Michael Sheard

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Michael Sheard

Michael Sheard, 1998.
Born Michael Lawson Sheard
18 June 1938(1938-06-18)
Aberdeen, Scotland
Died 31 August 2005 (aged 67)
Isle of Wight
Official website

Michael Sheard (18 June 1938[1]31 August 2005) was a Scottish actor who featured in a large number of films and television programmes.

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[edit] Early life

Sheard was born in Aberdeen, Scotland; the son of a Church Minister, and was trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London. During his National Service, Sheard was a Royal Air Force aircraftsman.

[edit] Career

Star Wars fans know him as Admiral Ozzel from The Empire Strikes Back, whereas those of Grange Hill will remember his performance as the terrifying deputy headmaster Mr Maurice Bronson. In 1983, he played Herr Grunwald, the German manager of a building site in the first series of Auf Wiedersehen, Pet.

He portrayed Adolf Hitler five times, including in The Tomorrow People (1978) and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989). He also portrayed Heinrich Himmler three times. In 1980, he had a major supporting role in Stephen Poliakoff's esteemed B.B.C. television play Caught on a Train. He also appeared as the police sergeant in the fifth episode of the comedy series Mind Your Language.

In the Space: 1999 science fiction television series, he played Dr. Darwin King in the episode, "Dragon's Domain", and was therein the first on-screen victim of a screaming, human-eating, unoptic, tentacular monster residing in a space-ship grave-yard behind planet Ultra on the fringe of the Solar System.

He made appearances in six stories in the BBC science fiction television series Doctor Who, with the First, Third, Fourth, Fifth and Seventh Doctors. More recently he appeared with Eighth Doctor Paul McGann, in The Stones of Venice (a Doctor Who audio drama produced by Big Finish Productions).

In February 2005 he played a small cameo role as the narrator in Star Wars fanatic films Order of the Sith: Vengeance and its sequel Downfall - Order of the Sith - alongside Jeremy Bulloch and David Prowse. These fanatic films were made in England in support of Save the Children.

He died 31 August 2005, aged sixty-seven years, at his home on the Isle of Wight. He had been suffering from cancer. A few weeks previously (9 August 2005) he appeared via telephone on the Iain Lee show on LBC and talked about his many appearances in film and television.

[edit] Filmography

[edit] References

  1. ^ Date of birth from obituaries printed in The Independent and The Times. Sheard's official website claims date of birth as 1940.

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] External links