Dame Penelope Keith, best known for The Good Life and To the Manor Born, has died of cancer aged 86.
The actor died “peacefully” at her home in Surrey, according to a statement issued by her family on Monday (29 July).
“We are deeply saddened to announce that Dame Penelope Keith died peacefully whilst living with cancer at her home in Surrey where she had lived for more than 50 years,” read the statement.
“The family is grateful for the care and support she received throughout her treatments, and ask that their privacy be respected at this time.”
The actor had resided at the 17th-century Mousehill Manor, in Milford, Surrey, since 1978. She shared it with her husband, Rodney Timson, and their two children.
Keith is best known for her role as Margot Leadbetter on BBC’s The Good Life. As the status-conscious suburbanite and disapproving neighbour of Tom and Barbra Goods (played by Richard Briers and Felicity Kendal), the actor won fans and acclaim.
Before making her name on screen, however, she got her start on the stage. Beginning in regional rep, Keith joined the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1963, performing ensemble roles in productions including the landmark stage adaptation ofThe Wars of the Roses, directed by Peter Hall and John Barton.
She won an Olivier award in 1976 for her performance in Michael Frayn’s Donkeys’ Years – but it was The Good Life that propelled Keith to national fame, earning the actor her first Bafta in 1977.
She won her second a year later for The Norman Conquests, the televised adaptation of a trilogy of Alan Ayckbourn plays.
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Following the success of The Good Life, Keith was inundated with scripts for similar sitcoms – all of which she turned down before agreeing to star in the BBC comedy To The Manor Born.
“After The Good Life I was sent various scripts which were sort of pale imitations of the Margot character,” she recalled in a 2013 interview with The Guardian. “To the Manor Born was the first script that I read that I thought was really attractive. I can usually tell within the first five or six pages. It’s the writing, really.”
Her performance as Audrey fforbes-Hamilton, a newly impoverished aristocrat forced out of her luxurious lodgings, cemented Keith’s status as a household name. The show proved to be another hit for the broadcaster, running for three seasons before it came to an end in 1981. It was later brought back for a one-off special in 2007.
Less widely known was Keith’s work as a voiceover artist, contributing to commercials and children’s programmes such as Teletubbies, on which she voiced the Bear with Brown Fuzzy Hair.
Alongside her work on screen, Keith continued to tread the boards. She reprised her role as Lady Bracknell in a 2008 West End production of The Importance of Being Earnest, having first played the part on tour in 1991.
In 2014, she was made a dame for services to the arts and to charity. She was also the long-serving president of the Actors’ Benevolent Fund, taking over the post in 1990 after the death of Laurence Olivier. She held the position until 2022.
Keith and Dame Siân Phillips were among the trustees to receive an official apology from England’s charity watchdog in 2023 over errors in its handling of their removal by other trustees, which they had argued was illegal.
In late 2025, TVF International announced Saving Country Houses, a new series in which Keith met with those fighting to save country estates from ruin. Debuting on Channel 4 in January, it would prove to be her final television role.
Outside of her acting career, Keith was an avid gardener, enthusiastically dedicating herself to the upkeep of her manor’s grounds where she cultivated an apricot-coloured shrub rose that was named after her.
Felicity Kendal, who starred opposite Keith on The Good Life, led tributes to her late co-star, stating: “I am deeply saddened to hear of my friend Penelope’s death.“The shows I worked on with her were such special times in our lives and demonstrated her comic genius.
“My heart goes out to her beloved Rodney at this time, theirs was a great love story and partnership. She was a joy to know and work with, and she will be much missed.”
Former culture secretary Sir Jeremy Hunt, meanwhile, posted on X: “Incredibly sad to hear of the passing of Dame Penelope Keith CBE. She was a neighbour and friend where she was dearly loved by all who knew her in Milford.
“She helped Britain laugh at itself, one of our best national qualities, and brought happiness to millions. RIP dear Penny.”
In memory of Keith, West End theatres will dim their lights for two minutes at 7pm on Wednesday (1 July). “We are proud to come together as an industry and honour the life and extraordinarily prolific career of Dame Penelope Keith, who will undoubtedly be remembered for many years to come as one of this country’s most venerated actors,” said Claire Walker, co-CEO of the Society of London Theatre and UK Theatre.
Keith is survived by her husband and two children.
