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Emma Chambers dead: Vicar of Dibley's 'Alice Tinker' and Notting Hill actor dies, aged 53

‘Emma created a wealth of characters and an immense body of work. She brought laughter and joy to many,’ her agency said

Clarisse Loughrey
Saturday 24 February 2018 12:32 EST
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Vicar of Dibley star Emma Chambers has died aged 53

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Emma Chambers, the British actress best known for her roles in The Vicar of Dibley and Notting Hill, has died aged 53.

A statement from her agency said: “Emma created a wealth of characters and an immense body of work. She brought laughter and joy to many, and will be greatly missed.” It said she died from natural causes on Wednesday evening.

Born in Doncaster, Chambers trained at the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art in the 1980s, working in theatre for 10 years before her major TV break as Charity Pecksniff in a TV adaptation of Charles Dickens’s Martin Chuzzlewit.

However, her best-loved role will always remain Alice Tinker in the BBC’s The Vicar of Dibley, a character once described, by her good friend Geraldine – played by Dawn French – as having “the intellectual capacity and charisma of a cactus”. Chambers appeared in all 20 episodes of the series and four Comic Relief specials, winning the British Comedy Award for best TV actress in 1998.

She also famously starred as Honey, the little sister of Hugh Grant’s Will, in the 1999 romcom classic Notting Hill, penned by Vicar of Dibley co-writer Richard Curtis.

Dawn French led tributes to her former co-star. She said in a statement: “Emma was a very bright spark and the most loyal & loving friend anyone could wish for. I will miss her very much.”

Grant called news of her death “very sad”. He wrote on Twitter: “Emma Chambers was a hilarious and very warm person and of course a brilliant actress.”

Emma Freud, who worked as a script editor on both The Vicar of Dibley and Notting Hill, paid tribute to Chambers on Twitter. “Our beautiful friend Emma Chambers has died at the age of 53. We’re very very sad. She was a great, great comedy performer, and a truly fine actress. And a tender, sweet, funny, unusual, loving human being,” she wrote.


Chambers' co-star in Notting Hill, James Dreyfus, wrote: “RIP the wonderful and talented Emma Chambers. Unique, & unspeakably funny. Too young. Thoughts with her family.”


Presenter Jeremy Clarkson tweeted: “I’m sad about Emma Chambers. Knew her when she was a kid in Doncaster. She was very funny.”


Chambers is survived by her husband, fellow actor Ian Dunn.

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