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EastEnders star in tears as she’s forced to use food bank after cancer diagnosis

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Former EastEnders actress Cheryl Fergison revealed she struggled to pay bills and needed to visit a food bank (Picture: BBC)

Former EastEnders actress Cheryl Fergison has revealed she struggled to pay the bills and needed to visit a food bank after being treated for womb cancer.

The Walford icon, known for playing Heather Trott on the BBC One soap from 2007 until 2012 as well as Celebrity Big Brother and The IT Crowd, was diagnosed in 2015, and shared her condition in April 2024.

The soap star, who is based in Cleveleys, Lancashire, revealed earlier this year that she underwent a hysterectomy and experienced early onset menopause due to the treatment before she got the all-clear.

She detailed to The Sunday Mirror how she had to stop acting due to undergoing treatment, which caused her money issues, as well as mental health problems.

Cheryl, 60, previously said she had been supported financially by former EastEnders colleague Dame Barbara Windsor, who died in 2020 aged 83, and in February this year she had nothing left.

‘I didn’t have any money to do a weekly shop, I was trying to pay too many debts,’ she said.

‘It was a really difficult time. Lots of people can relate to it. You’re trying to find a penny. You’re literally looking down your settee to see if you can find a quid.’

Editorial use only Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock (14468913e) Cheryl Fergison 'Loose Women' TV show, London, UK - 08 May 2024
Cheryl was diagnosed with womb cancer in 2015 (Picture: Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock)
CHERYL FERGISON playing Heather Trott in the soap opera Eastenders. Generic WARNING: Use of this copyright image is subject to Terms of Use of Digital Picture Service. In particular, this image may only be used during the publicity period for the purpose of publicising EASTENDERS and provided the BBC is credited. Any use of this image on the internet or for any other purpose whatsoever, including advertising or other commercial uses, requires the prior written approval of the BBC.
The star played Heather Trott in the BBC soap (Picture: BBC)

When she attended Citizens Advice and they suggested a food bank, she said she ‘cried and cried’ and felt ‘it was shameful’.

‘How could I have been earning that much money and now I am here?’ she asked.

However, since being supported by the food bank, who Cheryl called ‘angels’, she said she has not needed their help again.

Instead, Cheryl said she has been able to return to work in pantos and singing in restaurants.

Television programmes: EastEnders. BBC Picture Shows: Heather Trott (CHERYL FERGISON) BBC ONE Thursday 30th April 2009 Heather, in the midst of her asthma attack, spots Janine and attempts to call out for help.
Cheryl played Heather from 2007 until 2012 (Picture: BBC)

‘I hope other people can relate to it. I really want to stress that food banks are a service,’ she said.

‘They’re there for you to use so please do not feel embarrassed or that it’s a weakness. Whatever the reason, you deserve help. We have a right to be able to live like a human being and do it in a dignified way.’

This comes after Cheryl said she was selling her old scripts and bookings to a Chinese restaurant to help pay for her bills.

She told OK!: ‘I think that people need to get their heads around the fact we have to earn a living, we are not always fortunate to be filming all the time and working in our chosen and trained profession.’

Editorial use only Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken McKay/REX/Shutterstock (1020789v) Cheryl Fergison 'The Paul O'Grady Show' TV Proramme, London, Britain - 21 Oct 2009
Cheryl previously revealed she was selling old scripts to help pay bills (Picture: Ken McKay/REX/Shutterstock)

Earlier this year, Rudolph Walker – known as Patrick Trueman on EastEnders – revealed that he had been without a stable home for a period, while working on the soap, and had to live in a hotel with a shared toilet after money issues.

He told the Daily Mirror he ‘didn’t have any financial means’ while he was in his 70s and ‘nowhere to live’.

The 85-year-old said: ‘Some days on my way to the studio, I would pull up at the side of the road, have a cry.

‘I’d pull myself together, arrive at the studio and the environment would act as a tonic, and I was ready to go. I suppose it was a sort of double life.’

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