Peter, who had retired in 2015 after losing his sight to macular
degeneration, passed away peacefully with his family by his side at
Denville Hall, a retirement home for actorsWatch TV legend Peter Sallis as the voice of Wallace
Growing old on screen without ever growing up, he aged like a vintage wine.
Clegg’s antics in the Yorkshire Dales with Bill Owen as Compo, Brian Wilde as Foggy Dewhurst, and Kathy Staff as Nora Batty, made the show such a success it became the longest-running sitcom in British TV history.
He was the last surviving member of that gang of four until his death today at the age of 96. Bill died aged 85 in 1999, while and Kathy and Brian passed away in 2008, aged 80 and 81.
Peter also became an unlikely Hollywood star as the voice of absent-minded inventor Wallace in the Oscar-winning Wallace and Gromit films.
Peter, who had retired in 2015 after losing his sight to macular degeneration, passed away peacefully with his family by his side at Denville Hall, a retirement home for actors in North London.
He may have mastered a Yorkshire accent for his two most famous characters, but he was actually born in Twickenham in Middlesex, the only son of banker Harry and housewife Dorothy.
He had no interest in acting at school and followed his father into a banking career with Barclays and might have stayed there for life were it not for the Second World War.
When a blood disorder that could cause him to black out meant he could no longer fly, he became a wireless mechanic, then a radio instructor at RAF Cranwell in Lincolnshire.
It was there Peter caught the acting bug after a pupil offered him the lead in a production of Hay Fever in 1943.
He once said: “When I went on to the stage and spoke the lines, people laughed. That night, in my bunk, I couldn’t sleep.
"I had definitely caught the bug. So I decided that after the war, if I survived it, I would become an actor.”
After being demobbed he won a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.
When auditioning Peter for Richard II, John Gielguld told him: “We have two very beautiful men playing Bushy and Bagot. You might make a good contrast.”
He also had roles in Z Cars, The Avengers, and Doctor Who.
He married an actress, Elaine Usher and they had a son, Crispian, before divorcing in 1965. They later reconciled but split for good in 1983.
Then in 1973, when he already had 25 years of acting experience, he was cast in a pilot for Last of the Summer Wine.
He also played Clegg’s father in the prequel First of the Summer Wine in 1988.
Last of the Summer Wine creator Roy Clarke, 87, paid tribute.
He said: “I admired him enormously, he was a very nice guy. I used to give him the best lines, because he always knew what to do with them.”
Peter, who was awarded an OBE for services in drama, himself loved the show.
It wasn’t all plain sailing. Peter once had to be rescued by Bill Owen.
He said: “We were going to paddle a canoe towards the bridge and under it. I approached the director and explained to him, ‘Look, I can’t swim. If I fall in, I want the entire unit to come to my rescue’.
“In the event it was Bill Owen who saved my life. When we were in the canoe, it started to shudder from front to back.
"I said: ‘We’re going over!’ I kicked out and struck out with everything I’ve got.
"Fortunately, my left foot hit something hard. I got a purchase and gave a good push, and I came out of the water like a cork out of a bottle.”
Peter agreed to do it in exchange for a £50 fee to his favourite charity.
It took six years for the first Wallace and Gromit film, A Grand Day Out, to reach the screen.
Nick said: “He was my first and only choice for Wallace. His silliness started the moment he greeted you at the door and didn’t stop when the mic was switched off. He had naturally funny bones and was a great storyteller.”
The film was nominated for an Oscar and the follow-ups The Wrong Trousers and A Close Shave both became Oscar winners in 1993 and 1995.
Each of the films also won a Bafta.
“It is an absolute honour to have known him.”
Wallace and Gromit’s first feature-length movie, The Curse Of The Were-Rabbit, was released in 2005 and when it was nominated for the Best Animated Feature Oscar, Peter was Nick’s plus one and was there to see the film win.
Peter said later: “I was so grateful just to be there.”
’Allo ’Allo! star Vicki Michelle, 66, tweeted: “Sad to hear about Peter Sallis. Fabulous actor loved by the nation.”
Shane Allen, controller of comedy commissioning for the BBC, said: “He will be forever fondly remembered.”
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