Actor and comedian Ronnie Corbett has died at the age of 85.
A statement from his publicist said: “Ronnie Corbett CBE, one of the nation’s best-loved entertainers, passed away this morning, surrounded by his loving family. They have asked that their privacy is respected at this very sad time.”
Corbett, the diminutive half of ‘The Two Ronnies’ – one of the funniest duos of their generation – was a highly versatile comedian who was just as much at home doing stand-up comedy (although usually sitting down) on his own, or sitcom characters, as he was with his famous partner Ronnie Barker.
His long, professional association with Barker produced one of the most popular TV programmes of the late 20th century until Barker’s retirement in the mid-1980s, after it had run for 12 series.
‘The Two Ronnies’, which ran from 1971 to 1987, invariably ended with the two saying: “It’s goodnight from me . . . and it’s goodnight from him.”
Most TV critics rated them as funnier, even, than Morecambe and Wise, one of the best-known British comic double acts.
When on his own, Mr Corbett specialised in long, rambling jokes delivered from an outsize armchair with his legs dangling in the air. The punchline came after the beginning had long been forgotten, so many twists and turns were there in the telling along the way.
Ronald Balfour Corbett was born in Edinburgh on December 4th, 1930. He was educated at the James Gillespie School and the Royal High School, Edinburgh.
At the age of 15, he was playing the Wicked Aunt in a pantomime at his local church youth club in Edinburgh.
After two years overseeing animal-feed rationing at the Ministry of Agriculture in Edinburgh, and National Service with the Royal Air Force, Corbett moved to London and started to do summer seasons, intimate revues and running the bar at the Buckstone Club, off Haymarket, where he first met Ronnie Barker.
In the late 1950s, Corbett worked in the late-night revues at Danny La Rue’s Club, at Hanover Square, where he met his wife, Anne Hart, the actress and singer.
He was spotted at the club by David Frost, who invited him to join Barker and John Cleese in ‘The Frost Report’, one of the most influential TV shows of the 1960s. “David turned my life around,” Corbett said later.
After subsequent TV successes with ‘Frost on Sunday’, ‘Corbett’s Follies’, and ‘No, That’s Me Over Here’, a sitcom, he and Barker got their biggest break thanks to a mishap at the Bafta awards.
They were hosting the live ceremony when a technical fault meant they had to fill in unscripted for some minutes. High-ranking BBC executives who saw this immediately signed them up. ‘The Two Ronnies’ was born.
The programme won the best entertainment show award of 1972, ran for 16 highly popular years on the BBC and for a record-breaking spell at the London Palladium in 1978.
Corbett said that their success lay in the fact that they got on well together and that they complemented each other. “We had a certain kind of material that was not dangerously esoteric. It’s difficult to be clean and clever at the same time, but a lot of our stuff was.”
After Barker’s retirement, Corbett had many starring roles in the theatre, including ‘The Seven Year Itch’, ‘Out of Order’, ‘The Dressmaker’, and on TV, the sitcom, ‘Sorry’.
In 1996, Corbett appeared in John Cleese’s follow-up to ‘A Fish Called Wanda’, ‘Fierce Creatures’. He played a sealion-keeper at a zoo, but he said his worst experience on the film was when he had to carry “a very smelly baby ostrich”.
The following year he recorded ‘An Audience With . . .’ for ITV. In 1998 he returned to his famous armchair in a new Ben Elton series for BBC 1, as well as starring in a Pizza Hut commercial campaign.
He aapeared in several films, including ‘Top of the Form’, ‘You’re Only Young Once’, ‘Casino Royale’, ‘No Sex Please, We’re British’ and ‘Fierce Creatures’.
His publications included: ‘Ronnie Corbett’s Armchair Golf’, ‘The Small Man’s Guide To Life’ and his autobiography ‘High Hopes’. He was a keen and proficient golfer, and a member of the Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers.
Corbett was awarded a CBE in the 2012 New Year Honours for his services to charity and the entertainment industry. At a celebration to mark the award, he collapsed in a restaurant in January, but recovered.
He was presented with the award by the Queen at Buckingham Palace in February that year.
Afterwards he admired his medal – which matched his blue and pink striped tie – saying: ”It’s very pretty. It’s a very lovely honour. I shall treasure it.”
The sketch show veteran waws involved with many charities, including the RNLI and the Variety Club.
In March 2014 Corbett was among the speakers at a memorial service at Westminster Abbey for Sir David Frost, who died the previous September, aged 74, while on the Queen Elizabeth cruise ship where he was giving a speech.
Corbett was also among more than 200 celebrities and public figures who urged Scotland to stay part of the UK ahead of the country’s historic vote on independence in September 2014.
He is survived by his wife Anne and two daughters.