The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Outpouring of tributes as star of Monty Python dies

‘Renaissanc­e comedian’ was a writer and director as well as much-loved performer

- SHERNA NOAH AND ALEX GREEN

Sir Michael Palin has paid tribute to one of his “closest, most valued friends” following the death of fellow Monty Python star Terry Jones.

The actor and co median, who directed some of the comedy troupe’s best-loved works, “gently slipped away” at the age of 77, a statement to the PA news agency on behalf of his family said.

Sir Michael said Jones, who had dementia and died on Tuesday evening, was “kind, generous, supportive and passionate about living life to the full”.

“He was far more than one of the funniest writer-performers of his generation, he was the complete Renaissanc­e comedian – writer, director, presenter, historian, brilliant children’s author, and the warmest, most wonderful company you could wish to have,” he said.

He added in a statement to PA: “I feel very fortunate to have shared so much of my life with him.”

Fellow Python stars John Cleese and Eric Idle also paid tribute to Jones, with Cleese tweeting: “It feels strange that a man of so many talents and such endless enthusiasm should have faded so gently away...”

Referring also to sixth Python member Graham Chapman, who died in 1989, he added: “Two down, four to go.”

Idle tweeted that Jones’s death “is a cruel and sad thing”, adding: “But let’s remember just what joy he brought to all of us.”

Idle said he loved Jones “the moment I saw him on stage at the Edinburgh Festival in 1963.

“So many laughs, moments of total hilarity onstage and off we have all shared with him. It’s too sad if you knew him, but if you didn’t you will always smile at the many wonderfull­y funny moments he gave us.”

A family statement said they were “deeply saddened” to announce the death of a “beloved husband and father”, who had “given pleasure to countless millions across six decades”.

They hailed an “extraordin­arily talented, playful and happy man living a truly authentic life, in his words ‘Lovingly frosted with glucose’.”

They said his work “will live on forever, a fitting legacy to a true polymath”.

Jones died “with his wife Anna Soderstrom by his side after a long, extremely brave but always goodhumour­ed battle with a rare form of dementia, FTD”, the statement said.

The Welsh-born star suffered from a form of dementia which affects the ability to communicat­e.

Stephen Fry, David Walliams and Charlie Brooker were also among those paying tribute to the star, with Fry praising Jones as a “wonderful talent, heart and mind”.

Walliams wrote: “Thank you Terry for a lifetime of laughter.”

Shane Allen, BBC controller of comedy commission­ing, wrote that it was a “sad day to lose an absolute Titan of British comedy” and “one of the founding fathers of the most influentia­l and pioneering comedy ensembles of all time”.

Jones had two children with Alison Telfer, whom he married in 1970, and became a father again, at the age of 67, with second wife Ms Soderstrom.

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Terry Jones was hailed by his family as an “extraordin­arily talented, playful and happy man living a truly authentic life”.
Picture: PA. Terry Jones was hailed by his family as an “extraordin­arily talented, playful and happy man living a truly authentic life”.

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