LONDON â Actor Prunella Scales, best known as acid-tongued Sybil Fawlty in the classic British sitcom âFawlty Towers,â has died, her children said Tuesday. She was 93 and had lived with dementia for many years.
Scalesâ sons, Samuel and Joseph West, said she died âpeacefully at home in Londonâ on Monday.
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âAlthough dementia forced her retirement from a remarkable acting career of nearly 70 years, she continued to live at home,â her sons said. âShe was watching âFawlty Towersâ the day before she died.â
Scalesâ career included early roles in a 1952 television version of âPride and Prejudiceâ and the 1954 film comedy âHobsonâs Choice,â followed by her TV breakthrough starring opposite Richard Briers in âMarriage Lines,â a popular 1960s sitcom about a newlywed couple.
In âFawlty Towersâ she played the exasperated wife of hapless Basil Fawlty, played by John Cleese, whose efforts to run a seaside hotel inevitably escalated into chaos. Only 12 episodes were made, in 1975 and 1979, but it is regularly cited as one of the funniest sitcoms of all time.
Cleese remembered Scales as âa really wonderful comic actressâ and âa very sweet lady.â
âIâve recently been watching a number of clips of âFawlty Towersâ whilst researching a book," Cleese said in a statement. "Scene after scene she was absolutely perfect.â
Scales also starred as the small-town social powerhouse Elizabeth Mapp in âMapp & Lucia,â a 1985 TV adaptation of E.F. Benson's 1930s series of comic novels.
Later roles included Queen Elizabeth II in âA Question of Attribution,â Alan Bennettâs stage and TV drama about the queenâs art adviser, Anthony Blunt, who was also a Soviet spy. Scales played another British monarch in the one-woman stage show âAn Evening with Queen Victoria.â
Scales was a versatile stage performer whose theater roles ranged from Shakespeare's comedies to the morphine-addicted matriarch Mary Tyrone in a 1991 production of Eugene OâNeillâs âLong Dayâs Journey Into Night.â
But she remained best known for âFawlty Towers.â In 2006, Scales was guest of honor at the reopening of the Gleneagles Hotel in the English seaside resort of Torquay, the establishment whose memorably rude owner had inspired Cleese to create Basil Fawlty after a stay there in the 1970s.
Scales was diagnosed with vascular dementia in 2013. Between 2014 and 2019, she and her husband, actor Timothy West, explored waterways in Britain and abroad in the gentle travel show âGreat Canal Journeys.â The program was praised for the way it honestly depicted Scalesâ dementia.
West, her husband of 61 years, died in November 2024. Scales is survived by her sons, stepdaughter Juliet West, seven grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.