Jase Dyer

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EastEnders character
Jase Dyer
Portrayed by Stephen Lord
Created by Diederick Santer
Duration 2007—
First appearance 19 July 2007
Profile
Status Engaged
Home 27 Albert Square
Occupation Carpenter

Jason "Jase" Dyer is a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He is played by Stephen Lord.[1]

[edit] History

Jase is the previously estranged father of Jay Brown. He arrived in Walford in search of his son on 19 July 2007 just as Jay was mooning his grandfather Bert because Jay had called Yolande Trueman a racist name and refused to apologise.

He also appeared to be flirting with Honey Mitchell, and when he needed to wash his clothes, he stripped off to have them cleaned and was confronted by Billy, Honey's husband whom he ended up in a fight with and threw him across the pub.

He helped Roxy Mitchell when she stubbed her toe after chasing Jay because he had sprayed graffiti on The Queen Victoria. On "Fun Day", 26 August 2007, Jase and Jay won the Father and Son race against Ian and Peter Beale. On 14 September Jase threatened Max Branning because Max's daughter Lauren was bullying Jay, teasing him about his body odour.

On 17 September, while in The Vic, Jase left in a hurry and Billy found a letter dated a week previous about visiting a probation office. Billy then told Yolande and several others in the Square that Jase was a criminal.

On 20 September, Jase and Roxy Mitchell were flirting outside the Minute Mart and ended up walking Jay and Ben to school together. As they walked, Billy gave them dirty looks. Jase and Phil Mitchell were later arguing about Jase's past and Jase admitted that he had been in prison just as Jay walked in.

On 21 September, Jay was arrested for carving "LIAR" into a bus shelter referring to Jase's lies about where he has been, Jase then collected him from Walford police station and they had an argument at home and Jay stormed out. Jase later sent a text message to his son asking him to come home. Jay texted back "LIAR" and in rage, Jase kicked a mirror in the flat and shouted "Come on then" to his reflection.

During October 2007, Jase met up with his old friend Terry Bates, the leader of a gang who looked after Jase when he was a teenager, and the other members of the gang including Dee and Bird. Jase expressed his wish to no longer be a part of the gang, as he now has a son to look after. In November 2007, Terry's gang raided The Queen Victoria, looking for Jase, who they believed was there on a date with Dawn Swann, however Jase and Dawn had gone back to Dawn's house. Jase saw someone beating Keith Miller and went to the pub to put a stop to it. The gang took Jase into the cellar and beat him. Meanwhile, a nine-months pregnant Honey, who was upstairs, came down and called the police. She then heard something in the cellar and went down and told the gang to leave Jase alone. They attacked Jase again and Honey was knocked onto some empty beer barrels. This caused her placenta to come away from the uterine wall and Jase took Honey to hospital. Billy turned up at the hospital and threatened Jase that if anything happened to Honey or the baby during the birth, he would be a dead man but Honey later revealed to Billy that Jase had helped her to hospital and also said to Phil that if he lay a finger on Jase then she would never forgive him. Later on Terry and Bird turned up outside Jase's flat and Jase was about to hit Terry with a spanner but Phil Mitchell stopped him, the Police turned up and arrested Terry and Bird for the raid. Phil later revealed to Jase that he called the police and said that Jase owed him big. Jase recently had a short relationship with Roxy Mitchell. However, she dumped him because she was fed up that he didn't take a proper interest in her.

On 6 June 2008, he proposed to Dawn, she accepted and they went back home to let the rest of the family know. Jase then went off to work, and it turned out May Wright is the person hes working for.

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Jay's dad arrives in Albert Square", bbc.co.uk. URL last accessed 2007-06-08.

[edit] External links