


The dark angel actress serial#
She moved around a lot, and wherever she went, Cotton exuded charm and confidence – the traits common to many serial killers. Using her good looks and sexual appeal, Cotton embarked on a series of marriages and affairs while having more children. That was not unusual, since child mortality rates were high back then.Įventually, Cotton’s first husband died in 1865. She had grown up poor, a miner’s daughter, and always dreamed of escaping her hard existence.Īt 20, she married a laborer, and they began to have children, most of whom died young. So Cotton – who we first meet in her early 30s – was a rarity. The results of which didn’t look much different from typhoid fever, cholera and scarlet fever, some of the scourges of the era.Įven today, female serial killers are rare. Her choice of execution was less bloody – arsenic in a teapot. With an estimated body count of between 14 and 21, Cotton killed more people than the more notorious Jack the Ripper. “I thought it would fit well having gotten to know them over the years,” says Froggatt. The producer title also allowed her to bring the project to Rebecca Eaton, the executive producer of PBS’ “Masterpiece.” “It was great because Brian and I had worked together, so we had a shorthand,” says Froggatt, a three-time Emmy nominee.

She had been talking to Emmy-winner Brian Percival (“The Book Thief”) who directed a number of “Downton” episodes when she was considering the role of Cotton and would help persuade him to come on board.
