“Prunella Scales, who starred with John Cleese as the squabbling married co-owners of a quaint seaside hotel on the beloved British sitcom Fawlty Towers, has died. She was 93. Scales died “peacefully at home in London yesterday,” her sons Samuel and Joseph said, the BBC reported. She had battled dementia in recent years. She and her late husband Timothy”, — write: www.hollywoodreporter.com
Scales died “peacefully at home in London yesterday,” her sons Samuel and Joseph said, the BBC reported. She had battled dementia in recent years.
She and late husband Timothy West, a fellow actor whom she married in 1963, hosted the Channel 4 travel series Great Canal Journeys from 2014-17.
On the big screen, the petite British actress portrayed one of Charles Laughton’s daughters in Hobson’s Choice (1954) and one of Peter Sellers’ daughters in Waltz of the Toreadors (1962).
She also made brief appearances in the Oscar best picture nominees Room at the Top (1959) and Howards End (1992) as well as in The Boys From Brazil (1978), The Hound of the Baskervilles (1978), Wolf (1994) and Johnny English (2003).
And she was also known for her stint as Dotty the demanding shopper in a series of Tesco commercials (“Every little helps”) that featured Jane Horrocks as her daughter.
Fawlty Towers aired on BBC2 for only two seasons — one in 1975 and the other in 1979, six half-hour episodes in each — yet in 2000 the British Film Institute voted it the No. 1 British television program of all time.
On the show, Scales’ bossy Sybil Fawlty and Cleese’s dysfunctional Basil Fawlty run a hotel in the town of Torquay in Devon, England. Cleese created and wrote Fawlty Towers with his then-wife Connie Booth, who played Polly the waitress.
Sybil lapses into laziness when things get busy, and much to Basil’s displeasure, spends time consoling her rarely seen friend Audrey (“Oh, I know”) on the phone. She regularly drinks with the guests and has a laugh that “always reminds me of somebody machine-gunning a seal,” her husband tells a hotel guest.
Basil, of course, is far from perfect, a rude, neurotic, accident-prone manager who insults guests, hides his gambling winnings from his wife and organizes an elaborate impersonation of her when his surprise anniversary party backfires.
“The central purpose in having the character of Sybil in the show from the beginning was to give Basil someone to be frightened of,” Cleese once said.
The Monty Python legend originally offered the role of Sybil to Bridget Turner, whom he had seen onstage opposite Tom Courtenay in The Norman Conquestsbut she declined.
At her script reading, Scales asked Cleese why Sybil and Basil would ever marry in the first place. An amused Cleese covered his face with a pillow and said, “Oh God, I was afraid you’d ask me that!”
Scales modeled Sybil after a woman she met when she was 7, she recalled in an undated interview.
“My father came on leave [from the service]and as a treat my parents went to a seaside hotel,” she said. “This lady who ran it used to bend over the table and say, ‘Did you find that tasty, Major? Is that to your liking, Major?’ She had this special manner with the guests.”
Scales was born on June 22, 1932, in Surrey, England. Her mother was an actress; her father, a cotton salesman, served in both World Wars.
She worked as an assistant stage manager at the Bristol Old Vic, then played Lydia Bennet in a 1952 BBC miniseries adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. In the 1960s, Scales appeared on the fabled British soap opera Coronation Street and starred opposite Richard Briers on the BBC husband-and-wife comedy Marriage Lines.
After Fawlty TowersScales starred with Geraldine McEwan as dueling snobs on the London Weekend Television period comedy Mapp & Luciabased on the novels by EF Benson. And on the ITV series After Henryshe played a widow who shares a home with her mother and daughter.
She was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1992.
She and West, who died in November 2024had two children, Joseph and Samuel, an actor with credits including Howards End — he received a BAFTA nomination for that — Notting Hill (1999), Darkest Hour (2017) and the TV series Mr. Selfridge. They survive her.
For her Fawlty Towers character, Scales said she concocted a backstory that had Sybil’s family working as caterers at a small hotel on the South Coast. She happened to be behind the bar one day when a posh Basil, fresh out of the National Service, stopped in for a drink.
“Sybil’s trouble was that, having married out of her class and been fooled by Fawlty’s flannel, she realized, too late, that she had landed with an upper-class twit for a husband,” Scales said in the 2007 book Fawlty Towers: The Story of a Sitcom. “But behind all of Sybil’s apparent disenchantment with Basil, there is still some — just enough — real affection for him, and that is probably what makes her stay.”
Mike Barnes contributed to this report.
