Graham Crowden
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Graham Crowden | |
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Born | 30 November 1922 Edinburgh, Scotland |
Graham Crowden (born 30 November 1922) is a Scottish actor.
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[edit] Biography
Crowden was born in Edinburgh, the son of Anne Margaret (née Paterson) and Harry Graham Crowden.[1] Crowden is known for his roles in BBC comedy-dramas, including Dr. Jock McCannon in A Very Peculiar Practice and Tom Ballard in Waiting for God. He has also had a long and distinguished theatrical career, and originated the role of The Player King in Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead, the play by Tom Stoppard.
Crowden has occasionally played mad scientists in film, taking the role of Doctor Millar in the Mick Travis films of director Lindsay Anderson, O Lucky Man! (1973) and Britannia Hospital (1982), and also playing the sinister Doctor Smiles in the film of Michael Moorcock's first Jerry Cornelius novel, The Final Programme (1973).
He was offered the role of the Fourth Doctor in Doctor Who in 1974, when Jon Pertwee left the role, but turned it down. The role ultimately went to Tom Baker. He did, however, appear in The Horns of Nimon (1979) as a villain opposite Baker. He voiced the role of Mustrum Ridcully in the 1997 animated Cosgrove Hall production of Terry Pratchett's Soul Music.
In 2001, he guest starred in the Midsomer Murders episode Ring Out Your Dead. In 2005 he starred in the BBC Radio 4 sci-fi comedy Nebulous as Sir Ronald Rolands. In 2008 he appeared as a guest star in Foyle's War.
Crowden had a sister, Anne Crowden,[2] a violinist who established The Crowden School, classical music prep school in Berkeley, California.
[edit] Television roles
Year | Title | Role |
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1986 to 1988 | A Very Peculiar Practice (TV series) | Dr McCannon |
1990 to 1994 | Waiting For God (TV series) | Tom Ballard |