Actor Clive Dunn, best known for his role as Lance Corporal “Jonesy” Jones in Dad’s Army, has died aged 92.
He died in Portugal on Tuesday from complications following an operation.
Dunn – whose famous catchphrases included “Don’t panic, don’t panic” and “They don’t like it up ’em” – became a recording star in 1971 when his record, Grandad, reached number one.
Frank Williams, who played the Vicar on Dad’s Army, said he was always “great fun” to be around.
“Of course he was so much younger than the part he played,” he told BBC Radio Four. “It’s very difficult to think of him as an old man really.
“But he was a wonderful person to work with – great sense of humour, always fun, a great joy really.”
Born in London in January 1920, Dunn studied at the Italia Conti Academy of Theatre Arts.
He made his first forays into acting in the 1930s, appearing alongside Will Hay in Boys Will Be Boys in 1935 and Good Morning Boys in 1937.
His acting career was interrupted by World War II, during which he spent four years as a German prisoner.
The actor would later say that Dad’s Army, which ran from 1968 to 1977, was his revenge on his former captors.
The much-loved showfeatured the exploits of a Home Guard platoon formed to protect the seaside village of Walmington-on-Sea from possible German attack during World War II.
Co-star Ian Lavender, who played Private Pike, said: “You never left Clive’s presence from working without a smile on your face, and so inevitably working always was fun – not necessarily hysterical, but just fun.
“A word Clive used a lot was nice, ‘I’ve had a very nice time thank you’, ‘did you have a nice time?’. And he wanted everybody else to have a nice time as well.”
As well as Dad’s Army, Dunn also appeared in such TV shows as Bootsie and Snudge, My Old Man and Grandad.
His last screen credit came playing the Shakespearean clown Verges in a 1984 TV version of Much Ado About Nothing.
He spent his last three decades in Portugal, where he occupied himself as an artist painting portraits, landscapes and seascapes until his sight failed.
Comedian Roy Hudd starred with him in pantomime Cinderella in Bournemouth, in which Dunn played the Baron.
“We had a marvellous time, he was in a world of his own Clive, he was so eccentric,” remembered Hudd.
“He never really, really knew his lines terribly well, but what he said not even knowing his lines was funny. Funnier probably than the lines we ever gave him to say.”
Dunn’s final interview appeared in the most recent issue of The Oldie magazine, which made him its cover star.
Writer Paul Bailey travelled to Dunn’s cottage in Portugal in early September in order to speak to him.
He told BBC News the 92-year old was “almost completely blind and hard of hearing” but still loved “a good joke and a glass of wine”.
“I asked him a fairly silly question: ‘What is it like to be 92?'” he said. “He replied, ‘The same as it was to be 91’.”
Mr Bailey said Dunn was “very stoic” when talking about his time as a PoW during the war. “He joked about it in a very English, self-deprecating way.”
Tony Pritchard of the Dad’s Army Appreciation Society said Dunn had attended various conventions organised with the society and was “immensely popular” with its members.
“I met him many times over the years,” he told BBC Radio Gloucestershire. “He was just a nice chap. He always had a joke to tell and was full of humour.”
Dunn is survived by his wife Priscilla Morgan and their two daughters, Jessica and Polly.
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