He Was A Comedian Of Historic Importance
Terry Jones was the Welsh comedian and writer who spun his quirky love of history into one of comedy’s most iconic franchises: Monty Python. His comedic chops on camera translated into a topsy-turvy off-camera life with as many punchlines as one of his sketches.
1. He Was Born By The Bay
Terence Graham Parry Jones drew his first round of applause on February 1, 1942 in the seaside town of Colwyn Bay, North Wales. His mother, Dilys, kept the home while his father, Alick, worked at the bank. Humor, it turns out, was something Jones was born with.
2. He Met His Father Late
Jones was born in the midst of WW2, which means that he didn’t meet his father until age four, when Alick returned from RAF service. Even at this tender age, Jones managed to find comedy in his situation. “I’d only ever been kissed by the smooth lips of a lady,” he joked. “So his bristly moustache was quite disturbing!”
3. He Moved From Wales To Surrey
When Jones was four and a half, the family traded coastal Colwyn Bay for suburban Claygate, Surrey. There, he excelled in school, specializing in grammar and even becoming the school captain. But behind his good manners and perfect syntax, a mischief-maker was quietly forming.
4. He Fell For Chaucer First
At Oxford’s St Edmund Hall, Jones pursued English, falling in love, in particular, with medieval literature. Immersed in Chaucer’s bawdy pilgrims, he confessed he “strayed into history” and graduated with honors. His love of history would become his comedic playground—the perfect stage for his saucy satire.
5. He Found His Partner In Comedy
During his Oxford years, Jones found more than a love for medieval literature. In addition to meeting the likes of the Pearl Poet and John Gower on the page, he met a kindred spirit who shared his view of comedy. It was after joining the Oxford Revue, that Jones crossed paths with Michael Palin. Together, they would reshape comedy.
6. He Impressed Michael Palin Instantly
Jones and Palin hit it off immediately. “The first thing that struck me was what a nice bloke he was,” Palin recalled. “He had no airs and graces”. More importantly, however, the two shared a sense of humor. “We had a similar idea of what humour could do and where it should go, mainly because we both liked characters; we both appreciated that comedy wasn’t just jokes”.
That said, Jones had a lot of jokes.
7. He Joined TV’s Funniest Experiments
After graduation, Jones took his wit to television, appearing in Twice a Fortnight alongside Palin, Graeme Garden, Bill Oddie, and Jonathan Lynn. Soon after, he joined Do Not Adjust Your Set, sharing the screen with future Python icons Eric Idle and David Jason. The beginnings of a legendary comedy troupe were taking shape.
8. He Got A Little “Frosty”
Before rewriting comedy, Jones cut his teeth scripting for The Frost Report and other David Frost programs. The work honed his knack for razor-sharp satire—especially against Britain’s social hierarchies. But Jones didn’t just want to write jokes; he wanted to reinvent them.
9. He Helped Invent A Circus
Jones and Palin soon became a powerhouse writing duo, crafting sketches for Britain’s top comedy shows. Their unique sense of humor brought together an all-star British comedy cast that included Graham Chapman, John Cleese, and Eric Idle, plus the American animator Terry Gilliam. Together, they created Monty Python’s Flying Circus.
The laughter practically wrote itself.
10. He Rewrote The Rules Of Comedy
While everyone contributed their comedic chops to Monty Python, Terry Jones reshaped the show’s DNA. He boldly abandoned punchlines and pushed for a seamless sketch comedy show that flowed more like drama. The result was a surreal stream of consciousness that felt revolutionary—and distinctly Jones.
The Circus had its ringmaster. Next, came the chaos.
11. He Created Memorable Characters
In Jones’ Circus, the biggest clowns were the unforgettable “ratbag old women” that he portrayed on screen. These “grannies from hell” or “pepper pots” allowed Jones to create characters that were hilarious, in and of themselves. Given the raucous laughter he elicited from audiences, no one missed the punchlines.
He had stumbled onto the “holy grail” of comedy.
12. He Found The “Holy Grail”
With the success of the series, in 1975, Terry Jones combined his love for comedy with his passion for history. Stepping behind the camera for the first time, he shared directorial duties with Terry Gilliam to create the classic comedy film Monty Python and the Holy Grail. Bringing absurdity to the Arthurian legend netted Jones his first British Fantasy Award.
That was just his opening act.
13. He Took The Helm Alone
After the success of Monty Python and the Holy Grail, Jones felt comfortable directing on his own. Taking full creative command, he delivered two more classics in Life of Brian and The Meaning of Life. The odd comedies balanced theological farce and philosophical absurdity, taking Python from sketch comedy to cinematic scripture.
One fellow Python thought so too.
14. He Earned Cleese’s Highest Praise
Even Terry Jones’ fellow Monty Python comedians had to tip their hats to him. John Cleese once declared, “Of his many achievements, for me the greatest gift he gave us all was his direction of Life of Brian. Perfection”. Jones was brewing up more than comedy gold.
15. He Brewed A Brilliant Business
In 1977, Jones bottled his comedy success—or, at least, he tried to. He co-founded a microbrewery in Herefordshire, pouring humor into hops until 1983, when the brewery tapped out. However, brave knights of the Monty Python variety can still visit the site today where a cheeky pub called The Python’s Arms still pours pints with pantomime.
16. He Picked Up Chaucer Again
Never content with just conquering comedy, Terry Jones returned to academia with his first book, Chaucer’s Knight: The Portrait of a Medieval Mercenary, published in 1980. It was classic Jones—erudite, irreverent, and controversial—reimagining one of English literature’s noblest figures as something quite different.
Different and controversial.
17. He Redefined The Gallant Knight
In Chaucer’s Knight, Jones once again flipped convention on its head. He proposed that the famed pilgrim wasn’t a pious hero at all but a hardened sword-for-hire—a meagre mercenary, hiding behind chivalry. Jones’ blend of scholarship with comedic cheek scandalized medieval scholars—but delighted readers.
He wasn’t done rewriting history yet.
18. He Danced With Dragons
In the 1990s, Terry Jones traded medieval manuscripts for medieval mischief. In co-creating the series Blazing Dragons with Gavin Scott, he flipped Arthurian legend on its head once again. This time, he made the dragons the heroes and the humans the villains. The animated series was witty, subversive, and unmistakably Jones.
His next act would be pure theater.
19. He Took Comedy To The Stage
Jones and Palin joined forces again, this time taking their comedic collaboration to the stage for the play Underwood’s Finest Hour. Premiering at London’s Lyric Theatre, the farce followed an obstetrician distracted during a live birth by a cricket match on the radio. It was classic Jones—smart, silly, and slightly scandalous.
But he saved his best for the youths.
20. He Penned Timeless Tales For Children
In 1981, Terry Jones surprised his fans with Fairy Tales, a children’s book. In it, Jones reimagined classic bedtime stories and filled the pages with unexpected moral twists and mischievous humor. Even decades later, in 2009, Children’s Laureate Michael Rosen hailed Jones’ work as one of the five best children’s books ever written.
21. He Declared Himself An Anarchist
Jones was so focused on comedy that he barely had time to think about anything else. In an interview, he once said, “If I had any political convictions, I would say that I am an anarchist”. But for Jones, it wasn’t about chaos. It was his way of saying that he believed in making change from the bottom up, not the top down.
That made his next proclamation kind of awkward.
22. He Wanted The Kingdom To Stay United
In 2014, Terry Jones swapped satire for sincerity. He joined 200 other British public figures in signing a Guardian letter with an urgent message. In the letter, Jones beseeched Scotland to remain part of the United Kingdom. When it came to his personal life, however, he was ok with a little infidelity.
23. He Believed In Open Love
Jones had married Alison Telfer in 1970, and together they raised two children. But there was an open secret about their marriage. Namely, that it was an open marriage. The loose terms of their marital agreement was a reflection of Jones’ free-thinking spirit. But it wasn’t without consequences.
24. He Created A Labyrinth
Jim Henson’s 1986 film Labyrinth was, originally, Terry Jones’ idea. Jones had written the original screenplay for the hit film, but after several rewrites, much of his material ended up on the cutting room floor. Still, Jones’ wit and whimsy echoed through the film’s twisted tunnels.
He wanted to see his vision up on the big screen.
25. He Made The Irish Irate
Jones returned to directing with 1987’s Personal Services. In the film, he took his comedic risks to new, risqué heights. Loosely inspired by a real-life cathouse owner, the film’s bawdy humor so scandalized censors that it was banned in Ireland. But, if they thought that would slow Jones down, they were horribly mistaken.
26. He Played Kings And Toads
Terry Jones never stopped mixing history with hilarity—whatever the consequences. In 1989, he directed Erik the Viking where he played the bumbling King Arnulf. In a show of his versatility, he later hopped into The Wind in the Willows as the exuberant Mr Toad. His next production confronted one of history’s greatest capers.
27. He Solved A Medieval Mystery
In 2003, Jones traded slapstick comedy for scholarly inquiry in Who Murdered Chaucer?. Jones argued that Chaucer’s mysterious disappearance wasn’t an accident at all, but a terrible political hit job. According to Jones, after the fall of King Richard II, Chaucer was persecuted by Thomas Arundel.
Still, he had a rosy view of that period in history.
28. He Defended The Middle Ages
Terry Jones’ 2004 series Medieval Lives gave the so-called “Dark Ages” a brilliant (and bright) makeover. In his Emmy-nominated work, he showed that medieval people were far more sophisticated than history books claimed. Believe it or not, but that was just the beginning of his historical revisionism.
29. He Avenged The Barbarians
Two years after shining a brighter light on the “Dark Ages”, Jones turned his attention even further back in history, all the way to the Fall of Rome. In Jones’ 2006 work, Barbarians, he argued that the so-called “savages” who conquered the Romans were actually civilized peoples smeared by centuries of propaganda.
He was fighting a battle against a powerful enemy of his own at the time.
30. He Beat Cancer With A Smile
In 2006, Terry Jones faced a foe that no punchline could disarm: colon cancer. But, just like his favorite historical figures, Jones wasn’t giving up without a fight. He underwent surgery and endured chemotherapy, walking away from his treatments cancer-free. And he never lost his sense of humor.
31. He Mocked His Own Mortality
After surviving his brush with colon cancer, Jones couldn’t resist poking fun at the ordeal. Ever the satirist, he quipped, “Unfortunately, my illness is not nearly bad enough to sell many newspapers—and the prognosis is even more disappointing”. His gallows humor proved that comedy was still the best medicine.
32. He Took His Comedy To The Opera
Jones’ creative curiosity knew no bounds, and his close call with fate seemed to broaden his horizons even further. In 2008, he wrote and directed the opera Evil Machines, blending classical music with absurdist storytelling. By 2011, he was back at it, writing a libretto for The Doctor’s Tale.
The only thing operatic, however, was the drama unfolding in his personal life.
33. He Found Love Again—Much Younger
Terry Jones’ open marriage might have been a little open. In 2009, he left his wife of over 40 years, Alison Telfer, for Anna Söderström, a Swedish scholar with whom he had already had a five-year long relationship. The punchline? Söderström hadn’t even been alive when Jones had first married Telfer. His new Swedish lover was 41 years his junior.
He was practically starting over again.
34. He Became A Father Again
Later that same year, the reason for Jones’ sudden divorce from Telfer became glaringly apparent. Not only had he been carrying on this long relationship with Söderström, but he had gotten her pregnant. Even into his 60s, Jones became the father of a baby girl. Perhaps it was this late-in-life romantic renaissance that inspired his next move.
35. He Went Searching For His Roots
With all of the chaos in his personal life unfolding, Terry Jones kept working. He joined BBC Wales’ Coming Home, a documentary tracing his Welsh family history. The journey reconnected Jones to his homeland and reminded him of how far he had come. But his next partnership would be his most unexpected yet.
36. He Tied The Knot Again
In 2012, Jones made it official. He married Anna Söderström, settling into a quiet life in Highgate, North London. Between toddler chaos and creative projects, he seemed to have found peace—at least until inspiration came knocking once more.
37. He Cracked Nuts With Metal
Getting on into his 70s, Jones refused to slow down. Instead of announcing his retirement, he announced a wild collaboration with the legendary songwriter Jim Steinman. But it wasn’t an opera or a lyric poem. Their collaboration was a heavy metal version of The Nutcracker.
38. He Reunited With His Old Crew
Feeling the pangs of nostalgia, in 2014, Jones reunited with his surviving Monty Python comrades. The result was Monty Python Live (Mostly)—a ten-show run at London’s O2 Arena. It was the famous comedy troupe’s final curtain call. But behind the scenes, without the audience’s laughter, something darker was starting to show.
39. He Forgot His Own Lines
During those reunion performances, fellow Pythons noticed that something was off with Jones. Once sharp as a tack with a wit honed by medieval poetry, Jones struggled to remember his lines. At first, his fellow comedians chalked it up to nerves. Sadly, it was something far more serious.
40. He Faced His Toughest Diagnosis Yet
In 2015, Jones’ doctors confirmed the heartbreaking truth that no one wanted to believe. The titan of British comedy for decades had primary progressive aphasia, a form of dementia that would gradually erode his ability to speak and communicate. For a man whose life was built on words and whimsy, it was the cruelest twist of fate imaginable.
41. He Donated His Brain To Science
Even as dementia dimmed his speech, Jones refused to let it silence his purpose. As his aphasia ravaged his mind, he became an advocate for dementia research and awareness. And he didn’t stop at raising funds. In a show of devotion to the cause, Jones agreed to donate his brain to science after his passing.
His comedic chops, however, could not be dissected.
42. He Took His Final Bow At BAFTA
Before aphasia could wipe his memory clean, Jones received the honor of a lifetime. In 2016, he became a recipient of the BAFTA Cymru Lifetime Achievement Award for his immense contribution to British film and television. When he appeared onstage, the crowd rose in a standing ovation. They would have to rise a lot higher to reach his heights.
43. He Reached For The Stars—Literally
That same year, Jones achieved a kind of immortality few (if any) comedians can claim when scientists named an asteroid in his honor. 9622 Terryjones now soars through the cosmos, hopefully bringing laughter to all the other space objects.
44. He Directed One Last Laugh
In 2016, while he still had his fragments of his mind left, Jones returned to the stage for one final directorial effort: Jeepers Creepers. The West End play chronicled the life and times of Jones’ fellow comic Marty Feldman. It was a fitting farewell—a love letter from one eccentric genius to another.
45. He Wrote Until His Words Ran Out
By late 2016, Jones’ aphasia had almost taken over his brain. He could no longer give interviews, and by 2017, he could only utter a few words of agreement. Yet, his talent for comedy and storytelling would be the last thing to go. Even as he lost his speech, Jones managed to write The Tyrant and the Squire, a riveting children’s adventure novel.
He had one last adventure of his own.
46. He Passed Peacefully At Home
On January 21, 2020, Jones’ aphasia ran its course and he took his final bow at his home in Highgate. The only solace for his grieving fans was that he was surrounded by family in his final moments. He was 77. Even in the grave, however, he left behind nothing but laughs and smiles.
47. He Was Remembered With Joy
To honor his free-spirited life, Jones’ family opted for a humanist funeral—a celebration of his life, not a lament of his demise. His friend Terry Gilliam remembered him as “brilliant, constantly questioning, iconoclastic, righteously argumentative and angry—but outrageously funny and generous and kind”.
48. He Was Terrified Of Terror
In his later years, Jones had turned his pen toward politics, writing scathing columns for The Guardian, The Daily Telegraph, and The Observer. His essays, compiled into a book, mocked the absurdity of “declaring [a fight] on an abstract noun”. His satire aged better than the policies.
49. He Did Not Have The Luck Of The Irish
Jones had brought laughs to millions—and controversy to just as many. Three of his directed films—The Meaning of Life, Life of Brian, and Personal Services—were so controversial that they were banned in Ireland. While Jones didn’t mind the snub, he could have used a little luck from the Irish.
50. He Was Brilliant Beyond Measure
Python biographer George Perry, spoke of the man behind the comedian. “[You] speak to him on subjects as diverse as fossil fuels, or Rupert Bear, or mercenaries in the Middle Ages or Modern China,” Perry said, “in a moment you will find yourself hopelessly out of your depth, floored by his knowledge”.
Or on the floor because of his humor.
You May Also Like:
Wacky Facts About the Marx Brothers, Comedy Pioneers
Secret Facts About Peter Sellers, The Tragic Comic
Snappy Facts About The BBC, The British Broadcasting Corporation