Peter Halliday
Actor/Actriz
32
Filmes
26
Séries
One of the UK's most prolific television actors for 50 years, Peter Halliday was the son of an auctioneer and estate agent. He was schooled in Shropshire. Halliday failed his exam as apprentice auctioneer, worked briefly for Rolls-Royce, then served in the British Army during the Second World War, based in Iraq, Palestine and Egypt, until 1947. He graduated from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in 1949. He became a member of the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, which later became the Royal Shakespeare Company. He achieved his greatest fame in the BBC's science-fiction television drama A for Andromeda (1961). He also gained further cult status for several appearances in Doctor Who (1963), which included providing monster voices for two serials and appearing under heavy makeup to play the alien Pletrac in Robert Holmes' witty parody of television and its viewers, Carnival of Monsters: Episode One (1973).
Como Ator/Atriz
Doctor Who
Soldier
Los vengadores
Perrier
The Saint
Vargas
BBC Play of the Month
The Sweeney
Chief Insp. Gordon
Theatre 625
Sir William Mallet
Dalziel and Pascoe
Mr Edward Soper
Lovejoy
Mr. Reynolds
UFO
Dr. Segal
Out of the Unknown
Patrick Wilson
Churchill's People
Sir George Carew
The Main Chance
John Smith
Sir Francis Drake
Theobald Burke
Our Friends in the North
Speaker
Lo que queda del día
Canon Tufnell
The Adventures of the Scarlet Pimpernel
Sergeant
Sergeant Cork
Dr. Cato
Beasts
Crisp
Hearts and Minds
Shotgun
Lassie
Vicar
Armchair Theatre
Mike Regan
Tales Out of School
Headmaster
Births, Marriages and Deaths
Vicar
Dunkirk
Battery Major
How Green Was My Valley
Jack Richards
A for Andromeda
John Fleming
The Black Windmill
Customs Officer (uncredited)
Clinic Exclusive
Fawcett
La Biblia: Ester
Karschena
Thirteen Against Fate
Gaston