Jane Asher (born 5 April 1946)[1] is an English actress and author. She achieved early fame as a child actress, and then through her association with Paul McCartney, and has worked extensively in film and TV throughout her career.
Having played Alice herself as an 11-year-old child in the audio recordings of Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass in 1958, Asher played the real Alice's (Alice Liddell) mother, Lorina Liddell, in the 1985 Dennis Potter film Dreamchild alongside Coral Browne (Alice Hargreaves), Ian Holm (Lewis Carroll/Charles Dodgson), Peter Gallagher, and Amelia Shankley (young Alice).[citation needed]
In 2003, she appeared in the revived ITV soap, Crossroads where she played the hotel's owner, Angel Sampson. After the soap was axed, Asher apologised to Crossroads fans for the way the 2003 series went.[7]
In August 2008, Asher appeared in the reality TVtalent show-themed television series, Maestro, on BBC Two with other showbusiness personalities.[8][9] From 2009 to 2010, she played Sally in the BBC One comedy series The Old Guys. In 2011, she played Margaret Harker in Waterloo Road.
Asher has written three novels: The Longing, The Question, and Losing It, and published more than a dozen lifestyle, costuming, and cake decorating books. Asher owns a company that makes party cakes and sugar crafts for special occasions.[12]
She is also president of the National Autistic Society.[16] She was a speaker at the 2006 launch of the National Autistic Society's "Make School Make Sense" campaign and is president of Parkinson's UK.[17] In March 2010, Asher became vice president to Autistica, a UK charity raising funds for autism research.[18] Asher is also a patron of TRACKS Autism, an early years nursery setting for children on the autistic spectrum[19] and The Daisy Garland,[20] a national registered charity supporting children with drug resistant epilepsy.
Personal life
On 18 April 1963, the 17-year-old Asher met Paul McCartney[21] at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and began a five-year relationship with him. In December 1963, McCartney took up residence at Asher's family Wimpole Street townhouse and stayed there until the couple moved into McCartney's own home in St John's Wood in 1966. McCartney wrote several Beatles songs inspired by Asher, including "And I Love Her", "We Can Work It Out", "You Won't See Me", "I'm Looking Through You", "What You're Doing", "Things We Said Today" and "For No One". The couple announced on Christmas Day 1967 that they were engaged to be married, and Asher accompanied the Beatles and their partners to Rishikesh in early 1968 to attend an advanced transcendental meditation training session with the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. In mid-1968, she returned to London from an acting assignment in Bristol earlier than expected and allegedly discovered McCartney in bed with Francie Schwartz. A fan who frequently loitered around Paul's Cavendish Avenue home claims to have witnessed the incident, saying: "Paul brought this American girl home... [and a little while later]... another car turned into Cavendish Avenue—it was Jane. She'd come back... earlier than she was supposed to. Jane went into the house. A bit later on, she came storming out again and drove away." Shortly afterwards, Margaret Asher drove to Cavendish Avenue to collect her daughter's things.[22]
On 20 July 1968, Asher announced publicly to the BBC that her engagement to McCartney had been called off, an announcement that shocked many people, including McCartney himself, who was soon to start dating Linda Eastman, whom he married in 1969. At the time of Asher's announcement, McCartney was at his father's home with Schwartz by his side. A problem in the relationship had been McCartney's drug use and close relationship with John Lennon. After returning to London from a five-month acting tour of the United States in May 1967, Asher had found McCartney to be completely different, confiding in the Beatles' biographer Hunter Davies that McCartney had "changed so much. He was on LSD, which I hadn't shared. I was jealous of all the spiritual experiences he'd had with John. There were fifteen people dropping in all day long. The house had changed and was full of stuff I didn't know about."[23]
Asher attended the 1970 London premiere of the Beatles' last movie, Let It Be, along with Lennon's ex-wife Cynthia, though the former Beatles did not attend.[24]
In 1971, Asher met the illustrator Gerald Scarfe.[25] They married in 1981 and have three children.[26] Asher dislikes discussing her relationship with McCartney; she said in 2004: "I've been happily married for 30-something years. It's insulting."[27]