: “The commissioner has been clear he doesn’t believe officers should be policing toxic culture war debates, with current laws and rules on inciting violence online leaving them in an impossible position.
“As a result, the Met will no longer investigate non-crime hate incidents.
“We believe this will provide clearer direction for officers, reduce ambiguity and enable them to focus on matters that meet the threshold for criminal investigations.”
Linehan said on his blog that his was arrested by five armed officers and had to go to A&E after his blood pressure reached “stroke territory” during his interrogation.
Police said the officers’ guns were never drawn and were only present as Linehan was detained by the aviation unit, which routinely carries firearms.
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JK Rowling, who’s regularly shared her views on women’s rights in relation to transgender rights, was among those who had criticised the arrest, calling it “utterly deplorable”.
Reform’s Nigel Farage, shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick, and ex-foreign secretary Sir James Cleverly also hit out at the treatment of Linehan.
Entertainment
Harper Lee mystery: Is there a To Kill A Mockingbird prequel and true crime novel ‘waiting to be published’?
Published
17 hours agoon
October 20, 2025By
admin
One of Harper Lee’s surviving relatives says it’s possible there could be major unpublished works by the author still to be discovered, following the release of eight of her previously unseen short stories.
Describing the mystery around a manuscript titled The Long Goodbye, which Lee wrote before To Kill A Mockingbird, Lee’s nephew, Dr Edwin Conner, told Sky News: “Even the family doesn’t know everything that remains in her papers. So, it could be there waiting to be published.”
Dr Conner says Lee submitted a 111-page manuscript, titled The Long Goodbye, after writing Go Set A Watchman in 1957.
The retired English professor explains: “It’s not clear to me or to others in the family, to what extent [The Long Goodbye] might have been integrated into To Kill a Mockingbird, which she wrote immediately after, or to what extent it was a freestanding manuscript that is altogether different and that might stand to be published in the future.”

Lee researched Reverend Maxwell’s death, but no book was ever published. Pic: AP
A second mystery exists in the form of a true crime novel, The Reverend, which Lee was known to have begun researching in the late 1970s, about Alabama preacher Reverend Willie Maxwell who was accused of five murders before being murdered himself.
Dr Conner said: “The manuscript of a nonfiction piece, that according to some people doesn’t exist, according to others who claim to have seen it, does [is also a mystery]. We don’t know where it is, or whether it is, really.
“That could be a surprise that has yet to be revealed if we discover it and it’s published, which is a real possibility.”
More on Literature
Related Topics:
He believes much of the manuscript was written in his family home and says his mother, Louise, who was Lee’s older sister, saw a “finished version of it” on the dining room table.
Dr Conner says there are “others who just as fiercely say no, it was never completed”.

A C Lee (L) – the inspiration for Atticus Finch with his grandchildren, including Edwin Conner (C), in 1953
‘She did want to publish these stories’
There has long been debate over why Lee published just two books in her lifetime.
To Kill a Mockingbird came out in 1960. Selling more than 46 million copies worldwide, translated into more than 40 languages and winning a Pulitzer Prize, it’s arguably the most influential American book of the 20th century.
Fifty-five years later, Lee published a sequel, Go Set A Watchman, written ahead of Mockingbird, but set at a later date.
Then aged 88, and with failing health, there were questions over how much influence Lee had over the decision to publish.
Asked how happy she’d be to see some of her earliest work, containing early outlines for Mockingbird’s narrator Jean Louise Finch and the story’s hero Atticus Finch, now hitting the shelves, Dr Conner says: “I think she’d be delighted.”

A previously unseen image of one of Lee’s short story transcripts. Pic: Harper Lee Estate
He says Lee had presented them to her first agent, Maurice Crane, at their first meeting in 1956, “precisely because she did want to publish these stories”.
And while dubbing them “apprentice stories,” which he admits “don’t represent her at her best as a writer,” he says they show “literary genius of a kind”.
Notoriously private, he says the stories – which were discovered neatly typed out in one of Lee’s New York apartments after her death – offer “deeply enthralling new glimpses into her as a person”.
Never marrying or having children, he says Lee maintained a degree of privacy even with her family: “You never saw her complete personality… We thought we knew her, we thought we’d seen everything, but no, we hadn’t.”

George W Bush awards Lee with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2007. Pic: Reuters
‘That’s it, I’m not giving any more interviews’
While describing her as a “complicated woman,” he insists Lee was far from the recluse she’s frequently painted as.
He says: “In company, she was most of the time delightful. She was a lively personality, she was funny, witty, and you would think she was very outgoing.”
But Lee was known to have struggled with her success.
Dr Conner explains: “She never ever wanted fame or celebrity because she suspected, or knew, that would involve the kind of uncomfortable situations in public situations that she found just no satisfaction or pleasure in”.
He says while in the early years of Mockingbird Lee gave interviews, the wild success of the book soon rendered such promotion unnecessary, leading her to decide: “That’s it, I’m not giving any more interviews”.
While he admits she was subsequently much happier, he goes on: “Not that she was a recluse, as some people thought. She wasn’t at all a recluse, but she didn’t enjoy public appearances and interviews particularly. She wanted the work to speak for itself.”

Truman Capote and Harper Lee in April 1963. Pic: AP/The Broadmoor Historic Collection
‘Deeply hurt’ by Truman Capote
Famously close to Truman Capote, one of the pieces in Lee’s newly released collection is a profile of her fellow author.
Dr Conner says that piece – a love-letter of sorts, describing Capote’s literary achievements – is all the more remarkable because at the point Lee wrote it in 1966, when she and Capote “were not even on speaking terms”.
He says Lee “probably knew [Capote] better than any other person alive when that was written”, adding, “she did love him as a friend very much, even when he was not speaking to her”.
Friends since childhood – and the prototype for the character of Dill in Mockingbird – Capote later hired Lee to help him research his 1965 true crime novel In Cold Blood.
Despite his book’s relative success, Dr Conner believes Capote was “bitter” over the fact Mockingbird far eclipsed it in accolades and recognition.
“He had been writing for much longer. He felt that he was at least as good as she was, and he was very envious of her success”.
Dr Conner says Lee was “deeply hurt” at Capote’s rejection of her, never speaking about him in later life.
Recalling his own meeting with Capote many years later, Dr Conner says he “got a personal sense of how [Capote] could charm the socks off of anybody, male or female”.
He says it was noteworthy that while Capote asked about his mother, who he had been fond of, he “never once mentioned” Harper.
Sky News has contacted Lee’s lawyer and the executor of her estate, Tonya Carter, for comment.
The Land of Sweet Forever: Stories and Essays, by Harper Lee is on sale from Tuesday
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