Thursday, 6 November 2025
Wednesday, 5 November 2025
The Butler ...

A butler is a domestic worker in a large household. In great houses, the household is sometimes divided into departments with the butler in charge of the dining room, wine cellar, and pantry. Some also have charge of the entire parlour floor, and housekeepers caring for the entire house and its appearance. A butler is usually male, and in charge of male servants, while a housekeeper is usually a woman, and in charge of female servants. Traditionally, male servants (such as footmen) were rarer and therefore better paid and of higher status than female servants. The butler, as the senior male servant, has the highest servant status.
In modern houses where the butler is the most senior worker, titles such as majordomo, butler administrator, house manager, manservant, staff manager, chief of staff, staff captain, estate manager and head of household staff are sometimes given. The precise duties of the employee will vary to some extent in line with the title given, but perhaps more importantly in line with the requirements of the individual employer. In the grandest homes or when the employer owns more than one residence, there is sometimes an estate manager of higher rank than the butler.
The word "butler" comes from the Old French bouteleur (cup bearer), from bouteille (bottle), and ultimately from Latin. The role of the butler, for centuries, has been that of the chief steward of a household, the attendant entrusted with the care and serving of wine and other bottled beverages which in ancient times might have represented a considerable portion of the household's assets.In Britain, the butler was originally a middle-ranking member of the staff of a grand household. In the 17th and 18th centuries, the butler gradually became the senior, usually male, member of a household's staff in the very grandest households. However, there was sometimes a steward who ran the outside estate and financial affairs, rather than just the household, and who was senior to the butler in social status into the 19th century. Butlers used to always be attired in a special uniform, distinct from the livery of junior servants, but today a butler is more likely to wear a business suit or business casual clothing and appear in uniform only on special occasions.A Silverman or Silver Butler has expertise and professional knowledge of the management, secure storage, use and cleaning of all silverware, associated tableware and other paraphernalia for use at military and other special functions
Butlers were head of a strict service hierarchy and therein held a position of power and respect. They were more managerial than "hands on"—more so than serving, they officiated in service. For example, although the butler was at the door to greet and announce the arrival of a formal guest, the door was actually opened by a footman, who would receive the guest's hat and coat. Even though the butler helped his employer into his coat, this had been handed to him by a footman. However, even the highest-ranking butler would "pitch in" when necessary, such as during a staff shortage, to ensure that the household ran smoothly, although some evidence suggests this was so even during normal times.
Tuesday, 4 November 2025
‘I knew I needed help. I knew it was over’ / alcoholism, anger, Academy Awards – and 50 years of sobriety
‘I knew I
needed help. I knew it was over’
alcoholism,
anger, Academy Awards – and 50 years of sobriety
Anthony
Hopkins
The big
interview
‘I knew I
needed help. I knew it was over’: Anthony Hopkins on alcoholism, anger, Academy
Awards – and 50 years of sobriety
As the
actor approaches his 90th year and publishes an autobiography, he reflects on
his early years on stage, being inspired by Laurence Olivier, becoming a
Hollywood star and conquering his demons
Steve
Rose
Mon 3 Nov
2025 05.00 GMT
‘What’s
the weather like over there?” asks Anthony Hopkins as soon as our video call
begins. He may have lived in California for decades but some Welshness remains,
in his distinctive, mellifluous voice – perhaps a little hoarser than it once
was – and his preoccupation with the climate. It’s a dark evening in London but
a bright, sunny morning in Los Angeles, and Hopkins is equally bright in
demeanour and attire, sporting a turquoise and green shirt. “I came here 50
years ago. Somebody said: ‘Are you selling out?’ I said: ‘No, I just like the
climate and to get a suntan.’ But I like Los Angeles. I’ve had a great life
here.”
It hasn’t
been all that great recently, actually. In January this year, Hopkins’ house in
Pacific Palisades was destroyed by the wildfires. “It was a bit of a calamity,”
he says, with almost cheerful understatement. “We’re thankful that no one was
hurt, and we got our cats and our little family into the clear.” He wasn’t
there at the time; he and his wife, Stella, were in Saudi Arabia, where he was
hosting a concert of his own music played by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.
They’re now in a rented house in the nearby neighbourhood of Brentwood. “We
lost everything, but you think: ‘Oh well, at least we are alive.’ I feel sorry
for the thousands of people who have been really affected. People who were way
past retirement age, and had worked hard over the years and now … nothing.”
Hopkins
will be 88 this December, but clearly doesn’t consider himself past retirement
age. As a two-time Oscar-winner, a knight of the realm, a fixture of pop
culture and one of the most revered actors alive, he has an embarrassment of
laurels to rest on, but there’s still plenty on his schedule. He’s just
finished a movie with Guy Ritchie, for whom he has a newfound admiration –
“He’s precise in what he wants to see” – and he’s coming back to Britain soon,
he says, to make a new movie with Richard Eyre (The Housekeeper, about Daphne
du Maurier), then another one in Wales.
Nor is he
too old to move with the times. On a recent Instagram video, he put on one of
Kim Kardashian’s much-ridiculed Skims face wraps and channelled Hannibal
Lecter. “Hello, Kim. I’m already feeling 10 years younger,” he announces to the
camera, followed by Lecter’s trademark sinister lisping-slurping action. “Fun,
wasn’t it?” he says, laughing. Kardashian told him she thought it was
hilarious, he says.
But
recently Hopkins has also been looking back, too – at his whole life. His new
memoir, We Did OK, Kid, is far from your stereotypical luvvie memoir, partly
because Hopkins is far from your typical luvvie – even if he does cross paths
with past greats such as Laurence Olivier, Peter O’Toole, Katharine Hepburn and
Richard Burton – but mainly because he’s surprisingly upfront about his often
troubled early life. When he describes his childhood in the Welsh town of Port
Talbot, the only son of a family of bakers, it feels like a different planet.
“My father had that attitude: stop whining, stop complaining, you don’t know
what you’re talking about, stand up straight, get on with it!” His father was
also prone to depression and anxiety, Hopkins says. It was wartime and postwar
Britain; life was just like that.
By his
own account, the young Hopkins comes across as a bit of a loner and an oddball.
He had few friends, was frequently bullied and wouldn’t even go to his own
birthday parties. He showed so little promise at school, one teacher told him
he was “a brainless carthorse”. “I was living in my imagination, my dream
world, I suppose,” he says. “I couldn’t understand anything intellectually or
academically and that drove me into a kind of loneliness and resentment.” He
retreated behind a mask of insolence, “a tough stance and a cold remoteness”,
and that became his identity. Perhaps, in a way, he was already acting?
“Yes,
yes, I think I was,” he says. “The only way I could protect myself was, if I
got a slap across the head from a school teacher, I’d stare them out and I’d
defy them. I wouldn’t react at all.” You can almost picture a young Hannibal
Lecter doing the same.
His
despairing parents had all but written him off, but he told them: “One day,
I’ll show you,” he says. “I discovered that I had one small gift: I could
remember things.” He was an avid reader, and easily retained facts, figures,
whole poems and speeches from plays.
An early
epiphany in terms of acting was seeing Olivier’s film adaptation of Hamlet at
school in 1949, when he was 12. “I was shocked by my reaction,” he says. “I
don’t know what it was about that, but it made such a punch in my head, hearing
Shakespeare for the first time.” He started memorising speeches from Hamlet and
Julius Caesar. His parents were amazed. (Decades later, his father, on his
deathbed, asked Hopkins to recite Hamlet for him.)
Hopkins
even goes as far as wondering if he has Asperger’s or some other form of
autism. As well as his memory, he details behaviour such as repeating words
obsessively and a “lack of emotionality”. He has never sought a professional
assessment. “My wife, Stella, she diagnosed me. She said: ‘Well, you’re
obsessive. Everything has to be laid out perfectly.’ I have to have everything
arranged. So that’s a little twist in the brain, I suppose. But I’m quite happy
with whatever inner disturbance I have.”
Hopkins’
memory is the foundation of his acting, he says. He reads his scripts 100 or
200 times, so every line is etched into his memory before he turns up on set.
It started as a protection mechanism when he was a young actor, but it’s become
his technique. “That was my gift, really: to know the part so well that I had
no fear. Once you know the script, you have a relaxation to go on stage in
rehearsal, so you can hear the other person. The art of acting, I think, is to
be able to listen.”
In 1964,
15 years after being transfixed by Olivier’s Hamlet, Hopkins found himself
auditioning in front of the man himself to join London’s National Theatre
(cheekily, he did Othello, a role Olivier had recently made his own, albeit in
blackface). He considers Olivier his mentor. “He gave me this huge break in my
life. He seemed to admire my physical strength, because I had that in me, and I
had this sense of Welsh danger, you know, quick-tempered.” He didn’t really get
along with the English middle-class chumminess of the British theatre-world,
though – the “kissy-smoochy-darling stuff”, as he puts it. “I’ve never felt
comfortable with that.”
One area
where he did find common ground – far too much of it – was alcohol. “Drinking
was a family tradition,” he says. It was a theatre tradition, too. This was the
era of “angry young men” epitomised by John Osborne’s Look Back in Anger
(Hopkins had been riveted seeing Peter O’Toole’s version in 1957), and of
legendary, hard-drinking “hell-raisers” like O’Toole, Oliver Reed, Richard
Burton and Richard Harris. Did he fit that description?
“Yes,
yes, I did. I would not be trusted, and I would have fights and quarrel with,
especially, directors. Looking back, it’s all paranoia. They were trying to do
their job; I was trying to do mine, but I couldn’t take any … it wasn’t
criticism, I couldn’t take any authoritative bullying. So I’d lash out.” He
would often get into physical fights in pubs, too.
The week
before Hopkins’ first marriage, to fellow actor Petronella Barker in 1966, he
impulsively quit the National because of one such director, declaring he was
giving up acting. He recalls his colleagues getting sloshed at the wedding
reception then heading off to perform in the afternoon matinee. He used to do
the same. “Oh yeah, it was terrible. You used to be on stage and not know where
you were or why you were there, adding 10 minutes to the play.”
It was
just the done thing, he says. “Yeah, we are rebels. We can fight. Who cares
about the establishment? When you’re growing up, it’s healthy to want to punch
out and be rebellious and survive. And it was a bit of fun, I thought. But I
remember thinking one day: ‘Yeah, and it’s going to kill you as well.’”
It
certainly took many of his contemporaries. By the mid-70s, even as his career
was going places, Hopkins’ drinking and heavy smoking were taking a toll on his
health – and his relationships. In 1969, after two years of marriage marked by
rows, depression and a lot of whisky, he walked out on Barker and their
one-year-old daughter, Abigail. He describes it as “the saddest fact of my
life, and my greatest regret, and yet I feel absolutely sure that it would have
been much worse for everyone if I’d stayed”. He and Barker divorced in 1972.
The real
wake-up call came in December 1975, in LA. He woke up one morning to find his
car missing, and called his agent to tell him. “Nobody stole it,” his agent
replied. “We found you on the road.” Hopkins had driven all night from Arizona
to Beverly Hills, about 500 miles, blackout drunk. “I was insane, I was nuts, I
couldn’t remember half the journey,” he says. “And that’s a deadly way to live,
because I didn’t care about myself. I could have taken out an entire family … I
knew I needed help, I knew it was over.”
The way
he narrates it, a literal voice in his head asked him if he wanted to live or
die. He replied: “‘I want to live,’ and the voice said, ‘It’s all over now. You
can start living.’” He went straight to Alcoholics Anonymous. Afterwards, “I
got out on the street, 11am, 29 December 1975, and everything looked different.
Everything seemed sunnier, everything seemed more … benign. No threat in the
air.”
He
doesn’t go as far as to claim it was God that spoke to him, but it was “a
moment of clarity”, he says, “from deep inside here [he points to his head] or
here [he points to his heart].” He has never craved a drink since. “We all have
that power within us, and we choose our lives and navigate through that kind of
… inspiration, I suppose it is.”
By this
stage Hopkins was living and working more and more in the US, and in cinema. “I
just wanted some sunshine, and I didn’t want to be standing around in wrinkled
tights holding a spear for the rest of my life,” he jokes. It was his hero
O’Toole who had first coaxed him on to a movie set, in 1968. He knocked on
Hopkins’ dressing room door at the National one day and said, “I want you to do
a test for me,” Hopkins says. “He’d had a few jars, and we went to the pub
afterwards.”
Monday, 3 November 2025
Brasserie Lipp, a living legend
On 27
October 1880, Léonard Lipp and his wife Pétronille opened the brasserie on the
Boulevard Saint-Germain. Their speciality was a cervelat rémoulade starter,
then choucroute garnie, served with the finest beers. The brasserie's
atmosphere and its modest prices made it a great success. Anti-German sentiment
during the First World War led to a change of name to Brasserie des Bords for
several years. Of Alsatian origin, Lipp left Alsace when it became part of
Germany.
In July
1920, the bougnat (Paris immigrant) Marcellin Cazes redesigned the brasserie,
which had become frequented by poets such as Paul Verlaine and Guillaume
Apollinaire. He decorated it with tiled murals by Léon Fargues, with painted
ceilings by Charly Garrey, and purple moleskin seating. In 1955, Cazes passed
the baton to his son Roger.
On 29
October 1965, Mehdi Ben Barka, a Moroccan anti-monarchist politician opposed to
King Hassan II, was abducted by the Moroccan Secret Service in front of the
brasserie, probably with the help of the French. The 'Ben Barka Affair' became
a political scandal which fundamentally changed France–Morocco relations.
Since
1990, the brasserie has been progressively developed by the Bertrand family of
Auvergne, owners of the Angelina tea house, of fast food chain Bert's, and of
the Sir Winston pub chain.
More than
a restaurant, it's a true Parisian legend.
Founded
in 1880 by two Alsatians, Léonard and Pétronille Lipp, Brasserie Lipp has been
a staple of the chic Saint Germain district for 140 years.
Everything
is in its original form.
The
sumptuous Art Nouveau decor earned it a historic monument designation in 1989,
and especially the menu, unchanged for over 60 years! Here, traditional cuisine
is served, according to a fixed weekly schedule; otherwise, regulars revolt:
pepper steak on Mondays, veal blanquette on Tuesday evenings, or cassoulet on
Thursdays.
Another
tradition: the clock is set ahead exactly seven minutes! Why? Is that how long
it takes for members of parliament to get to the National Assembly?
We'll
follow Pascal Jounault, the chef, as he tries to change two recipes without
incurring the wrath of the celebrities and politicians who know him well. The
first maître d'hôtel, who is also a physiognomist and who decides as soon as a
guest walks in the door whether they deserve to stay on the ground floor or
send them to "purgatory," meaning the first floor, where it's always
too hot or always too cold.
His head
waiters, who are numbered from 1 to 27 according to their seniority, and who
argue very often. And finally, Cindy, the oldest member of staff in the
establishment, who takes care of the evening cloakroom.
- Arrival of Luc, the first maître d'hôtel, arriving at 8 a.m. at the brasserie and starting by filling out his forms for the seating plan; Interview with Luc Pignon
- Preparation by Frédéric Gindre, head waiter donning a log jacket
- Pascal Jounault, head chef, explains that he doesn't change the recipes or daily specials
- Followed by Christian Leprette, a Lipp customer, walking through Saint Germain des Prés
- Marc Cerrone, a VIP customer, at his table
- Delivery of products including sauerkraut, 100-day-old chicken, Petrossian marinated herring, Joel Dupuch oysters, and reception by Pascal Jounault; the latter shows us the storerooms and the second kitchen in the basement
- Jauffrey Beauclair, director of the Brasserie, shows us the wooden revolving door and the three dining rooms "Paradis", "Purgatoire" and "Enfer"
- Luc tells us the story of the tables: Belmondo's No. 1, Picasso's No. 39, Lovers' No. 8
- Luc choosing the wrong table when seating Michel Lafon; Bruno Lemaire sitting at a table
- All clocks set forward 7 minutes, the time needed to reach the National Assembly
- Pascal visiting the butcher shop of Jean-Baptiste Bissonnet, official supplier to the Élysée Palace; Visiting the carcasses in the cold room, pierced by Rolling Stones music
- Louis Giscard d'Estaing and Alain Pompidou tasting the new veal blanquette
- Interview with Cindy Doniguian, cloakroom manager, making trips to the basement
- Followed by Patrice Le Cudennec, maître d'hôtel this Saturday
- Interview with Marie-Françoise and Monique, long-time customers
"
Sunday, 2 November 2025
Why Vienna’s coffee houses are a real institution! | Cheers & Chats Ep. 1
The Top 6
traditional coffee houses in Vienna
You can
get coffee everywhere nowadays. But real Viennese coffee house culture can only
be found in Vienna. It's about more than coffee – it's about an attitude
towards life. Let's dive into the old Viennese world of Melange, Buchteln and
living history.
Viennese
coffee house culture: sometimes in company, sometimes alone, never too many
changes and always a really good coffee and a delicious pastry at a
marble-topped table. This is where the Viennese can still be Viennese, and
guests can dive into that unadulterated Viennese attitude towards life for a
couple of hours.
Sometimes,
the Viennese are right to shun change. In an age when everything is moving
faster and faster, it's good to find a few things that endure and never change.
Vienna's coffee houses among them. UNESCO takes the same view and added
Viennese coffee house culture to its list of intangible cultural heritage in
2011.
Dive into
Viennese coffee house culture
Anyone
who has ever experienced the unique atmosphere of a Viennese coffee house
understands that only too well. History comes alive here. The air is heavy with
the aroma of fresh coffee and enticing cakes, tarts and strudels. Newspapers
rustle, guests talk excitedly about God and the world. Perhaps the busy author
at the adjacent table is working on his next bestseller novel. Yet where can
all this be experienced with particular intensity? We present six of the best
traditional Viennese coffee houses to you here.
Café
Jelinek
Our first
stop is at Café Jelinek. Slightly tucked away, just off Mariahilfer Strasse,
it's the perfect place to escape from the hustle and bustle of shopping for a
few moments. This little café offers everything that Viennese coffee house
culture is known for. Most things here have remained unchanged for decades. The
wrought iron woodburner, excellent coffee, free newspapers and many sweet
temptations give Café Jelinek a very special charm. Our insider tip: the
home-made guglhupf cake.
Café
Jelinek
Otto-Bauer-Gasse
5, 1060 Wien
+43 1 597
41 13
http://cafejelinek.steman.at/
Opening
times
Café
Sperl
Halfway
between Mariahilfer Strasse and Vienna's famous Naschmarkt, we go on a journey
through time in Café Sperl. It has been synonymous for Viennese coffee house
culture since 1880. At Café Sperl, time seems to have stood still. Little about
the furnishings has changed since it opened. Whether a cozy cup of coffee with
a slice of original Sperl Torte or at one of the billiard tables, Café Sperl is
perfectly suited for a short break in old Vienna.
Café
Sperl
Gumpendorfer
Straße 11, 1060 Wien
+43 1 586
41 58
melange@cafesperl.at
http://www.cafesperl.at
Opening
times
Café
Hawelka
Not far
from Stephansplatz is one of Vienna's most legendary cafés. It's distinctive
charm has made Café Hawelka a popular meeting place for famous peoples from the
worlds of art and culture, such as Hans Moser, Udo Jürgens or Andy Warhol. The
Hawelkas spent decades creating a real Viennese institution. What did Leopold
Hawelka say so well? "I wouldn't be Hawelka without my wife." And it
wouldn't be Café Hawelka without her famous Buchteln. The sweet aroma of these
delicious, jam-filled leavened dough treats is an experience on its own.
Café
Hawelka
Dorotheergasse
6, 1010 Wien
+43 1 512
82 30
office@hawelka.at
http://www.hawelka.at
Opening
times
Café Korb
Café
Korb, also near Stephansplatz, has welcomed guests through its doors since
1904. Breakfast is served here all day long, as is a fantastic Wiener
schnitzel. Café Korb is famous for its Artlounge. Several artists designed this
special room. The Artlounge forms an artistic and modern antithesis in the
midst of a classical coffee house environment. Another eye-catcher in Café Korb
are the many pictures from the life of the owner – the glittering actress and
performance artist Susanne Widl.
Café Korb
Brandstätte
9, 1010 Wien
+43 1 533
72 15
http://www.cafekorb.at/
Opening
times
Café
Schwarzenberg
Café
Schwarzenberg has always been one of the most popular places to meet among
Vienna's coffee houses. It is Vienna's oldest Ringstrasse café, whose charm can
be felt in all corners of the place. In 1980, Café Schwarzenberg almost became
a car dealership, but the future mayor, Helmut Zilk, was just able to stop this
happening. The result: You can still experience the special flair of the old
Ringstrasse café today and enjoy traditional coffee and tea specialties with a
wonderful slice of cake.
Café
Schwarzenberg
Kärntner
Ring 17, 1010 Wien
+43 1 512
89 98
office@cafe-schwarzenberg.at
http://www.cafe-schwarzenberg.at
Opening
times
Café
Central
The
crowning finale is a visit to Café Central on Herrengasse. Since 1876, this
Viennese coffee house in Palais Ferstel has exuded a very special ambience. The
magnificent inner courtyard in the Venetian style, the excellent patisserie,
and the pleasant piano music make every visit an experience. In addition to
various coffee specialties, the café's guests enjoy the delicious classics of
Viennese cuisine such as Tafelspitz (fillet of boiled beef), Wiener schnitzel
and Kaiserschmarrn (sugared pancake strips).
Café
Central
Herrengasse/Strauchgasse,
1010 Wien
+43 1 533
37 63 24
cafe.central@palaisevents.at
https://www.cafecentral.wien
Saturday, 1 November 2025
Fawlty Towers actor Prunella Scales dies aged 93
The
accomplished classical actress had a perfect ear and the ability to
effortlessly pull off demanding jokes. Her performance as Sybil alongside John
Cleese in Fawlty Towers was one of sitcoms’ finest
Mark
Lawson
Tue 28
Oct 2025 15.28 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2025/oct/28/prunella-scales-tribute-sybil-fawlty-towers
Prunella
Scales portrayed two of Britain’s greatest monarchs on TV: Queen Victoria and
Queen Elizabeth II. She was the first dramatic actor to play the latter on
television, and won a Bafta nomination for doing so.
However,
Scales, who has died aged 93, knew that public memory of her would be shaped by
another woman. One who made those two royals look powerless – the self-declared
domestic and hospitality industry empress, Sybil Fawlty, wife of Basil, owner
of the worst hotel in Torquay in Fawlty Towers, in which she co-starred with
John Cleese, who also co-wrote with Connie Booth.
Though
occupying only a few months of work in a seven-decade career that stretched
from Lydia Bennet in a 1952 BBC Pride and Prejudice to a cameo in ITV’s The
Royal (2011), the dozen episodes of the 1975 and 1979 series of Fawlty Towers
have achieved rerun immortality. They have become a template for perfection in
sitcom writing and performances, including Scales’s.
In naming
the character, Cleese brought into play the classical associations of various
Sybils with prophecy, longevity, guarding the gates of hell and, above all,
inducing terror in mortal men. Especially effective at the last of these,
Scales, an accomplished classical stage actor, knowingly channelled these
mythical women.
Sybil
cowed her husband with what might be called a Basilisk stare. The single word
of another character’s name might not seem the most promising basis for a
national catchphrase, but Scales created one from “Basil!”. All professional
impressionists and many amateur ones at pubs and bus stops soon had it in their
repertoire.
Scales
was especially skilful in the elasticity of her delivery. Sometimes she barked
so hard and fast that “Basil” seemed to have only one syllable. But elongating
words like an opera singer gave Sybil another of her signature tics: the
gossipy, “Oh, I knoooooow!”, that would punctuate phone calls to unseen
friends. Further evidence of her perfect ear came when Basil was given a line
about Sybil’s laugh sounding like “someone machine-gunning a seal.” It de facto
became a demanding stage direction for Scales – which she pulled off
effortlessly.
At script
meetings these days, there would be concerns about the characterisation of
Sybil being misogynistic or a stereotypical henpecker, and Cleese has said that
the first script was rejected by the BBC partly on the grounds that it depicted
a standard marital battleground.
In fact,
the Cleese and Booth scripts were part of a trend in TV comedy of that era to
give women strength and agency by dramatising their dominance over feckless
men. Scales’s portrayal won sympathy for Mrs Fawlty by showing the character’s
imperious manner to be a reasonable response to the snivelling idiocies and
deceits of her husband. There was deliberate physical comedy in the 6ft 5in
Cleese shrivelling at the voice of the 5ft 3in Scales.
That
stature made her exactly the right height for Elizabeth II. Her portrayal of
the then current monarch in A Question of Attribution (BBC One, 1991) – adapted
by Alan Bennett from his stage play in which she had appeared at the National
Theatre three years earlier – came with multiple degrees of difficulty.
Some
conservative broadcasting grandees balked at the thought of dramatising a
living monarch, which, outside of comedy lookalikes such as Jeanette Charles,
had long been a taboo in English culture. And whereas theatre is a more
artificial medium, Scales was playing her on TV alongside appearances of the
real Queen on news bulletins and the annual Christmas Day broadcast. Scales,
though, managed to be a spitting image without ever risking seeming like
Spitting Image.
Though
four inches taller than the famously diminutive Victoria, Scales captured
everything else in the 2003 two-hour drama-documentary Looking for Victoria,
directed by Louise Osmond, in which the actor was shown researching her stage
show about the monarch between fictional interludes.
Scales
brought to her screen work comic technique perfected in theatre. But TV also
allowed her to play a choice part that had eluded her on stage: as Marion, a
woman descending into alcoholism across the three successive Christmas Eve
parties depicted in the 1985 BBC One seasonal treat production of Alan
Ayckbourn’s 1972 play, Absurd Personal Singular.
Scales
appeared on screen with her husband, the actor Timothy West, in her last
substantial TV contribution, a long-running Channel 4 travelogue, Great Canal
Journeys (2014-21). The show began happily, with the couple celebrating their
50th wedding anniversary and revisiting honeymoon sites, but became
progressively more poignant as subsequent series were candid about the
diagnosis and progress of Scales’s dementia, becoming the last public service
of a great career in raising awareness of the condition and its management.
Millions
of Britons will have heard the word “Basil!” echoing happily in their heads
today, a tribute to one of many great creations of a consummate comedy
performer.
Fawlty Towers actor Prunella Scales dies aged 93
Actor portrayed Sybil Fawlty and later charmed
viewers with her canal boat journeys alongside husband Timothy West
Hannah J Davies
Tue 28 Oct 2025 16.00 GMT
Prunella Scales, the actor best known for playing
Sybil Fawlty in the classic comedy series Fawlty Towers, has died aged 93.
Scales, who was married to fellow actor Timothy
West , was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease in 2013.
The actor died peacefully at home in London on
Monday, her sons, Samuel and Joseph, said.
A statement to the PA Media news agency said:
“Our darling mother Prunella Scales died peacefully at home in London
yesterday. She was 93.
“Although dementia forced her retirement from a
remarkable acting career of nearly 70 years, she continued to live at home. She
was watching Fawlty Towers the day before she died. Pru was married to Timothy
West for 61 years. He died in November 2024.
“She is survived by two sons and one
stepdaughter, seven grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
“We would like to thank all those who gave Pru
such wonderful care at the end of her life: her last days were comfortable,
contented and surrounded by love.”
Scales, who was born in Surrey in 1932, began her
career as an assistant stage manager for the Bristol Old Vic theatre, having
studied at its associated drama school. Her mother, Catherine, was an actor and
her father, John, was a cotton salesman who loved the theatre. She told the
Guardian in 2009: “Acting was always in the air. But when I got into the
Bristol Old Vic my headmistress wrote to the director and said: ‘Are you sure
this girl should be an actress? We wanted her to try for Cambridge.’ Of course,
this was used as a stick to beat me with for the rest of my training”.
Following a number of film roles, including in a
now-lost screen adaptation of Pride and Prejudice from 1952, Scales broke into
the mainstream in the television sitcom The Marriage Lines, which aired in the
early 1960s, starring alongside Richard Briers. As well as roles in the BBC
Radio 4 adaptation of Rumpole of the Bailey and TV’s Mapp and Lucia, Scales was
best known for playing Sybil Fawlty in the John Cleese and Connie Booth-penned
sitcom Fawlty Towers, in which she appeared between 1975 and 1979. In it,
Scales memorably played the domineering Sybil, the wife of Cleese’s incompetent
hotel boss Basil.
Cleese was among those who paid tribute to Scales
following the news of her death. In a statement, he said: “How very sad. Pru
was a really wonderful comic actress. I’ve recently been watching a number of
clips of Fawlty Towers whilst researching a book. Scene after scene she was
absolutely perfect.”
He added: “She was a very sweet lady, who spent a
lot of her life apologising. I used to tease her about it. I was very, very
fond of her.”
Scales also portrayed Queen Elizabeth II in Alan
Bennett’s A Question of Attribution – for which she earned a BAFTA nomination
in 1992 – and appeared in adverts for the supermarket Tesco for 10 years from
1995, playing a demanding shopper, Dotty.
Between 2014 and 2019, Scales and West presented
Channel 4’s Great Canal Journeys, which followed the couple on a series of
canal and narrowboat journeys across the UK and Europe, and later further
afield. In the final series of the programme, West said that Scales’s condition
had worsened in recent times, and that she was also losing her hearing.
Downing Street passed on its condolences to
Scales’ family, with Keir Starmer’s official spokesperson saying she was “a
part of the golden era for British comedy, someone whose talent was beamed into
people’s homes over many years”.
The broadcaster Gyles Brandreth remembered her as
“a funny, intelligent, interesting, gifted human being”, while Jon Petrie, the
director of comedy at the BBC, called her “a national treasure whose brilliance
as Sybil Fawlty lit up screens and still makes us laugh today”.
Corinne Mills, the interim chief executive at the
Alzheimer’s Society, said: “We are deeply saddened by the news that Prunella
Scales – a true British icon – has died.
“Prunella was an inspiration not just for her
achievements on screen, but because she spoke so openly about living with
dementia, shining an important light on the UK’s biggest killer.
“We are profoundly grateful for the awareness she
helped to raise and send our heartfelt condolences to her loved ones.”










