Legendary British actor Leslie Phillips, best known in the US for voicing the Sorting Hat in the “Harry Potter” films, has died after a long battle with illness. He was 98 years old.
Phillips’ agent Jonathan Lloyd confirmed that the thespian passed away “peacefully in his sleep” on Monday, the Guardian reported.
Born April 20, 1924, in Tottenham, London, the comic actor starred in over 200 films, TV and radio series during his storied 80-year career, the Sun reported.
Phillips is perhaps best known to younger generations for lending his voice to three “Harry Potter” films as the Sorting Hat, the enchanted wizard’s cap that would choose which houses new Hogwarts students would belong to.
The actor is most famous for playing a honey-tongued ladies’ man in the “Carry On” and “Doctor” films in the 1950s and 60s. His characters became known for uttering the saucy catchphrases “Ding dong”, “I say” and “Well, hello,” when in the presence of attractive women. These one-liners became so iconic that Phillips joked that they would be inscribed on his headstone.
Along with his comic movie roles, the Brit also had a 17-year stint on the BBC radio show “The Navy Lark.” He played a dim-witted army officer alongside Ronnie Barker and Jon Pertwee.
Despite his success, Phillips began to resent being typecast as a wise-cracking womanizer. This came to a head when his pals dubbed him “King Leer” after he played King Lear in a performance for the Royal Shakespeare Company.
“I felt I was in a bit of a rut,” lamented the actor, per the BBC. “It wasn’t necessarily a bad rut, and some people might actually want to be in that particular rut, but I wanted to get out.”
Thankfully, he also took on memorable dramatic roles in films later on, including “Out of Africa,” “Empire of the Sun,” and, more recently, “Venus” opposite Peter O’Toole.
Phillips at home.Getty ImagesPhillips poses for photographs after receiving his Commander of the British Empire (CBE) from Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace in London, on May 7, 2008.AFP via Getty ImagesPhillips poses during a portrait session at the 17th British Film Festival on October 6, 2006, in Dinard, France.Getty ImagesThe comic actor’s wife Zara paid tribute to her late husband. “I’ve lost a wonderful husband and the public has lost a truly great showman,” the bereaved widow told the Sun. “He was quite simply a national treasure. People loved him. He was mobbed everywhere he went.”
Phillips is survived by his third wife, Zara Carr, and four children.