Deborah Sheridan-Taylor looked unrecognisable after unveiling a brand-new career - 27 years after her dramatic on-screen death.
The star is well-known for starring as Saskia Duncan on the soap from December 1998 to February 1999.
Her short-lived but memorable time on the series concluded when her character brutally killed by Steve Owen (played by ).
It determined a crucial plot twist involving the wrongful framing of Matthew Rose (Joe Absolom), with her storyline still considered one of the most epic deaths on the soap.
Yet almost 30 years on from that iconic exit, it seems the London-born actress, 57, has reinvented herself.
Deborah now works as a personal stylist and image consultant, as well as interior designer and even owns her own company.
Deborah Sheridan-Taylor looked unrecognisable after unveiling a brand-new career - 27 years after her dramatic on-screen death
The EastEnders star is well-known for starring as Saskia Duncan on the BBC soap from December 1998 to February 1999, where she appeared for 14 episodes (seen)
Swapping soap tragedies for new beginnings, Deborah now works as a personal stylist and image consultant, as well as interior designer and even owns her own company
Her namesake company, named after her, is called DST Designs, and goes by @dstdesigns on Instagram - where her bio reads: 'STYLIST IMAGE CONSULTANT EVENTS.'
Previously, the soap star has also took off with her interior design passion and appeared on Channel 4's property show Grand Designs back in 2014, where she showed how she transformed her London pad.
One of her most recent social media posts highlighted how her brand is all about 'Refresh. Reconfigure. Reimagine.'
'What if I told you that your wardrobe is already full of possibilities?,' she wrote.
'In this Outfit Building session, I took my client’s existing pieces and completely transformed how she sees and wears them -
'This client has been working with me for about four years now, everything she is wearing has been bought through me, either firsthand or we also shop Preloved for wardrobe enrichment.
'Switching up colour combinations, original thinking, accessories and silhouettes.
'The result? She described it as “a whole new wardrobe!” without buying a single new item.;
Deborah concluded: 'This is the power of strategic styling. If your wardrobe feels uninspired, let’s redefine it together.'




