The comedian Janey Godley, who shot to fame with video voiceover spoofs during lockdown, has died of cancer in a hospice aged 63.
The Scottish comedian’s management company confirmed she died ‘surrounded by her loved ones’ on Saturday.
In a statement, Chris Davis Management said: ‘It is with great sadness that we announce the death of our client doctor Janey Godley on November 2.
‘Janey died peacefully in the wonderful Prince and Princess of Wales Hospice in Glasgow surrounded by her loved ones. She will be hugely missed by her family, friends and her many fans.
‘She will be remembered for her legendary voiceovers of Nicola Sturgeon during the pandemic, her hilarious and outspoken comedy, but most of all for just being Janey.’
Taking to X, her daughter shared a heartfelt video telling fans of her mother’s passing.
In the video, she says: ‘My mum Janey Godley died this morning at about 7. She was with friends and family and I wanted to tell you face to face because it felt very much what she would have wanted.
‘She went peacefully and I want to say a big thank you to all the staff at the Prince and Princess of Wales Hospice and a big thank you to mum’s found family who were around her through these last horrible days.
‘I want to thank all of you for your kindness and your support. I believe in my heart of hearts that she felt every bit of love you sent to her. I think it kept her going. We got her longer because of all the support and love’.
She ended the video with a tearful sign off of ‘bye ma’.
Godley, who found viral fame with her dubbed pastiches of Sturgeon’s coronavirus news briefings as well as other comic voiceovers during the pandemic, revealed she had ovarian cancer in November 2021.
In 2022 the comedian was given the all-clear and said in a post to X, formerly Twitter, that a scan showed ‘no evidence of disease’.
However, she later announced that another scan had shown signs of the disease in her abdomen but added that she would continue touring.
But the gigs were cancelled in September of this year after she was treated in hospital for sepsis before learning her cancer had returned with added complications.
Fans have been paying tribute to the star and praising her bravery in opening up about her plight and sharing updates on social media as her condition deteriorated in recent months.
The Scottish comic had revealed last month she would be getting palliative care for ovarian cancer and going into a hospice in a video shared to social media.
The news came after her actress daughter Ashley Storrie revealed on Instagram how Godley had just been awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Glasgow.
She shared on Instagram a photo of her mother lying in bed holding the certificate.
The post was also shared on Godley’s own account on X, formerly Twitter.
Ashley wrote on October 31: ‘Thank you @uofglasgow for bestowing upon my mum honorary degree of Doctor of the University of Glasgow.
‘This has brought her so much joy in the final beats of her life. Janey is so honoured, and I am so immensely proud of her. I am always proud of her.
‘Congratulations Doctor Godley.. Thank you for all your kindness and support to our family in this very difficult time.’
To an outpouring of love and support, Godley had updated her followers on her condition in September after going into a hospice.
She said: ‘The chemo ran out of options and I just couldn’t take any more of it and the cancer has spread,’ she told followers to an outpouring of love and support.
‘So it looks like this will be getting to near the end of it and it’s really difficult to speak about this and say to people.’
She said: ‘The chemo ran out of options and I just couldn’t take any more of it and the cancer has spread,’ she told followers to an outpouring of love and support.
Among those replying online were writer and broadcaster Richard Coles, who called the doctorate award ‘Excellent news’, while celebrity chef Nigella Lawson wrote: ‘This is heartbreakingly beautiful. All love to you.’
There had previously been an outpouring of love and support when Godley updated her followers on her condition last month after going into a hospice.
She said: ‘The chemo ran out of options and I just couldn’t take any more of it and the cancer has spread,’ she told followers to an outpouring of love and support.
‘So it looks like this will be getting to near the end of it and it’s really difficult to speak about this and say to people.’
That update came after the Glasgow-raised comedian had announced the cancellation of an upcoming UK tour called ‘Why Is She Still Here?’ amid ongoing treatment.
‘It is devastating news to know that I’m facing end-of-life but we all come to an end sometime.
‘I want to thank everybody for supporting the family, especially (her daughter) Ashley and my husband.
‘The overwhelming support has been amazing, and I don’t know how long I’ve got left before anybody asks. I’m not a TikTok.
‘So I just want you to know that I appreciate all the love you’ve gave me and all the support. Cancer affects two in one people, and it’s affected me.’
She also thanked charities who have supported her throughout her health journey.
Responding to her latest video, Scotland’s former First Minister Nicola Sturgeon wrote: ‘Sending you so much love, my friend. You are an inspiration.’
Godley, born in poverty in Glasgow in 1961, took up stand-up comedy in 1994 and went on to become a regular co-presenter on BBC Radio 4’s Loose Ends, as well as fronting BBC Radio 4 series The C Bomb.
She has also appeared on panel shows such as Have I Got News For You.
The comedian was photographed at Turnberry golf resort in Ayrshire, on Scotland’s West Coast, with her infamous ‘unwelcome’ sign for the course’s owner Donald Trump in June 2016 – bearing the message: ‘Trump is a c**t.’
She faced controversy in 2021 after Scottish Government coronavirus adverts in which she featured were pulled after offensive tweets by her in the past came to light following an investigation by the Daily Beast website.
Godley profusely apologised for the tweets and donated the £12,000 fee she was paid to charity.
Last year she became the winner of the inaugural Sir Billy Connolly Spirit of Glasgow Award at the Glasgow International Comedy Festival.
Godley, who has been married to her husband Sean Storrie for 44 years, spoke publicly in early October about how the ‘worst part’ of her ordeal was having to tell her autistic daughter Ashley, 38, that she had cancer.
The comedian told the Times: ‘She has always been a catastrophiser – telling her was like throwing a hand grenade.
‘I tell Ashley that she is likely to feel a sense of relief once it’s finally done and I’m dead: no more chemo, no more hair loss, no more vomiting, no more worry. And she was just, like, ‘Ah, f***, I’ve been waiting for that to happen for ages already!”
Talking to in January this year, Godley told of feeling comforted that her husband and daughter would be financially secure after her death.
She said: ‘I worked hard. I have a great daughter. I’ve got a marriage that’s lasted 43 year. I’m proud of the fact that despite all the s***e that was flung at me I managed to make my family financially secure which was very important to me.
‘[It’s because] I came from such poverty. It’s very important that my daughter will never have to worry about the electricity bill or being evicted or the rent not being paid.
‘She will never have to worry about her dinner. Level six has been achieved so I can leave the game.’