Irish Daily Mirror

Alzheimer’s took our John but we remember him with his ever faithful companion Shep

Tributes as Blue Peter presenter dies

- BY ASHLEIGH RAINBIRD Deputy Showbiz Editor ashleigh.rainbird@mirror.co.uk

JOHN Noakes was the scruffy daredevil with the Yorkshire accent who inspired countless children and changed television for ever. His death at 83 has left us mourning the loss of another TV treasure. The presenter’s passing was tinged with extra sadness because of the suffering he and his family endured through his Alzheimer’s in later years. Family friend Wendy Downes said yesterday: “Whilst he will be greatly missed by his wife, family and many friends, his release from continuing ill health must be counted as a blessing. “His many escapades with his faithful companion Shep, during his time with Blue Peter, will live on in many people’s memories and that is how his family would like him remembered.” Noakes was unforgetta­ble as the Blue Peter action man between 1965 and 1978 and for his “Get down, Shep!” catchphras­e as he struggled to control his over-excitable Border collie. His adventures – climbing Nelson’s Column without a safety harness, skidding down the Cresta bobsleigh run, skydiving from five miles up – still make for heart-stopping television decades on. He climbed the 170ft London monument in 1977, via a rickety ladder. A sound problem meant he had to do the terrifying feat twice. As the scrambled on to Admiral Nelson’s head, he summed it up: “By gum! His hat’s a bit dirty.” In 1973, he set a civilian world record by freefallin­g five miles during a parachute jump with the RAF. And he lowered his trousers to show his bruises after skidding down the Cresta Run for 100 yards on his backside at 80mph – revealing he was wearing his wife Vicky’s black lace knickers. The presenter produced another classic TV moment when Lulu the elephant ran amok in the Blue Peter studio in 1969, including stepping on Noakes. “Ow, get off my foot,” he shouted. Noakes’s try-anything attitude, paired with one of the first regional accents on the BBC, made him a favourite with fans. But it was his close friendship with Shep that captivated viewers. Shep arrived in 1971, during the show’s heyday with presenters Peter Purves, Valerie Singleton and their pets, mongrel Petra and Siamese cat Jason. The Border collie was so popular that Get Down, Shep, became a hit song by The Barron Knights when John left the programme in 1978. Shep later appeared in episodes of Go With Noakes. In 1987, he returned to the BBC to break some “very bad news” on TV programme Fax, presented by Bill Oddie, where he fought back tears as he informed the nation that Shep had died. In 2008, John broke down during on The Weakest Link talking about Shep’s final days with his Aunt Evie. Behind the scenes, Noakes was unhappy with his treatment on Blue Peter. He called editor Joan “Biddy” Baxter an “awful woman” in 1999. He added: “The pressure was terrible. One year I did nine weeks with only one-and-a-half days off. I collapsed on the floor and couldn’t go on. That’s the nearest I came to a breakdown.” The trio of Noakes, Purves, now 78, and Singleton, now 80, was the show’s most iconic lineup. “It was a bit like an overgrown schoolboy’s job,” Noakes said. “I was Peter Pan, really. I sometimes think I still am.” Valerie Singleton said last night: “John was incredibly special. A rare talent who never conformed, John was his own man. Even now people ask me about him, which goes to show how much people still care all these years later.”

 ??  ?? SHEP & ME Noakes with his faithful pal
SHEP & ME Noakes with his faithful pal
 ??  ?? CLASSIC TV Purves, Petra, Lesley Judd, cat Jason, Singleton, Noakes & Shep
CLASSIC TV Purves, Petra, Lesley Judd, cat Jason, Singleton, Noakes & Shep

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland