Bradford-born Timothy West talks about his new book

Actor Timothy West talks to Hannah Stephenson about coping with his wife Prunella Scales' dementia and his new book about their canal journeys.
ON THE WATER: Timothy West and Prunella Scaless canal journeys are chronicled in a new book.Picture: Timothy West/PA.ON THE WATER: Timothy West and Prunella Scaless canal journeys are chronicled in a new book.Picture: Timothy West/PA.
ON THE WATER: Timothy West and Prunella Scaless canal journeys are chronicled in a new book.Picture: Timothy West/PA.

After more than half a century together, veteran Bradford-born actor Timothy West and his wife, Prunella Scales, are still as inseparable as ever, despite her ongoing struggles with dementia.

At their home in Wandsworth, south London, former Fawlty Towers star Prunella remains in the background while her husband discusses his latest book, Our Great Canal Journeys: A Lifetime Of Memories On Britain’s Most Beautiful Waterways, a lovely coffee table tome which details their famous journeys both on the water and in life.

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Viewers will have seen moments on their Great Canal Journeys Channel 4 series, where Prunella loses clarity, which has clearly struck a chord with many.

What began as a gentle, seemingly light-hearted travelogue has become something far deeper and more touching than this devoted couple could have imagined, which is evident from Timothy’s accounts in the book.

They still rely on each other, their lives gloriously entwined, but Prunella’s foreword reveals her frustration with what they call her ‘condition’.

“I hate the idea that the world is going on all around me, but that so much of it is closed off. I soon forget my anger, though, as I forget nearly everything else.

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“I think this book is a bit like one of our canal journeys; meandering along through our lives until it is suddenly carried away by a current, or a weir, or a sandbank,” she writes.

West, 83, whose stellar career has taken him from the Royal Shakespeare Company to Coronation Street and EastEnders, admits the canal journeys have become trickier as time has gone on but, so far, that hasn’t deterred them. “It needs much more preparation and support, but 
we can do it and Pru is insistent that we should,” he says. “She doesn’t want the alternative of sitting at home and watching daytime television. She loves doing it and likes being in the programme.”

Prunella, 85, doesn’t do as much of the physical work now connected with getting through difficult locks, he explains.

“As long as there’s somebody to tell Pru what’s going on, she’s absolutely fine. She loves the wildlife and watching the ducks, herons and water voles. She always says that seeing the angle just a couple of feet above the water gives you a new insight into nature.”

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As for life at home, Prunella has largely given up acting, although she still does radio plays. They don’t go to the theatre or cinema often because she can’t remember much of it afterwards, she confesses. “I miss an awful lot about our early life together,” says West, “but you mustn’t think about that. We have to take each day as it comes.”

Prunella remembers the canal journeys more than a lot of things, he adds. “There’s something about the country that stimulates her. People who know a lot about the condition say, ‘Yes, you’ve got to keep going’.”

Our Great Canal Journeys: A Lifetime Of Memories On Britain’s Most Beautiful Waterways by Timothy West is published by John Blake, priced £20. Available now.

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