Carry On star Leslie Phillips left more than £5million to his family when he died aged 98 – as the roguish wit donated to his favourite charities and even made provision for his beloved Buddha statue.
Famed for his leery, roguish, upper-class roles, the actor was beloved by millions and known for his ‘Ding Dong’, ‘Well, Hello’ and ‘I Say’ catchphrases.
Born from humble roots in Tottenham, north London, the outrageous comic enjoyed a long and succesfull career to become a national treasure.
Working into his old age, Phillips died in 2022 after battling a long illness, leaving behind his wife Zara and his four children.
The veteran actor left a gross value of £5,372,182 in his estate, his probate documents reveal, with a net value amounting to £5,225,616.
Leslie Phillips (left) and Jon Pertwee wearing sailors hats and mugging to the camera, on board the HMS Troubridge to promote their BBC radio show ‘Navy Lark’ in 1969
Prince Charles, now King Charles, chats with actor Leslie Philips at the Royal Shakespeare Company’s gala fund raising dinner for their ‘Complete Works Festival’, in London, on May 17, 2006
Leslie Phillips with his new wife Zara Carr at their wedding blessing at St Mark’s Church in Maida Vale in December 2013
Leslie won a new audience of fans as the voice of the Sorting Hat in Harry Potter
Leslie Phillips, pictured in 2010, famous for his leery, roguish, upper-class roles, was a great comedy actor who yearned to get out of what he called ‘that rut’ and concentrate on heavier and more serious parts
Leslie Phillips starring alongside Joan Sims in the Carry On Teaching film
In an exacting will, he gave his OBE and CBE medals to his grandchildren and ‘my statue of the Buddha’ to his wife Zara.
He directed that his possessions should remain in his Maida Vale home for as long as his spouse lives there. Once she moves out, he asked that she should take ten items of her choice, with each of his children taking two each.
In a generous gesture, he further gave £5,000 to the Royal Theatre Fund and a further £5,000 to the Disabled Living Foundation, in Bristol. The charity free and impartial advice for older adults and disabled people across the UK.
Phillips also gave each of his grandchildren £5,000, with £30,000 going to his niece’s family and £50,000 to each of his children.
The remaining money is set to be distributed between his children equally. The accord was signed on November 16 2020 – two years before his death.
Away from the big screen, Phillips suffered a series of terrible tragedies in his life, including the deaths of two of his wives and suffering shell shock while fighting in the Second World War.
His first wife Penny Bartley was killed in a house fire in 1981. Phillips had stayed in touch with her after their 1965 divorce, and called the split one of the great failures of his life.
And then in 2011 he was rocked by the suicide of his second wife, the former Bond girl Angela Scoular. She was suffering from bowel cancer and depression and took her own life. Phillips was too ill to attend the inquest into her death three months later.
Leslie Phillips and his bride Penelope Bartley outside All Souls Church following their wedding in St John’s Wood, London, in 1948
His ex-wife Penny (pictured together with their daughter Caroline after her baptism in 1950). They stayed in touch with even after their divorce. She was killed in a house fire in 1981
Leslie Phillips with actress Angela Scoular at London’s Savoy Hotel after their wedding in 1982. Right, the couple outside Buckingham Palace after Phillips received a CBE from the Queen in 1998
Leslie Phillips and his ex-wife Penny Bartley with their son Roger
Leslie Phillips at his beloved home in Maida Vale, London, taken on Oct 19, 2011, but still looking his debonair and suave self
But he found love again with Turkish social worker Zara Carr, who he married age 89 in front of two witnesses in Mayfair in 2013. Afterwards Phillips – ever the joker – noted that his new wife now shared the same name as the Queen’s granddaughter, Zara Phillips.
He was further left devastated when his mother Cecelia died in the Eighties, aged 92, after being mugged by three teenagers in Chingford, Essex. A few months later, his older sister Doris, who cared for their mother, also died having never recovered from the tragedy.
His acting career stretched back to 1938 and spanned more than 70 years. He was best known in the UK for his Carry On parts even though he only appeared in three of the films.
Phillips also enjoyed an international audience after playing the voice of the Sorting Hat in the Harry Potter films and appearing in hit movies including Empire of the Sun, The Jackal, Out of Africa, Lara Croft: Tomb Raider and Venus, alongside Peter O’Toole.
His stardom – and the riches it brought – was a far cry from his humble roots in Tottenham. His life was changed by his talent for acting and elocution lessons that helped him win the parts that made him famous.
Phillips, famous as a great comedy actor, yearned to get out of what he called ‘that rut’ and concentrate on heavier and more serious parts.
To some extent he succeeded, but even so he will always be remembered above all else for the outrageous comic characters he perfected in the Carry On films and elsewhere.
But although the franchise was his major claim to fame, Phillips was critical of the movies in later years.
He said: ‘In the old days the Carry On films would have died a natural death after doing the rounds at the cinemas.
Leslie Phillips, June Whitfield, Barbara Windsor and Jack Douglas celebrating the Carry on 40th Anniversary in 1998
Phillips became a huge star in the 1950s and the 1960s. Left, in 1959’s The Navy Lark and right, in 1962’s The Longest Day
Barbara Roscoe and Leslie Phillips in the 1963 film, Father Came Too!
Actor Leslie Phillips with the female cast members of play ‘Not Now Darling’, including June Whitfield
Phillip’s life had been touched by tragedy after the 2011 suicide of his second wife, the former Bond girl Angela Scoular
‘But then television came along and they were absolutely flogged to death, all over the world. Someone’s made quite a lot of money out of them, but not those of us who acted in them.’
Phillips was the type of actor who could never be persuaded to retire.
Once he told an interviewer: ‘If you are asking when will I retire, then the answer is never. I intend to die on the job.’
Although he was famous for his come-hither, aristocratic accent, Phillips was born and brought up in London, speaking what is now called estuary English.
He took elocution lessons to help him to speak ‘proper’ English, which in his early days was an essential part of any actor’s range.
He was born in Tottenham, north London, on April 20, 1924, and attended Chingford School and later the Italia Conti Stage School.
During the Second World War, he served as a lieutenant in the Durham Light Infantry from 1942 until 1945, when he was invalided out, suffering shell shock.
Phillips said of his experiences: ‘The beginning of my trouble was continuous bombardment and the bangs. It was nerve-wracking with airplanes flying over and shooting them down.
Actor Leslie Phillips and wife, actress Angela Scoular, who died in 2011
Veteran actor Leslie Phillips, aged 79, at the top of his mountain farmhouse in Ibiza. He bought the property in the 1970s and gradually developed the farm into a modern home with the help of his wife Angela
Katie Price and and Leslie Phillips during the annual British Comedy Awards at London Television Studios in 2003
Leslie, seen in In The Doghouse, said he loved being ‘idolised’ by the public who looked ‘beyond the lecherous twit I played’
Leslie Phillips arrives at the BAFTA awards at The Royal Opera House in 2007
‘I used to get a sort of paralysis on the left side of the body. I suppose it was a form of shell shock. I never really recovered.’
In 1945 he went to a hospital in north London with ‘people who had every known kind of problem – it was a great mess of people who were suffering’.
He went on: ‘To be honest, I never thought I’d survive the war. I always thought, “Any minute now I’ll be bloody killed”, so I was quite surprised to be alive.’
He was soon back in the limelight and began to get leading roles on the stage and screen from the early 1950s.
But Phillips began making serious inroads into film from 1955 and his foxy charm was seen to good effect in Brothers In Law, The Smallest Show On Earth and The Man Who Liked Funerals.
In that film he played the star role of a man who blackmailed the bereaved in a good cause.
He became well known for his appearances in the Doctor films, as well as in a series of fast-moving comedies in which he played alongside Scots comedian and impressionist Stanley Baxter.
They began with the prisoner-of-war caper Very Important Person and continued with Crooks Anonymous, The Fast Lady and Father Came Too, about a disastrous honeymoon.
Veteran actor Leslie Phillips receives the Freedom of the City of London at The Guildhall on November 16, 2010 in London
Leslie Phillips drinking a glass of wine in 1975. He had suffered a huge stroke in his later years but had battled to recovery
Actor Leslie Phillips looked suave and relaxed with his many female co-stars at a photocall for TV programme ‘Casanova’
Within the space of five years Phillips had made 18 starring comedies, but the output of comedy from British studios had suddenly become quite restricted during the 1960s.
After making Doctor In Clover, Phillips made a disastrous career switch by starring in Maroc 7, a woeful spy thriller.
But things were looking up for him on television, especially with Our Man At St Mark’s.
He returned to film in the late 1980s largely in comedy character roles.
Like most of his contemporaries, he did a stint in Hollywood, but he preferred Britain.
‘I could have stayed,’ he said once, ‘but I am a Londoner through and through. I want to go everywhere, but I will always want to live in London. So I came back.’
It was in the mid-1980s that he decided to become a serious actor. He joined the Royal Shakespeare Company and played roles such as Falstaff in The Merry Wives Of Windsor.
But fine all-round actor though he was, his huge following preferred him as the saucy seaside postcard character.
Phillips was awarded the OBE in 1998.
Freddy Fox – played by Leslie Phillips – and Grunhilde – played by Heidi Erich – together in the Fast Lady’ film from back in 1962
‘Don’t Just Lie There, Say Something!’ which starred Brian Rix, Joanna Lumley and Leslie Phillips in one of his notable roles
Leslie Phillips in a Chichester production of Love For Love, a theatre play that showed his versatility as he trod the boards
His first marriage, in 1948 to Penelope Bartley, was dissolved in 1965. They had two sons and two daughters.
He said that they ‘drifted apart’ because of his work in the United States but he counted the failure of that marriage as the greatest tragedy of his life.
In 1982 he married his second wife Angela Scoular and the couple remained together until her death in April 2011.
Scoular was suffering from bowel cancer and depression and took her own life.
Phillips was too ill to attend the inquest into Scoular’s death three months later.
A long-term fan of Tottenham Hotspur, he appeared on the pitch as part of the half-time entertainment during the team’s home match against Swansea City in 2012.
In December 2013, Phillips, aged 89, married Zara Carr, his third wife.
He suffered a stroke while on a shopping trip with his wife in London in August 2014.
A few months later, Phillips was again admitted to hospital after suffering a seizure.
Phillips had a wide variety of interests outside the theatre, including cars, racing, gardening, classical music, weaving, chess and all sport.
In 2014 he starred in the gothic mystery film Darkheart Manor alongside Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part One and Two actor Nick Moran.