Career
As a child she toured with her musical and comedy artist parents George and Ada (née Worsley) Speed, moving to different schools almost every week. Her debut came to her at the age of three years, as she toddled onstage in a nightdress to sing a song about a golliwog. Two years later, she made her acting debut as the velvet-suited infant Prince of Rome in a Victorian melodrama, called The Royal Divorce.
She then appeared in repertory theatres and in numerous radio plays.
She left acting to work for, amongst others, the Guinness brewery in Manchester, as a clerk. Returning to acting relatively late in life, she had a small role in the 1960 Stanley Baker vehicle Hell Is a City, set in her native Manchester.
She also worked on a 1950s police television series Shadow Squadron She appeared in 1,746 episodes and was one of only a handful of original cast members still appearing in the 1980s.
In 1983, the Daily Mirror published a story revealing that Speed was older than she said she was (though her birth certificate was not printed alongside the story, as is often claimed).
She publicly fainted when she learned the news, while at work on Coronation Street, and was advised to go home to rest. Weeks later, burglars robbed her house while she was asleep. She never returned to the programme.
The stress surrounding the incidents caused her to have a minor breakdown, and she left the show to live the rest of her days in a nursing home, although she made a guest appearance in the 30th anniversary special programme, Happy Birthday Coronation Street in 1990, where she was given a standing ovation.
Her final television appearance was an interview given with actor Ken Farrington (her on-screen son) in 1993. She died in 1994, at the age of 95.
Speed is commemorated by two plaques in her native Manchester: one outside Granada Studios, where she filmed most of her work as Annie Walker, and another at 13 Sibson Road, Chorlton-cum-Hardy, her home for many years.