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Prunella Scales as Sybil, John Cleese as Basil, Connie Booth as Polly and Andrew Sachs as Manuel in Fawlty Towers (Picture: PA)

Fawlty Towers is one of the most celebrated British comedies, but one of the main actresses from the series – Prunella Scales – is seemingly tired of talking about it.

If a TV show can capture the public’s imagination, the stars are likely to be endlessly questioned about it.

Daisy Edgar-Jones can barely make it from one end of a red carpet to the other without being asked about Normal People co-star Paul Mescal, and our love of nostalgia means that actors such as Chace Crawford, and Eva Longoria will always be asked about Gossip Girl and Desperate Housewives respectively.

It’s how a whole podcast genre exists which sees stars of big TV series rewatch them (Gilmore Girls, One Tree Hill, The Office, The OC, and Scrubs all have one) and it’s why we’ll always celebrate a reboot.

However, the downside can be that actors can’t always escape that part of their career, even if they want to.

Prunella has spoken honestly about how she feels when asked about the BBC series Fawlty Towers, which ran from 1975-1979.

Prunella has been honest in regards to how she feels about Fawlty Towers questions (Picture: Alamy Stock Photo)

It may have been 45 years since the last episode aired, but Prunella, 92, is still questioned about her experience playing Sybil Fawlty, the wife of hotel owner Basil Fawlty [John Cleese].

A journalist at The Times summarised that Prunella found the topic ‘irritating’.

When asked if she is regularly asked about Sybil, she replied: ‘Yes. It’s boring.’

Fawlty Towers ran from 1975-1979 (Picture: UKTV)

‘On the whole, I love it when they don’t,’ Prunella added.

Prunella recently provided voiceover cameos for a reprisal of Queen, which uses Queen Victoria’s letters as inspiration for a drama, and so the interviewer asked if comedy was harder than drama.

‘Oh, that’s boring. Is the play good? Is the writing good? Do you understand the character? Go ahead. I mean, I don’t like this terrible analysis of one’s work,’ she responded.

When it’s pointed out that her Queen co-stars will enjoy meeting her, she suggests having another drink or changing the subject.

Prunella has enjoyed an illustrious career (Picture: Getty)

Fawlty Towers ran for two series, each comprised of six episodes, and focused on a fictional hotel located in Torquay, Devon. It won many accolades including British Academy Television Award for Best Scripted Comedy, and is described by BBC as ‘the British sitcom by which all other British sitcoms must be judged’.

Prunella has continued to be a small screen regular with roles in A Question of Attribution, After Henry, Mapp and Lucia, Smelling of Roses and Ladies of Letters. She also featured in many films including Lord of Misrule, Emma, and Wolf.

She played Queen Victoria over 400 times in the theatre show, An Evening With Victoria, which she recently reprised for the Edinburgh Fringe Festival show.

Alongside her husband Timothy West, she presented ten series of Great Canal Journeys for Channel 4 from 2014 until 2020.

The couple have been married nearly 60 years (Picture: Tristan Fewings/Getty Images)

She was diagnosed with vascular dementia in 2013 which is caused by reduced blood flow to the brain. The couple discussed Prunella’s health openly within the programme that saw them take trips on narrowboats across the UK and beyond.

‘I’m unable to have the same in-depth conversation about stage productions with Pru that I used to enjoy. But we continue to do the things we have always done, as it’s important to continue to live,’ actor Timothy told the charity Alzheimer’s Society.

Writing in his memoir, Pru and Me, he said: ‘[We] have exactly the same conversation every day of the week and it’s something I never tire of.

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‘Repetition doesn’t really exist in Pru’s world and the look on her face when she enters the room and sees me sitting there on the sofa waiting for her makes me realise just how much I love her.’

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