Doof-Doofs (sometimes: Duff-Duffs) are the drum beats that are used to signify a cliff-hanger at the end of an episode, commonly known as a "Duff Duff moment", for which the camera focuses on the face of the actor receiving the "Duff Duff moment" for around four seconds.
Two documentaries The Greatest Cliffhangers (2010) and 30 Years of Cliffhangers (2015) counted down, which character had the most Duff Duffs'
The sound was actually an accident. Simon May, who composed the piece of music, has revealed that the doofs were originally put in the song as a break between a London-style version and the main part of the tune. He told Inside Soap: "I originally created a longer version of the theme, in which I had a separate section where the EastEnders theme went back in time and was played in a true cockney piano-type style.
"So I asked my drummer, Graham Broad, for a special drum 'fill' to take us from the cockney version back into the main version again. "When [EastEnders creators] Julia [Smith] and Tony [Holland] heard it, they said, 'That's genius – that's the end titles, isn't it?' But it was an accident."
Simon also explained that EastEnders creators actually wanted a "melodic and feel-good" song for the soap, as opposed to the "dark, edgy" tune he composed. "The show was called 'East 8' at that point. We had a delightful conversation," he explained. "I picked up the vibe of it being an edgy, dark show. "So I went back to my studio and wrote an un-cheerful, dark, edgy piece of music. When I went back to play them my work in-progress, Tony and Julia put on their earphones.
"As I pressed the 'play' button, I looked at their faces – and to my horror, they had a kind of glazed expression... "I'd done almost the opposite of what they wanted!"
The Greatest Cliffhangers Count (2010)[]
The 2010 count is up to 25 December 2009.
Episodes with no Doof-Doofs[]
Episodes with no Doof-Doofs, excludes Julia's Theme.
- Note: this is an incomplete list.
- 12 September 1985
- 16 September 1986
- 25 November 1986
- 23 December 1986
- 27 August 1987
- 21 January 1988
- 19 July 1988
- 23 February 1989
- 9 May 1989
- 22 June 1989
- 8 May 1995
- 25 December 1999 - Part 2
- 31 December 1999
- 7 September 2000
- 17 May 2001
- 21 January 2003
- 25 December 2003
- 11 November 2005
- 31 January 2008
- 10 September 2010
- 1 January 2012
- 10 April 2015
- 1 January 2016
- 17 May 2016
- 19 December 2016
- 1 January 2017
- 19 January 2018
- 5 July 2018
- 6 July 2018
- 18 September 2020
- 1 December 2022 - Part 2
- 8 December 2022
- 25 December 2022
- 27 June 2023
- 7 May 2024
- 8 May 2025
- 21 May 2025