
Sally Ann Matthews in her musical debut as Patricia in Here & Now
SALLY Ann Matthews’ next step on leaving Coronation Street last October after treading the Weatherfield cobbles across 39 years is to join the cast of Steps’ musical Here & Now.
“This is my first tour show since 2010. I’ve come in for the second leg,” she says, after taking over from Finty Williams – Dame Judi Dench’s daughter – in the role of Patricia, a supermarket proprietor “with a touch of Hyacinth Bucket about her”.
Next week, she will play a York stage for the first time, performing at the Grand Opera House from February 10 to 15.
How did Sally Ann feel on her first night at The Mayflower in Southampton on January 23? “I wasn’t remotely nervous,” she says. “It’s a beautiful theatre – another one I’d never played before – with that lovely feeling of 1,700 people on their feet at each show. What’s not to love about a show that leaves everyone with a smile on their face?”
She was delighted to be offered the chance to join the hit show. “I got a phone call from my agent, saying ‘how do feel about touring again?’. I said, ‘what is it?’. ‘Here & Now, the Steps musical’.
“Of course I said ‘yeah’ as I’m a massive Steps fan and I know Claire [Steps member Claire Richards]. We have mutual friends and we’ve kept in touch. I messaged her to say ‘I’ve just had an offer to play Patricia’. ‘I suggested you!’ she said.
“When she then came to see the show, I told her I was so grateful she’d recommended me.”
At 55, Matthews is making her debut in a musical. “I’ve done plays and pantomime, but never musical theatre, though I do love musicals,” says Sally Ann, who is part of a touring company of 56-60. “They’re such a vibrant, young, talented group that I’m working with.”

Introducing Sally Ann Matthews as Patricia in Here & Now
Produced by Steps, the London dance-pop group with 14 consecutive top five hits to their name since 1997, Here & Now weaves those songs into Shaun Kitchener’s story of supermarket worker Caz and her fabulous friends dreaming of the perfect summer of love.
However, when Caz discovers her “happy ever after” is a lie, and the gang’s attempts at romance are a total tragedy, they wonder whether love will ever get a hold on their hearts? Or should they all just take a chance on a happy ending?
“The best way to describe it is it’s like Mamma Mia!, but with Steps songs, rather than Abba,” says Sally Ann. “It’s about love, life and loss, with the Steps songs feeding the storytelling parts beautifully – and it’s really funny as well.”
That means comedy and, of course, Tragedy, the Bee Gees cover so synonymous with Steps. “We use it as a war cry at the start of Act Two,” says Sally Ann.
“These characters have real heart and you really invest in their journey – and it’s like a panto because there’s a villain too, though I don’t want to give anything away about that.”
Tooled with such Steps favourites as Tragedy, Heartbeat, Stomp, One For Sorrow, Better Best Forgotten, 5,6,7,8, Last Thing On My Mind, Love’s Got A Hold On My Heart and Chain Reaction, Here & Now appeals to every demographic, reckons Sally Ann.
“We have older, retired couples there; then we have youngsters, like my great-nephew, aged six, who’s coming to the show; there are a lots of groups of girls and mums on a Prosecco trip, all dancing away, and then there are lots of men who love Steps,” she says.
“I’ve been to three Steps concerts, where it’s very inclusive and very safe, everybody coming together because there’s such a love of Steps – and this show is the same. After the curtain call, there’s a ten-minute mega-mix, where everyone’s on their feet.”

Sally Ann Matthews’ Patricia and Lara Denning’s Caz in Here & Now
Sally Ann has been struck by the high quality of the touring show and the demands on the cast to be at their best. “We have a resident director with us on tour, so every day we have notes from the director, the dance captain and the musical director to keep up in check. It’s a really tight show,” she says.
“It looks stunning too: a simple set, but so effective, beautifully lit, and the costumes are out of this world, with everyone working so hard for all the quick changes.”
Ironically, Sally Ann’s character has only one costume. “Though I do get to wear a pink pleather coat with fur collar,” she says. “It’s rather fabulous, with a scarf underneath that you only see a little of – but it’s a Dior scarf. There’s been no expense spared in this show.”
Sally Ann is best known for playing Jenny Bradley in Coronation Street, first from 1986 to 1991, then a brief return in 1993 before coming back as a regular from 2015 to 2025.
How did she feel when she recorded her final episode last autumn? “By that point, I felt excited for what was next,” she says. “I’d had a very, very fortunate time, starting my career at 15, then had a long gap when I went off and learnt my trade on stage and had my children as well – they’re 27 and 25 now.
“When I went back in 2015, it was supposed to be a short stint, but when they asked me to stay, I did. But there came a time when Jenny lost the love of her life three times in three years – Johnny in 2021, Leo in 2022 and Stephen, the serial killer, in 2023. Three years on the trot!
“It kind of got to the point where other actors were saying, ‘please don’t put me with her’ – and she’d been held up at gunpoint four times at the Rovers. It kind of felt like a natural end when it came. Jenny had been through so much, she needed a break.”
Here & Now, The Steps Musical, Grand Opera House, York, February 10 to 15, Tuesday to Saturday, 7.30pm; Wednesday and Saturday, 2.30pm; Sunday, 3pm. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.
