- (4/98) Stage: Appeared (as "The Old Man") in "The Chairs" by Eugène Ionesco. John Golden Theater, New York City
- TV commercials (Wales: Arthur Llewyllyn Jenkins furniture store (sometimes with Siân Lloyd).
- (2004) TV commercial: TML
- (2005) TV commercial: TML
- (4/16/05) Radio: Appeared as a guest on Jonathan Ross' show on BBC Radio 2.
- (2005) TV commercial (voice-over): Nestle Whole Grain Cereals
- (2006) TV commercial (voice-over): Npower price fix
- Radio commercial: Nottingham Evening Post classifieds with Penelope Wilton.
- TV commercial (voiceover): Iceland frozen food supermarket.
- (1973-74) Stage: Appeared in Sir Alan Ayckbourn's "Absurd Person Singular," at London's Criterion Theatre in England with the original cast including Bridget Turner, Michael Aldridge, Sheila Hancock, Anna Calder-Marshall, David Burke, directed by Eric Thompson.
- (1975) Stage: Appeared in Sir Alan Ayckbourn's "Absent Friends," performed at London's Garrick Theatre in England, with Peter Bowles, Phyllida Law, directed by Eric Thompson.
- (1994) Stage: Appeared in David Storey's "Home," at the Wyndham's Theatre in London, Englan,d with Paul Eddington CBE and Brenda Bruce.
- (1979) Stage: Appeared in Roger Hall's "Middle Age Spread," at the Lyric Theatre in London, England, with Paul Eddington CBE, Tom Chadbon, Judy Loe and Sheila Grant in the cast. Robert Kidd was director.
- (1987) Stage: Appeared in William Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night," in a Renaissance Theatre Company production at the Birmingham Repertory Studio Theatre in Birmingham, England, and the Tour with Frances Barber, Christopher Ravenscroft, James Saxon, Abigail McKern, James Simmons, Anton Lesser, Caroline Langrishe and Shaun Prendergast in the cast. Kenneth Branagh was director.
- (1991) Stage: Appeared in the Renaissance Theatre Company Tour of Anton Chekhov's "Uncle Vanya," with Peter Egan, Sian Thomas, Annabel Arden and Patrick Godfrey in the cast. Peter Egan and Kenneth Branagh were directors.
- (1959) Stage: Appeared Lord Montagu of Beaulieu's "Gilt and Gingerbread," at the Duke of York's Theatre in London, England, with John Clements, Kay Hammond, Hugh Sinclair, Eileen Peel and Walter Fitzgerald in the cast. Harold French was director.
- (1965) Stage: Appeared (as "Roland Maule") in Noël Coward's "Present Laughter," at the Queen's Theatre in London, England, with 'Nigel Patrick,' (also director), Phyllis Calvert, Maxine Audley, Avice Landon and Graham Payn in the cast.
- (1967) Stage: Appeared in Alan Ayckbourn's "Relatively Speaking," at the Duke of York's Theatre in London, England, with Celia Johnson and Michael Hordern in the cast.
- (1968) Stage: Appeard in John Galsworthy's play, "Justice," at the St. Martin's Theatre in London, England, with Eric Portman, Barbara Murray and Anthony Ainley in the cast. Anthony Sharp was director.
- (1969) Stage: Appeared in John Mortimer's adaptation of Georges Feydeau's play, "Cat Among the Pigeons!," at the Prince of Wales' Theatre in London, England, with Elizabeth Seal, Murray Melvin and Victor Spinetti in the cast. Charon was director.
- TV commercial (voiceover): Camps Solicitors.
- TV commercial (voiceover): Norton Finance.
- (1970) Stage: Appeared in Michael Frayn's play, "The Two of Us," at the Garrick Theatre in London, England, with Lynn Redgrave in the cast. Mark Cullingham was director.
- (1973) Stage: He appeared in Alan Ayckbourn's "Absurd Person Singular," at the Criterion Theatre in London, England, with Bridget Turner, Michael Aldridge, Sheila Hancock, Anna Calder-Marshall and David Burke in the cast. Eric Thompson was director.
- (1974) Stage: Appeared in Alan Ayckbourn's "Absurd Person Singular" at the Criterion Theatre in London, England, with Bridget Turner, Michael Aldridge, Sheila Hancock, Anna Calder-Marshall and David Burke in the cast. Eric Thompson was director.
- (1981) He acted in George Bernard Shaw's play, "Arms and the Man," at the Lyric Theatre in London, England with Peter Egan, Richard Pearson, Pat Heywood, Anna Nygh, Anthony Pedley, and Alice Krige in the cast.
- (1983) He acted in Ray Cooney's play, "Run for Your Wife," at the Shaftesbury Theatre in London, England with Bernard Cribbins, Royce Mills, Bill Pertwee, Helen Gill, and Carol Hawkins in the cast. Ray Cooney was also director.
- (1985) He acted in Stanley Price's play, "Why Me?," at the Strand Theatre in London, England with Diane Fletcher, Polly Hemingway, and Liz Smith in the cast.
- (1973) Portrayed Bertie Wooster in BBC Radio 4 series, "What Ho, Jeeves!", opposite Michael Hordern as Jeeves. The program was based on the novels and short stories by P.G. Wodehouse. The series ran occasionally from 1973 to 1981.
- (21/06/88) Played Tony Hancock in BBC Radio 3's drama "Hancock's Last Half Hour".
- (1994) He acted in David Storey's play, "Home," at the Wyndham's Theatre in London, England with Paul Eddington, Brenda Bruce, and Rowena Cooper in the cast.
- (February 1991) He acted in Kenneth Grahame and Alan Bennett's play, "The Wind in the Willows," in a Royal National Theatre production at the Laurence Olivier Theatre in London, England with Griff Rhys Jones, Michael Bryant, and David Bamber in the cast. Nicholas Hytner was director.
- (January 1990-October 1990; December 1990-January 1991) He acted in the Royal National Theatre Season at the Laurence Olivier Theatre, Cottesloe Theatre, and Lyttelton Theatre in London, England in Henrik Ibsen's play, "Peer Gynt;" Tony Harrison's play,"The Trackers of Oxyrhynchus;" Bertolt Brecht's play, "The Good Person of Sichuan;" Martin Sherman's play, "Bent;" Stephen Sondheim's musical, "Sunday in the Park with George;" Anthony Minghella's play, "Whale;" Georges Farquhar, "The Beaux Stratagem," David Hare's play, "Racing Demon;" August Wilson's play, "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom;" Richard Brinsley Sheridan's play, "The School for Scandal;" Jean Racine's play, "Berenice;" Moliere's play, "Tartuffe;" "Abingdon Square;" Arthur Miller's plays, "After the Fall;" William Shakespeare's plays, "Hamlet," "Richard III," and "Hamlet" (Bulandra Theatre); Terry Johnson's play, "Piano;" Brian Friel's play, "Dancing at Lughnasa;" Athol Fugard's play, "My Children, My Africa" (Market Theatre); Paul Godfrey's play, "One in a While The Odd Thing Happens;" Kenneth Grahame and Alan Bennett's play, "The Wind in the Willows;" Robert Lepage's play, "Tectonic Plates;" Dario Fo's play, "Accidental Death of an Anarchist;" and David Edgar's play, "The Shape of the Table;" with Annabelle Apsion, Jane Asher, Sheila Ballantine, David Bamber, Keith Bartlett, Lois Baxter, Duncan Bell, Stephen Bent, Brenda Blethyn, Richard Bonneville, Stephen Boxer, David Bradley, Elizabeth Bradley, Brid Brennan, Michael Bryant, Suzanne Burden, David Burke, Ion Caramitru, Michael Cashman, Tom Chadbon, Maria Charles, Trevor Cooper, Allan Corduner, Oliver Cotton, Brian Cox, Alan Cumming, Neil Daglish, Nyree Dawn Porter, Stephen Dillane, Anthony Douse, Lindsay Duncan, Christopher Eccleston, Robert Eddison, Susan Engel, Oliver Ford Davies, Julia Ford, Maria Friedman, Lisa Fugard, Sean Gascoigne, Brian Glover, Stella Gonet, Henry Goodman, Jane Gurnett, Garrick Hagon, David Haig, Janet Henfrey, Guy Henry, Clare Higgins, Clare Holman, Harold Innocent, Peter Jeffrey, Hakeem Kae Kazim, John Kani, Ayub Khan Din, Adam Kotz, James Laurenson, Barbara Leigh Hunt, Alfred Lynch, Sara Mair Thomas, Michael Maloney, Eve Matheson, Alec McCowen, Ian McKellen, John Matschikitza, Stephen Moore, David Morrissey, John Normington, John Nettleton, John Neville, Jeremy Northam, Richard O'Callaghan, Richard Pasco, Bill Paterson, Clarke Peters, Pete Postlethwaite, Bruce Purchase, Hugh Quarshie, Philip Quast, Pearce Quigley, Denis Quilley, Oscar Quitak, Gary Raymond, Stephen Rea, Joyce Redman, Paul Rhys, Griff Rhys Jones, Terence Rigby, Barrie Rutter, Prunella Scales, Rapulana Seiphemo, Fiona Shaw, Paul Shelley, Jack Shepherd, Josette Simon, Malcolm Sinclair, Maggie Steed, Mark Strong, Meera Syal, Owen Teale, Bridget Turner, Philip Voss, Zoe Wanamaker, Toyah Wilcox, Tom Wilkinson, Penelope Wilton, Emil Wolk, and Albie Woodington in the company.
- (January 1991-July 1991; September 1991-January 1992) He acted in the Royal National Theatre season at the Laurence Olivier Theatre, Cottesloe Theatre, and Lyttelton Theatre all in London, England in Tony Harrison's play, "The Trackers of Oxyrhynchus;" Kenneth Grahame and Alan Bennett's play, "The Wind in the Willows;" David Hare's play, "Racing Demon," "Murmuring Judges;" Franz Kafka's play, "The Trial;" Friedrich Durrenmatt's play, "The Visit," (Theatre De Complicite production); Christopher Hampton's play, "White Chameleon;" Alan Ayckbourn's play, "Invisible Play;" Dario Fo's play, "Accidental Death of An Anarchist;" David Edgar's play, "The Shape of the Table;" "Fever;" Eugene O'Neill's play, "Long Day's Journey Into Night;" Moliere's play, "The Miser;" William Shakespeare's play, "Richard III;" Mikhail Bulgakov's play, "White Snow;" John Webster's play, "The White Devil;" Eduardo De Filippo's play, "Napoli Milionaria;" Bertolt Brecht's play, "The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui;" "Grand Kabuki" (Shochiku Company production); "At Our Table;" Mustapha Matura's play, "The Coup;" Alan Bennett's play, "The Madness of King George III;" Edward Bond's play, "The Sea;" "The Little Clay Cart;" and Ferderico Garcia Lorca's play, "Blood Wedding;" with Mark Addy, Keith Allen, Tony Armatrading, Robin Bailey, David Bamber, Gillian Barge, Desmond Barrit, Norman Beaton, Stephen Bent, Steven Berkoff, Paul Bhattacharjee, Steven Boxer, Elizabeth Bradley, Jasper Britton, Eleanor Bron, Michael Bryant, Suzanne Burden, Richenda Carey, Tom Chadbon, Emma Chambers, Ben Chapman, Ron Cook, Trevor Cooper, Lorcan Cranitch, Alan Cumming, Myriam Cyr, Judi Dench, Stephen Dillane, Linda Dobell, Kate Duchene, Robert Eddison, Alphonsia Emmanuel, Tenniel Evans, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Oliver Ford Davies, Rupert Frazer, Brian Glover, Stella Gonet, Cathryn Harrison, Nigel Hawthorne, Clare Higgins, Kathryn Hunter, Harold Innocent, Saeed Jaffrey, Oscar James, Peter Jeffrey, Stratford Johns, Karl Johnson, Darlene Johnson, Charles Kay, Jeffery Kissoon, Adam Kotz, Peter Laird, Barbara Leigh HUnt, Mark Lewis, Mark Lockyer, John Matshikiza, Simon McBurney, Helen McCrory, Sean McGinley, Ian McKellen, Bill Moody, Paul Moriaty, John Nettleton, Joseph O'Conor, Richard Pasco, Robert Patterson, Patrick Pearson, Bruce Purchase, Denis Quilley, Griff Rhys Jones, Terence Rigby, Sally Rogers, David Ross, Barrie Rutter, Nadim Sawalha, Prunella Scales, Adrian Scarborough, Cyril Shaps, Wallace Shawn, Jack Shephard, Antony Sher, Josette Simon, Malcolm Sinclair, Claire Skinner, Dinah Stabb, Ken Stott, Mark Strong, Tamasaburo, Julian Wadham, Timothy West, Benjamin Whitrow, Peter Wight, Tom Wilkinson, and Andrew Woodall in the company.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content