Actress Joan Sims, known to millions for her roles in the Carry On movies - has died aged 71, her agent said on Thursday. She played a variety of roles ranging from gym mistress to empress, and became famous for her characters' pretentions and mock-refined accents.
After graduating from RADA in 1950, she worked in repertory, and by the early 1950's was appearing in West End revue, in films and on television.
She showed her talent as a classical actress with spells at Bristol Old Vic and the Chichester Festival, making her first film Will Any Gentleman with George Cole in 1953.
She was soon established as one of the great comic performers of the cinema and television.
She starred more than two dozen Carry On films, making her the longest-serving female member of the team until she parted company with the team in 1978.
Later she concentrated on television, appearing in Worzel Gummidge as Mrs. Bloomsbury-Barton, Till Death Us Do Part as Gran, and On the Up as the eccentric housekeeper.
'Terrific talent'
"It's wonderful to be able to say that she really did have all the qualities that her many fans would have wished," said her agent Richard Hatton, "a great sense of humour, a sympathetic and endearing personality, terrific talent and consideration for others.
"Over and above this, she discovered a new side of herself when she wrote her autobiography last year, which was untypical for the genre - honest, frank and intelligent.
"Everyone who knew her is going to remember her forever," he said.
Her most recent movie was the BBC TV film Last Of The Blonde Bombshells in which she starred with Dame Judi Dench. Joan Sims, who was unmarried, had been ill for some months.
This article appeared on the BBC Online web site on June 28, 2001.