Martin Kemp reveals EastEnders role helped him recover after brain tumour

The Spandau Ballet bassist starred as Steve Owen in the BBC One soap opera between 1998 and 2002.
Martin Kemp has spoken about how EastEnders helped him “recover” after he underwent treatment for a brain tumour (Ian West/PA)
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Connie Evans16 November 2022
The Weekender

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Martin Kemp has said that landing his role in EastEnders was “the thing that helped me recover, more than anything else” after he received a brain tumour diagnosis.

The Spandau Ballet bassist, 61, starred as Steve Owen in the BBC One soap opera between 1998 and 2002.

Speaking on the Dish podcast with Nick Grimshaw and Angela Hartnett, Kemp spoke candidly about how EastEnders helped his road to recovery: “When EastEnders was offered to me, it was like, everybody around me was saying, ‘Don’t do it, don’t do it. It’s going to ruin your career, don’t do it’. Well because they hadn’t had any name actors in that show before, right?

It was the thing that helped me recover, more than anything else. It moved me forward and left that whole nightmare behind

Martin Kemp on his role in EastEnders

“Everybody had grown up with EastEnders, so I was kind of the first one of those name actors to go in.

“But when it was offered to me, it was only really about five years after I had gone through the whole brain tumour business, that I went through in the nineties, about 95, and so for me, I was struggling to get myself together and my brain wasn’t working properly still from the operation.

“To the point where sometimes if I wanted to walk left, I would walk right, or like I couldn’t think about putting things in order, or anything like that. Learning lines was just way out there.

“When EastEnders was offered to me it was a chance for me to get over it, so it wasn’t just me taking EastEnders on because I thought yeah, it was a good gig – it was me trying to get my life back together.

“I honestly didn’t even know if I could remember the lines because my brain was so messed up from it. So, when I look back at EastEnders, it’s more than just, it was a good job.

“It was the thing that helped me recover, more than anything else. It moved me forward and left that whole nightmare behind.”

Kemp was diagnosed with two brain tumours in 1995 and underwent an operation and radiotherapy to treat the disease before landing his role as one of Albert Square’s most memorable villains.

Speaking to presenter Grimshaw, 38, and Michelin-starred chef Hartnett, 54, Kemp also shared his experience of leaving the soap and having his character killed off.

He said: “They killed me off. I’ll tell you what happened was I went in one day and I said, I’m leaving, my time’s done, I’ve done everything I can do.

“So, I went upstairs, spoke to the boss, I said, ‘I’ve got to go…. My time’s up,’ I knew it was, because on EastEnders, it’s the sort of show, you realise your time is up when you’re going round doing the same story but in a different suit. Do you know what I mean?”

He added: “I went upstairs, and I told them, and the producer said to me, ‘Listen, you’ve been a big character, you can come back on to the show any time, we’ll never kill you off, we want your character to be alive in case we want you to come back.’

“So anyway, I walk out, and I go back in a few weeks later, they called me upstairs, they said, ‘Martin, what are you going to do when you leave EastEnders, where are you going next?’ I said, ‘Well actually, I got a contract with ITV.’ So, I go back in a month later, killed me off.

“I opened the script, and I look at it: ‘Steve Owen gets blown up’.”

After being involved in several headline-generating storylines during his time on the soap, Steve’s demise came after being trapped in a car that exploded in a fireball.

Dish, hosted by Nick Grimshaw and Angela Hartnett, is available on all podcast platforms now.

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