Dame Penelope Keith, best known for her iconic role as Margo in The Good Life, has died peacefully aged 86 after living with cancer at her Surrey home, her family has confirmed.
Dame Penelope Keith has died aged 86 following a battle with cancer, her family has confirmed.
Penelope was best recognised for her performances in television programmes including The Good Life and To The Manor Born.
In a statement, her family confirmed she “died peacefully” at her Surrey home. They said: “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.
“The family is grateful for the care and support she received throughout her treatments, and ask that their privacy be respected at this time.”
Penelope launched her acting career performing at theatres across Britain. She joined the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1963 and appeared with them in Stratford and at the Aldwych Theatre in London.
Her television work commenced in the early 1970s when she featured in The Morecambe and Wise Show, Ghost Story and The Pallisers. She also made noteworthy appearances in spy programme The Avengers during the early stages of her career.
In 1975, she took on the role of Margo Leadbitter in The Good Life. Her final TV appearance, in 2025, was on UandGold’s The Good Life: Inside Out, a retrospective examining what made the beloved sitcom such a success with audiences.
She spent three years portraying Margo, a pretentious social climber married to her downtrodden husband Jerry, played by the late Paul Eddington. The programme aired from 1975 to 1978, broadcasting four series and a television special that was recorded before the Royal Family.
Penelope once declined the opportunity to feature in a spin-off series, reports The Mirror. She said: “People mentioned ‘Wouldn’t it be wonderful to have a Leadbetter spin-off and I said ‘No. It’s a situation comedy and the situation is strong because of the two couples’.
“Can you imagine how tedious it would have been having Margo and Jerry having their own series?”.
Penelope frequently praised the sitcom’s writers, John Esmonde and Bob Larbey, for crafting such wonderfully flawed characters that audiences embraced wholeheartedly.
Penelope explains: “Margo was the prime lady of the avenue with all the dinner parties and whatever she took part in, she had to do it perfectly and had to be top dog and sometimes she was terribly disapproving”.
“She had no sense of humour but she was terribly kind and didn’t want to offend but she engaged mouth before brain so often.
“She had enormous warmth and adored the goods and likewise jerry but he infuriated her. There is a line where she says ‘I am the silent majority’ and she said it deadpan and that is what she felt and that is what half the country felt at the time as well.”
She had previously spoken warmly about her experience on the programme. She said: “I look back on it as one of the happiest times. It was of its time at the right time.
“It was as good as it was because of everything else behind it. Everybody cared. The laughter, the joy it brought and the fact that people liked it so much and believed in it so much is reward.”




You must be logged in to post a comment Login