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Richard Hurndall(1910-1984)

  • Actor
  • Additional Crew
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Richard Hurndall in The Five Doctors (1983)
In the Nineteenth Century, in London, the psychologist Charles Marlowe researches a new drug capable to release inhibitions and uses his patients as guinea pigs. He discusses the principles of Freud with his friend Dr. Lanyon and decides to experiment his drug in himself. He becomes the ugly and evil Edward Blake and his friend and lawyer Frederik Utterson believes Blake is another person that might be blackmailing Charles. Meanwhile Charles loses control of his transformation.
Play trailer1:44
Je suis un monstre (1971)
1 Video
3 Photos
A gaunt, intense character actor of striking presence, Richard Gibbon Hurndall was educated at Scarborough College and trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. He acted professionally from 1930, initially in repertory theatre and later with the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford-upon-Avon, his roles including Orlando in "As You Like It", Bassanio in "The Merchant of Venice" and Laertes in "Hamlet". Richard's powerful voice and precise diction were also perfectly suited to working in radio. Between 1949 and 1952, he was a member of the BBC radio drama repertory company. In October 1958, he took over as host of Radio Luxemburg's half-hour British version of Edward R. Murrow's "This I Believe". A year later, he was well cast as Sherlock Holmes in a BBC radio adaptation of Arthur Conan Doyle's "The Sign of Four", transmitted over five weekly episodes.

From 1946, Hurndall made sporadic television appearances, but did not fully take to the medium until the mid 1960's. His incisive personality, combined with a natural ability to adopt diverse accents and dialects, led to him being cast as doctors, magistrates, aristocrats, and other authority figures of various ethnic backgrounds. By contrast, he was equally effective as a debonair underworld figure, Henry Mackleson, in Spindoe (1968). On the humorous side, he essayed a campy, effete antiques dealer in an episode of Steptoe and Son (1962) ("Any Old Iron?"); and alternated being sinister and droll, as Carne, a German general masterminding a rather unusual invasion of a Cornish fishing village at the onset of World War I, in the hilariously funny Ripping Yarns (1976) adventure, "Whinfrey's Last Case" .

His best known role was also destined to be one of his last. On the strength of his appearance in an episode of Blake's 7 (1978), Hurndall was cast as the First Doctor (formerly played by the late William Hartnell) in the 1983 feature length Docteur Who (1963) reunion special The Five Doctors (1983). The series' continuity adviser, Ian Levine, had spotted a resemblance between the two actors, an opinion with which Hartnell's widow apparently concurred. By his own admission, Hurndall entered the project with a measure of ambiguity, having had limited exposure to science fiction, or Docteur Who (1963), for that matter. Ultimately, he conformed perfectly to Hartnell's precise idiosyncratic mannerisms and intonation - a performance which proved more than adequate to the original. Sadly, Hurndall died within a few months of The Five Doctors (1983) going to air.
BornNovember 3, 1910
DiedApril 13, 1984(73)
BornNovember 3, 1910
DiedApril 13, 1984(73)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank

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Known for

Peter Egan and Robert Urquhart in The Inheritors (1974)
The Inheritors
TV Series
  • Mackie
It's Murder. But Is It Art? (1972)
It's Murder. But Is It Art?
TV Series
  • Brigadier Austin Binghop
Paul McGann, Colin Baker, Tom Baker, Peter Davison, William Hartnell, Sylvester McCoy, Jon Pertwee, and Patrick Troughton in Docteur Who (1963)
Docteur Who
8.4
TV Series
  • The Doctor
Chapeau melon et bottes de cuir (1961)
Chapeau melon et bottes de cuir
8.3
TV Series
  • Farrer

Credits

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IMDbPro

Actor



  • John Nettles in Bergerac (1981)
    Bergerac
    6.9
    TV Series
    • Maxwell Flagg
    • 1983
  • Paul McGann, Colin Baker, Tom Baker, Peter Davison, William Hartnell, Sylvester McCoy, Jon Pertwee, and Patrick Troughton in Docteur Who (1963)
    Docteur Who
    8.4
    TV Series
    • The Doctor
    • 1983
  • The Plot to Murder Lloyd George
    TV Movie
    • Sir Charles Mathews
    • 1983
  • Wendy Craig in Nanny (1981)
    Nanny
    8.1
    TV Series
    • Sir Hugo Bannerman
    • 1983
  • Rep
    TV Series
    • Wyndham Carter
    • 1982
  • Blake's 7 (1978)
    Blake's 7
    8.0
    TV Series
    • Nebrox
    • 1981
  • David Horovitch in Bognor (1981)
    Bognor
    6.0
    TV Series
    • Lord Camberley
    • 1981
  • Sunday Night Thriller (1981)
    Sunday Night Thriller
    TV Series
    • Sir
    • 1981
  • À la poursuite de l'amour (1980)
    À la poursuite de l'amour
    7.6
    TV Mini Series
    • Lord Montdore
    • 1980
  • Alfred Burke, Simon Cadell, Adolf Hitler, Bernard Horsfall, and Martin Jarvis in Enemy at the Door (1978)
    Enemy at the Door
    7.9
    TV Series
    • John Ambrose
    • 1978–1980
  • Ripping Yarns (1976)
    Ripping Yarns
    7.8
    TV Series
    • Carne
    • 1979
  • Richard Hurndall and John Shrapnel in Screenplay (1979)
    Screenplay
    7.1
    TV Series
    • General
    • 1979
  • Running Blind (1979)
    Running Blind
    7.5
    TV Mini Series
    • Sir Dennis Taggart
    • 1979
  • Adrian Dannatt in Just William (1977)
    Just William
    6.8
    TV Series
    • Great Uncle George
    • 1977
  • Barry Foster in Van der Valk (1972)
    Van der Valk
    7.1
    TV Series
    • Magistrate
    • Picard
    • 1972–1977

Additional Crew



  • Az ghatre ta darya (1957)
    Az ghatre ta darya
    Short
    • narrator
    • 1957

Videos1

Trailer
Trailer 1:44
Trailer

Personal details

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  • Born
    • November 3, 1910
    • Darlington, Durham, England, UK
  • Died
    • April 13, 1984
    • Camden, London, England, UK(heart attack)
  • Spouses
      Margaret Ward1964 - April 13, 1984 (his death)
  • Other works
    He acted in Jack Roffey's play, "Hostile Witness," at the Lyric Theatre in Haymarket, London, England with Michael Denison, Charles Leno, Miranda Connell, Geoffrey Lumsden, and Brian Oulton in the cast. Anthony Sharp was director.

Did you know

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  • Trivia
    He was working as an elevator operator at around the time that Jon Pertwee was performing his first stage role. Fifty years later, they met again when Richard was called in to replace William Hartnell as the First Doctor in the special anniversary programme, The Five Doctors (1983).

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