
The 2025 Curse of Corrie – how the soap's stars have suffered heartbreaking splits this year
From budget cuts to episode axes to a major cast cull, the show has found itself in the spotlight for mostly the wrong reasons this year.
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But it isn't just on-screen where things have been going from bad to worse.
Beyond the cobbles, the stars of the show have also been dealing with their own personal heartbreaks.
It appears to be the year of off-screen splits for the Weatherfield lot too with many of the show's cast calling it a day with their beloved partners.
From sirens of years gone past to current fan favourites on the show, it's been a pretty heartbreaking year for the stars of soap.
The Sun takes a look at some of the Corrie's casts shock splits and what drove them to breaking point in their once solid romances.
Katie McGlynn
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Sinead Tinker actress Katie McGlynn left her fans stunned when she was revealed to be in a relationship with forgotten The Only Way Is Essex star, Ricky Rayment.
This week, it was confirmed that Katie, who started dating former reality star Ricky after meeting on a cruise ship in 2023, had decided to call time on their romance, despite the couple sparking engagement rumours last February.
They quietly began to remove traces of each other from their social media before their split was revealed by the MailOnline.
One source said: "Katie and Ricky have ended their romance, they're still friends and want to remain civil but in terms of a romantic relationship, it's definitely over."
They added that they found it "difficult" to maintain a long distance relationship, with Katie in Manchester and Ricky in Essex.
Ex-Coronation Street & Strictly star 'headed for divorce' after just two years as she deletes husband from social media
Ricky, who was previously engaged to Marnie Simpson, rose to fame on the ITV reality show in 2012 before leaving 10 years ago.
Georgia May Foote
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Another former soap actress who has been facing a heartbreaking battle is Katy Armstrong star Georgia May Foote.
The Sun told earlier this week how the actress was headed for divorce with her husband Kris Evans just two years on from their intimate wedding ceremony.
Georgia has removed her wedding ring and wiped all traces of the musician who she once called her 'best friend' from her Instagram page — including glossy snaps from their wedding.
A source told The Sun: 'Georgia's marriage to Kris seems to be over.
'It's on the rocks.
'She's looking to the future and is surrounded by friends and her family.'
Despite the split, the pair are understood to still be living together as they figure out their next steps amid the split.
A source admitted that the pair were happy enough to still be living together but Georgia isn't sure that Kris fits into her life moving forward following a devastating fire at her nail salon.
The actress opened the salon amid struggles to find acting work and financial hardship.
She is now aiming to crowdfund to raise cash in the wake of her split and the business burning down.
Georgia Taylor
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At the start of the year, it was revealed that Toyah Battersby actress Georgia Taylor had split from her co-star lover.
Whilst on-screen, Toyah enjoyed an on-off marriage with husband, Imran Habeeb, away from screens, actress Georgia was dating her on-screen husband's actor in real life - Charlie de Melo.
The 44-year-old had been romancing the soap hunk since late 2022 - just months after Charlie's character was killed off the soap and their pretend marriage crumbled.
However, it is thought that the pair quietly called it quits in late 2024 before the news was made public in January of this year.
A friend revealed: 'Georgia and Charlie are no longer a couple, but they remain friends who care about each other deeply.
'They have lots of happy memories together, but are both really focused on work at the moment and looking forward to the future, there are no hard feelings.'
Charlie's character was killed off in June 2022 when he died of a heart attack, leaving millions of Corrie viewers in tears.
Georgia said at the time she was heartbroken by Charlie's decision to leave the ITV show.
Speaking in 2022, she said: 'I absolutely adore him. He's been a dream.
"He's so funny so we laugh a lot but he is honestly one of the most supportive people I have ever worked with."
Shortly after Georgia's gushing comments, they found themselves starting a romance in real life.
Tina O'Brien
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Sarah Platt actress Tina was left nursing her own heartbreak earlier this year when it was revealed she had split from her husband, Adam Crofts.
It is understood the pair called it quits at the top of the year following a stressful house move.
The 41-year-old soap actress decided it would be better for them to live apart after wishing to spend some time alone.
They both quickly ditched their wedding rings and decided to unfollow each other online.
However, sources insisted they were "still close" and would remain so for the sake of their son, Beau.
Tina and Adam started dating in 2011 before marrying on New Year's Eve in Manchester in 2018.
Corrie cash crisis: shock exits for 2025
ITV bosses are locked in a battle to save the cash-strapped soap.
This means that a number of stars have either been axed from or have abandoned the long-running serial drama.
Colson Smith - Craig Tinker
The character of Craig Tinker has been axed by bosses after 14 years. After he was told of the news in Autumn 2024, Colson Smith confirmed that would be written out of the show with scenes to air later this year. Craig's on-screen mum, Beth Tinker, also left the show in the summer when actress Lisa George was written out from the role.
Sue Cleaver - Eileen Grimshaw
After 25 years playing Eileen Grimshaw, former I'm A Celebrity campmate Sue Cleaver will quit the show. The Sun on Sunday reported in January that she's already begun to film her exit scenes. However the character will not be killed off in case Sue opts to make a return in the future.
Luca Toolan - Mason Radcliffe
Bosses decided to axe the teenage character after just 16 months after he first joined the show. Recent scenes saw Mason stabbed by his criminal brothers after his pal Dylan brought a knife in an attempt to defend him.
Sue Devaney - Debbie Webster
In November 2024, we revealed that Debbie Webster is set to be killed off after 40 years on the cobbles. The character will die as part of a heartbreaking long-running dementia storyline.
Charlotte Jordan - Daisy Midgeley
The actress became the fifth star to leave Coronation Street in just one month. We revealed that she will bow out of the ITV soap later this year after four years on-screen. Charlotte told sources that she's hungry to see what other opportunities await.
Shelley King - Yasmeen Metcalfe
The actress has played Yasmeen Metcalfe on the cobbles for the past 11 years and we revealed in January that she finished filming her final scenes. This follows the departure of her on-screen partner Stu Carpenter.
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There is another part of the same story, centred on a slew of 20th-century politicians and cultural figures who believed that learning-disabled people – and disabled people in general – were not just pitiful and wretched, but a threat to humanity's future, an idea expressed in the absurd non-science of eugenics. They included that towering brute Winston Churchill, DH Lawrence (who had visions of herding disabled people into 'a lethal chamber as big as the Crystal Palace'), and lots of people thought of as progressives: Bertrand Russell, HG Wells, George Bernard Shaw, John Maynard Keynes, the one-time Labour party chair Harold Laski, and the trailblazing intellectuals Sidney and Beatrice Webb. Their credo of pure and strong genes may have been discredited by the defeat of the Nazis, but we should not kid ourselves that everyday manifestations of loathing and condescension that underlay those ideas do not linger on. Ours is the age of such scandals as the one that erupted in 2011 at Winterbourne View, the 'assessment and treatment unit' in Gloucestershire, where people with learning disabilities were left out in freezing weather, had mouthwash poured into their eyes and were given cold showers as a punishment. The year 2013 saw the death in an NHS unit of Connor Sparrowhawk, the autistic and learning-disabled young man whose life was dramatised by Unwin in a profoundly political play titled Laughing Boy, based on a brilliantly powerful book written by Sparrowhawk's mother, Sara Ryan. As well as its principal character's life and death, it highlighted the fact that the health trust that ran the unit in question was eventually found to have not properly investigated the 'unexpected' deaths of more than 1,000 people with learning disabilities or mental-health issues. Right now, about 2,000 learning-disabled and autistic people are locked away in completely inappropriate and often inhumane facilities, usually under the terms of mental health legislation. Only 5% of learning-disabled people are reckoned to have a job. Six out of 10 currently die before the age of 65, compared with one out of 10 for people from the general population. But this is also a time of growing learning-disabled self-advocacy, which will hopefully begin to make change unavoidable. One small example: at this year's Glastonbury, I chaired a discussion about the cuts to disability benefits threatened by the political heirs of Laski and the Webbs. The speakers onstage included Ady Roy, a learning-disabled activist who is involved in My Life My Choice, a brilliant organisation that aims at a world 'where people with a learning disability are treated without prejudice and are able to have choice and control over their own lives'. He was inspirational, but it would be good to arrive at a point where what he did was completely unremarkable. It may sound a little melodramatic, but it is also true: such people, and allies like Unwin, are at the cutting-edge of human liberation. Far too many others may not have the same grim ideas as Woolf, Lawrence, Keynes and all the rest, but their unawareness and neglect sit somewhere on the same awful continuum. That only highlights an obvious political fact that all of us ought to appreciate as a matter of instinct: that the present and future will only be different if we finally understand the past. John Harris is a Guardian columnist