Patricia Greene obituary
Actor who played Jill Archer for 68 years on the long-running BBC radio soap opera The Archers
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Patricia Greene, who has died aged 95, was the world’s longest-serving soap opera actor, and featured in The Archers on BBC radio for 68 years. She joined as Jill Paterson, a demonstrator of kitchen appliances, in 1957, and evolved into the serial’s stern, sometimes interfering, matriarch after marrying Phil Archer (played by Norman Painting).
At her audition for the role, Greene was faced with a quandary. “The script was a rather domineering woman who was demonstrating a machine called the Household Drudge at a garden fete, but it was put to me as ‘a sexy blonde in a tea tent’,” she recalled. She decided to deliver her lines in the deep, sultry tones of the actor Fenella Fielding.
Godfrey Baseley, the creator and editor of the serial, which had begun in the BBC’s Midlands region in 1950, quickly hired her as a regular cast member. But Greene still had to face the ambiguities of the character penned by different writers. One wanted the “sweet, innocent type, the farming girl”, she told the Daily Telegraph in 2017, while another preferred “sophisticated girls sitting on cocktail stools”. She ended up adding elements of her own character to the role.
When Baseley told her that Phil was to find happiness following the death of his wife, Grace (Ysanne Churchman), in a stable fire (a BBC ruse to detract from the opening night of ITV in 1955), he told Greene: “Cut the sex – you’re going to marry him.”
The wedding took place within months and the couple went on to have four children. Jill joined Phil in the running of Brookfield, the farm owned by her father-in-law, Dan (Harry Oakes). In ventures echoing real-life farm diversification, Jill later supplemented their income by selling eggs and honey and, during a particularly difficult time in agriculture, the couple ran a bed-and-breakfast.
Jill also immersed herself in community events, including village fetes and flower shows, and became a pillar of the Women’s Institute in the fictional village of Ambridge, known for her baking, with lemon drizzle cake her speciality. “She works like a slave and runs all over the place,” said Greene, who was known as Paddy to friends and colleagues.
When Jill and Phil eventually passed the farm on to their son, David (Timothy Bentinck), and daughter-in-law, Ruth (Felicity Finch), in 2001, they retired to Glebe Cottage. After Phil’s death nine years later, Jill took up beekeeping and moved back to Brookfield, as well as finding companionship with the charming widower Leonard Berry (Paul Copley), a retired chartered surveyor. Greene made her final appearance as Jill Archer in September 2025.
Greene was born in Derby during the Depression, to Agnes (nee Johnson) and Edward Greene, a keen amateur actor and qualified engineer, who at the time was a piano salesman. But, she told Derbyshire Life in 2011, he “couldn’t sell a loaf of bread to a starving man”, adding: “We were dirt poor.”
Weekly visits to the cinema and a trip to watch the musical Oklahoma! in the West End of London, as well as seeing her father crying at a theatre show, fuelled her own interest in performing, but her early ambition was to become a school teacher. This was thwarted through her poor performance in Latin at Parkfields Cedars grammar school. On leaving, she worked as a ward orderly at Derbyshire children’s hospital, then as a secretary in a sheet metal factory.
In her spare time, she joined her father – by then an engineer with Rolls-Royce – in the Derby Shakespeare Society, where Alan Bates was a fellow member, under John Dexter, later associate director of both the English Stage Company at the Royal Court and the National Theatre.
Greene then trained at the Central School of Speech and Drama (1951-54) before acting in repertory theatre. “In Wales once, I even blacked up and went on stage as a coal miner,” she recalled.
While performing at Oxford Playhouse, she was invited to audition for the role of Jill in The Archers. Continuing on stage, she played Alice, the middle daughter, in a production of Hobson’s Choice with Birmingham Rep in 1960. Then, two years later, she was among the first actors to go behind the iron curtain during the cold war on a tour of eastern Europe.
When Bates introduced her to Lindsay Anderson, the director cast Greene opposite Richard Harris in the 1963 “kitchen sink” film This Sporting Life – but she was dropped when the distributor worried about not having a star name and Rachel Roberts was hired.
She had previously appeared in a 1961 film version of the Arnold Wesker play The Kitchen, but her screen career remained fairly low-key. On television, she was in A Man for All Seasons (1957), It’s a Woman’s World and Victoria Regina (both 1964), then, between 1965 and 1970, had four small parts in the TV soap Crossroads. Later, in 2000, she appeared in the first episode of the daytime soap Doctors as the wife of an Alzheimer’s disease sufferer, and played a bickering, but concerned, neighbour of a patient in Casualty.
She was made MBE in 1997.
Greene’s 1959 marriage to the actor George Selway ended in divorce. In 1972, she married Cyril Richardson; he died in 1986. She is survived by their son, Charles.
• Patricia Honor Greene, actor, born 26 January 1931; died 9 July 2026

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