List of Minor Emmerdale Characters (2004) - Dean Morris

Dean Morris
Emmerdale character
Portrayed by Marc Bolton
Introduced by Steve Frost (2004)
Kathleen Beedles (2009)
Duration 2004–07, 2009
First appearance 21 July 2004
Last appearance 31 March 2009
Classification Former; recurring
Profile
Occupation Foreman

Dean Morris was an employee of the King family. He appeared from 2004 to 2007 and in 2009.

Dean first appears in 2004 and works primarily as their chauffeur. He was one of the most loyal and trusted King employees. He takes Carl King around Romania following his involvement in the accidental death of Paul Marsden, and is forced to lie to Tom, which upsets him, as Tom has helped him on numerous occasions. At one point, false rumours suggest he is having an affair with Charity Tate; a few weeks later, Tom dumps Charity as he believes she has slept with Cain Dingle, and as Dean drives him away from the wedding, Tom apologises for doubting him. Following Tom's death on Christmas Day 2006, Dean carries his coffin at the funeral along with Jimmy, Matthew and Carl. In January 2009, he is a pallbearer at Matthew's funeral, and at the wake talks to Lexi Nicholls about his loyalty to the Kings. The following day Dean brings some of Matthew's effects from the site office to Jimmy and Carl. When they see Rosemary King's name plate, Dean reveals to them that Matthew had dug up her body and crushed it in a rubbish truck. In February 2009, he drives a van to Belgium, not knowing Jimmy and Nicola De Souza are in the back, having just slept together. The following month he attends Carl and Lexi's wedding. This was Dean's last appearance so far and he has not been seen since.

Read more about this topic:  List Of Minor Emmerdale Characters (2004)

Famous quotes containing the words dean and/or morris:

    President Lowell of Harvard appealed to students ‘to prepare themselves for such services as the Governor may call upon them to render.’ Dean Greenough organized an ‘emergency committee,’ and Coach Fisher was reported by the press as having declared, ‘To hell with football if men are needed.’
    —For the State of Massachusetts, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    Without the Empire we should be tossed like a cork in the cross current of world politics. It is at once our sword and our shield.
    —William Morris Hughes (1864–1952)