This article possibly contains original research. (December 2024) |
Roy Marsden (born Roy Anthony Mould; 25 June 1941[not verified in body]) is an English actor who portrayed Adam Dalgliesh in the Anglia Television dramatisations (1983–1998) of P. D. James's detective novels, and Neil Burnside in the spy drama The Sandbaggers (1979–1980).
Roy Marsden | |
---|---|
Born | Roy Anthony Mould 25 June 1941 |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1964–present |
Spouse(s) | First wife (m. 1962; div. 1968) Polly Hemingway (m. 1972; div. 1992) |
Children | 2 |
Early life and education
editThis section needs additional citations for verification. (December 2024) |
Marsden was born on 25 June 1941,[citation needed] as Roy Anthony Mould.[1][better source needed] Marsden attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) and spent four terms there,[citation needed] and while there, he attempted to unionise the students (but was thwarted).[citation needed][clarification needed] After one argument he poured a bottle of urine down the front of the director's suit;[citation needed] Marsden recalled, "Two weeks later, he phoned me up and asked if I'd got a job or an agent. I said no, so he arranged for me to start work at a theatre in Nottingham, and who should be the student assistant manager there but Anthony Hopkins. I persuaded him to go to RADA."[This quote needs a citation]
Acting career
editThis section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (December 2024) |
Stage
editIn the early 1960s, Marsden worked with the Royal Shakespeare Company and began to accumulate an extensive list of theatrical credits that include everything from Anton Chekhov and Henrik Ibsen to contemporary Soviet playwright Alexander Vampilov. His preference was for the alternative experimental theatres of Glasgow, Edinburgh, Cambridge and Birmingham over London's commercial theatre.
His appearances include Crispen in The Friends, 1970; Casca and Lucilius in Julius Caesar, 1972; Paul Schippel in Schippel, 1974; Heinrich Krey in The Plumber's Progress, 1975. He also played Long John Silver in Treasure Island at London's Mermaid Theatre around Christmas for two years and Henry Higgins in Pygmalion at the Albery Theatre. In 2008, Marsden appeared in two productions, Murder on Air and Happy Jack at the Theatre Royal, Windsor.
Television
editHis prominent television roles include George Osborne in a 1967 adaptation of Vanity Fair and the title role of Arthur Chipping in 1984's Goodbye Mr. Chips. Marsden has also appeared in guest roles in episodes of The New Avengers (episode "The Tale of the Big Why"), Space: 1999, Only Fools and Horses (episode "Little Problems"), and Tales of the Unexpected (episode "Proof of Guilt").
Marsden starred in Yorkshire Television's 1978–1980 Cold War espionage series The Sandbaggers. He played Neil Burnside, the dour and fiercely protective director of operations for the Secret Intelligence Service, whose character spent as much time infighting with his superiors in Whitehall and his own department as he did battling the KGB. The show ran for three series and 20 episodes.
In 1982, Yorkshire Television cast him in Airline, a series in which he played Jack Ruskin, a scrappy Second World War pilot trying to start his own post-war airline against establishment opposition. It also starred his wife, Polly Hemingway, who was pregnant with their first child during most of the filming. In an interview, Marsden said "It was one of the most enjoyable programmes I ever made. Learning to fly those old DC-3s was terrific. And I enjoyed playing Ruskin enormously because he had hope. Of course, he was a pain up the tushie most of the time, but then you'd see that youthful desire to actually get out and triumph against enormous odds. I identified with that character the most."[This quote needs a citation]
Marsden's portrayal of Adam Dalgliesh in Anglia TV's P. D. James series spanned fifteen years. The series began as adaptations played out in serials of five or six one-hour episodes each, which were, unusually for the time, recorded on outside broadcast videotape as opposed to film:
- Death of an Expert Witness (1983);
- Shroud for a Nightingale (1984);
- Cover Her Face (1985);
- The Black Tower (1985);
- A Taste for Death (1988);
- Devices and Desires (1991).
After producer John Rosenberg died in early 1991 (during the transmission run of Devices and Desires), the format of the adaptations changed. Initially, Anglia followed the trend made popular by the Inspector Morse series, condensing the next two adaptations into two-hour filmed TV films.
- Unnatural Causes (1993);
- A Mind to Murder (1995).
The final two adaptations were filmed in three one-hour episodes:
- Original Sin (1997);
- A Certain Justice (1998).
The Dalgliesh role was taken by Martin Shaw when the BBC took over the rights to James's novels and produced its own series.
In 1993, Marsden appeared in The Last Vampyre, a feature-length episode of Sherlock Holmes.
In 2006 he played Ted Cartwright, a veterinarian, in "Bad Blood", in the fourth season of Foyle's War.
Marsden presented a nine-part crime documentary series Roy Marsden's Casebook for ITV West in 2007. He also appeared in the 2007 Doctor Who episode "Smith and Jones" as Mr Stoker, a medical consultant.
In 2008, he appeared in the ITV series The Palace as King Richard's private secretary, Sir Iain Ratalick. That same year he played Sir Charles Marlow in the television film adaptation She Stoops to Conquer; Polly Hemingway appeared in the film as Mrs. Hardcastle, the first time the two formerly married actors had appeared in the same production since 1982's Airline.
Marsden reprised his Only Fools and Horses role in 2009 as one of the Driscoll brothers in the spin-off series, The Green Green Grass. He also appeared in the television film Margaret (2009) as Norman Tebbit.
In 2010 Marsden appeared in an episode of New Tricks, and in 2011 in an episode of Silent Witness.
He played Commander Haydock in the 2016 adaptation of Agatha Christie's N or M?, a three-episode part of the BBC's Partners in Crime serial.
Film
editHis film credits include Toomorrow (1970), a small part as a Gestapo officer in The Eagle Has Landed (1976), The Squeeze (1977), and Oberon in Dungeons & Dragons: Wrath of the Dragon God (2005).
Personal life
editRoy Marsden was just this subject's stage name, until April 2005 when it also became his legal name (replacing his birth name, Roy Anthony Mould).[1]
Marsden's second wife was actress Polly Hemingway, and they had two sons together before their divorce in 1992.[2]
Filmography
editThis section of a biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification, as its only attribution is to IMDb. (December 2024) |
Film
editYear | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1970 | Toomorrow | Alpha | |
1976 | The Eagle Has Landed | Sturmbannführer Toberg, SS | Uncredited |
1977 | The Squeeze | Barry | |
1993 | Unnatural Causes | Detective Superintendent Adam Dalgliesh | Television film |
1995 | A Mind to Murder | Detective Superintendent Adam Dalgliesh | Television film |
2004 | Salvage | David Foster | Short film |
2005 | A Higher Agency | Mr. Oliver | Short film |
Mysterious Island | Joseph | Television film | |
Dungeons & Dragons: Wrath of the Dragon God | Oberon | Direct-to-video | |
2006 | All in the Game | George | Television film |
Heroes and Villains | Fred | ||
2008 | She Stoops to Conquer | Charles Marlow | Television film |
2009 | Margaret | Norman Tebbit | Television film |
2011 | Holy Flying Circus | Mervyn Stockwood | Television film |
2013 | Game | James |
Television
editYear | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1964 | First Night | Matthew | Episode: "The Improbable Mr. Claybill" |
1965 | No Hiding Place | Gerry Moore | Episode: "Wolves Get Eaten, Too" |
Riviera Police | Jack | Episode: "Duet for Two Guns" | |
The Flying Swan | Tony Hassall | Recurring role; 3 episodes | |
Danger Man | H.Q. Policeman | Episode: "The Man Who Wouldn't Talk" | |
1966 | The Liars | Charles Ponsonby | Episode: "Series 1, Episode 5" |
Theatre 625 | Policeman | Episode: "The Queen and Jackson" | |
The Man in Room 17 | Lieutenant David Stanton | Episode: "The Standard" | |
Mystery and Imagination | Captain Battenburg | Episode: "Carmilla" | |
1967 | The Dick Emery Show | Episode: "Series 6, Episode 5" | |
The Fellows | Sherratt | Recurring role; 2 episodes | |
Escape | Gordon Oliver | Episode: "Nothing to Lose" | |
Vanity Fair | George Osborne | Miniseries; 4 episodes | |
1968 | The Jazz Age | Gervase Kent-Cumberland | Episode: "Winner Take All" |
1969 | Comedy Playhouse | Nigel | Episode: "The Liver Birds - Pilot" |
The Elusive Pimpernel | Sir Andrew Ffoulkes | Miniseries; 9 episodes | |
1970 | Never Mind the Quality, Feel the Width | Mr. Jenkins | Episode: "New Worlds for Old" |
Armchair Theatre | Gerry Cartland | Episode: "The Dolly Scene" | |
The Adventures of Don Quick | Sycamore | Episode: "Paradise Destruct" | |
1972 | Crown Court | Peter MacLennon | Recurring role; 3 episodes |
1973 | Late Night Theatre | Gavin | Episode: "Family Tree" |
Bright | Episode: "The Death of Captain Doughty" | ||
Omnibus | Jake | Episode: "The Runaway" | |
1974 | Z-Cars | Tommy | Episode: "Absence" |
1975 | The Legend of Robin Hood | Military Prior | Episode: "Part 4" |
1976 | Space: 1999 | Alien Invisible | Episode: "The Rules of Luton" |
The New Avengers | Frank Turner | Episode: "The Tale of the Big Why" | |
Dickens of London | Stanfield | Episode: "Angel" | |
1977 | Space: 1999 | Crael | Episode: "Devil's Planet" |
Playhouse | Tom | Episode: "Blind Love" | |
Survivors | The Captain | Episode: "Long Live the King" | |
Sister Dora | Redfern Davies | Episode: "Part 2" | |
Target | Mac | Episode: "Hunting Parties" | |
Drama | Palace attendant | Episode: "Oedipus Tyrannus by Sophocles" | |
1978 | BBC2 Play of the Week | Sidney Frederick Haynes | Episode: "Stargazy on Zummerdown" |
Do You Remember? | Frank | Episode: "Park People" | |
1978-80 | The Sandbaggers | Neil Burnside | Series regular; 20 episodes |
1979 | Playhouse | Reverend Thompson | Episode: "Children of the Gods" |
1980 | Tales of the Unexpected | Chief Inspector Walters | Episode: "Proof of Guilt" |
1982 | Airline | Jack Ruskin | Series regular; 9 episodes |
1983 | Death of an Expert Witness | Adam Dalgliesh | Miniseries; 7 episodes |
1984 | Goodbye, Mr. Chips | Charles Edward 'Mr. Chips' Chipping | Miniseries; 6 episodes |
Shroud for a Nightingale | Adam Dalgliesh | Miniseries; 5 episodes | |
Tales of the Unexpected | Gerald Overton | Episode: "The Mugger" | |
1985 | Cover Her Face | Adam Dalgliesh | Miniseries; 6 episodes |
The Black Tower | Adam Dalgliesh | Miniseries; 6 episodes | |
1986 | Inside Story | John Bennet | Miniseries; 6 episodes |
1988 | A Taste for Death | Adam Dalgliesh | Miniseries; 6 episodes |
1989 | Only Fools and Horses | Danny Driscoll | Episode: "Little Problems" |
1990 | Theatre Night | Agamemnon | Episode: "Iphigenia at Aulis" |
The Play on One | David Caesar | Episode: "Yellowbacks" | |
1991 | Devices and Desires | Adam Dalgliesh | Miniseries; 6 episodes |
1993 | The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes | John Stockton | Episode: "The Last Vampyre" |
1994 | Frank Stubbs Promotes | Blick | Recurring role; 3 episodes |
Against All Odds | Colonel Mark Cook | Episode: "The Promise" | |
1995 | Dangerous Lady | Boyd-Templeton | Miniseries; 1 episode |
1997 | Original Sin | Adam Dalgliesh | Miniseries; 3 episodes |
1998 | A Certain Justice | Adam Dalgliesh | Miniseries; 3 episodes |
2004 | King Solomon's Mines | Captain Good | Miniseries; 2 episodes |
2005 | Vincent | Terry O'Connor | Episode: "Series 1, Episode 2" |
2005-09 | The Green Green Grass | Danny Driscoll | Recurring role; 3 episodes |
2006 | Foyle's War | Ted Cartwright | Episode: "Bad Blood" |
Eleventh Hour | Drake | Episode: "Miracle" | |
Rebus | Sir Vivian Kirkwood | Episode: "Let It Bleed" | |
2007 | Doctor Who | Mr. Stoker | Episode: "Smith and Jones" |
Diamond Geezer | Garovski | Episode: "Old Gold" | |
2008 | The Palace | Sir Iain Ratalick | Series regular; 8 episodes |
Trial & Retribution | Ray Harper | Episode: "Tracks: Part 1" | |
2010 | New Tricks | George Mackie | Episode: "Where There's Smoke" |
Moving On | Eddie | Episode: "Trust" | |
2011 | Silent Witness | Professor Nigel Silverlake | Episode: "A Guilty Mind" |
2013 | The Escape Artist | Peter Simkins | Miniseries; 3 episodes |
2015 | Partners in Crime | Commander Haydock | Miniseries; 3 episodes |
References
edit- ^ a b "Changes of Name". The London Gazette. No. 57672. 13 June 2005. p. 7689.
Notice is hereby given that by a Deed Poll dated 19 April 2005 and enrolled in the Supreme Court of Judicature ... ROY MARSDEN, ... London E9 7AP, who is divorced and a British citizen, under section 11(1) of the British Nationality Act 1981, abandoned the name of Roy Anthony Mould and assumed the name of Roy Marsden
- ^ Quinn, Thomas (11 July 1998). "Roy the Rover". The Mirror. Retrieved 5 October 2022 – via The Free Library.
in 1992... Unexpectedly, Marsden divorced his second wife, actress Polly Hemingway, and left the South London home they lived in with sons Billy, 12, and Joe, 17...
External links
edit- Roy Marsden at IMDb