Sylvester mccoy sophie aldred
Sylvester McCoy
Scottish actor (born )
Percy James Patrick Kent-Smith (born 20 August ), known professionally as Sylvester McCoy, is a Scottish actor. Gaining prominence as a physical comedian,[1][2] he became best known for playing the seventh incarnation of the Doctor in the long-running science fiction television series Doctor Who from to —the final Doctor of the original run—and briefly returning in a television film in He is also known for his work as Radagast in The Hobbit film series (–).
Early life
McCoy was born Percy James Patrick Kent-Smith[3] in Dunoon, on the Cowal peninsula, to an Irish Catholic mother and an English father who had been killed in action in World War II a couple of months before McCoy was born;[4] he met his father's family at the age of [3] His mother suffered a mental breakdown when McCoy was eight years old, and was institutionalised thereafter.[5] Prior to adopting his stage name, McCoy was known as Kent Smith; he was unaware of his given names until he was eleven.[5]
McCoy was raised primarily in Dunoon,[3] where he attended Saint Mun's School; he then studied for the priesthood at Blairs College, a seminary in Aberdeen between the ages of 12 and 16,[3] but gave this up and continued his education at Dunoon Grammar School.[4] After school he moved to London where he worked in the insurance industry for five years.[6] He worked in the box office of The Roundhouse for a time, where he was discovered by Ken Campbell.[7]
Career
Early work
McCoy came to prominence as a member of the experimental theatre troupe "The Ken Campbell Roadshow".
His best known act was as a stuntman character called "Sylveste McCoy" in a play entitled An Evening with Sylveste McCoy (the name was coined by actor Brian Murphy, who worked beside Kent-Smith at the Roundhouse Theatre and originated in the Wolfe Tones version of "Big Strong Man"[8]), where his stunts included putting a fork and nails up his nose and stuffing ferretsdown his trousers, and setting his head on fire.
As a joke, the programme notes listed Sylveste McCoy as played by "Sylveste McCoy" and, conscious that he may have needed to distinguish himself from the American actor Kent Smith as his career progressed, Kent-Smith maintained the stage name. Canadian critic Milton Shulman believed McCoy's name and fictionalised biography were genuine in his review of the Roadshow.[5]
Notable television appearances before he gained the role of the Doctor included roles in Vision On (where he played Pepe/Epep, a character who lived in the mirror), an O-Man in Jigsaw and Tiswas.
Every episode of the innovative ATV schools maths programme Leapfrog featured McCoy as "Bert" in wordless sequences filmed out of doors, as he attempted to form regular geometric patterns from different numbers of logs or carpet squares. He also appeared in Eureka, often suffering from the effects of inventions of Wilf Lunn, and as Wart, assistant to StarStrider in the Children's ITV series of the same name.
McCoy also portrayed, in one-man shows on the stage, two famous movie comedians: Stan Laurel and Buster Keaton. While playing Laurel, who had adopted his stage name due to the perceived bad luck of his real name containing thirteen letters, McCoy realised his stage name also had thirteen letters and added an "r" to the end of "Sylveste".[5] He also appeared as Henry "Birdie" Bowers in the television serial about Scott's last Antarctic expedition, The Last Place on Earth.
McCoy also had a small role in the film Dracula opposite Laurence Olivier and Donald Pleasence, and has sung with the Welsh National Opera.
Doctor Who
McCoy became the Seventh Doctor after taking over the lead role in Doctor Who in from Colin Baker.
He remained on the series until it ended in , ending with Survival (his twelfth and final serial as the Doctor). As Baker declined the invitation to film the regeneration scene, McCoy briefly wore a wig and appeared, face-down until the last moment before the regeneration commenced as the Sixth Doctor, with his face concealed by regeneration special effects.
He played the Doctor in the charity special Dimensions in Time, and again in , appearing in the beginning of the Doctor Who television movie starring Paul McGann as the Eighth Doctor.
In his first season, McCoy used his background in physical comedy to portray the character with a degree of clown-like humour, but script editorAndrew Cartmel soon changed that when fans argued that the character (and plots) were becoming increasingly lightweight.
The Seventh Doctor developed into a much darker figure than any of his earlier incarnations, manipulating people like chess pieces and always seeming to be playing a deeper game.
Sophie aldred imdb Video games [ edit ]. Sil and the Devil Seeds of Arodor. The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey. Soundtrack release [ edit ].A distinguishing feature of McCoy's performances was his manner of speech. He used his natural Scottish accent and rolled his rs. At the start of his tenure he used proverbs and sayings adapted to his own ends (e.g. "There's many a slap twixt cup and lap" – Delta and the Bannermen), although this characteristic was phased out during the later, darker series of his tenure.
In , readers of Doctor Who Magazine voted McCoy's Doctor "Best Doctor", over perennial favourite Tom Baker.[9] Since he has continued acting in the role of the Seventh Doctor in a series of audio plays for Big Finish Productions.
In November McCoy co-starred in the one-off 50th anniversary comedy homage The Five(ish) Doctors Reboot.[10]
In January , McCoy returned to the role of the Doctor alongside Bonnie Langford as Mel Bush, in "A Business Proposal for Mel!" This short, acted as an announcement trailer for 'The Collection: Season 24' Blu-Ray set, which was released later that year.[11]
McCoy reprised the role of the Doctor in the special "The Power of the Doctor", and again in the series Tales of the TARDIS.[12]
Later work
McCoy's television roles since Doctor Who have included Michael Sams in the drama Beyond Fear, shown on the first night of broadcast of Channel 5.
In , while still appearing in Doctor Who, McCoy presented a BBC children's programme called What's Your Story?, in which viewers were invited to phone in suggestions for the continuation of an ongoing drama.
He has also acted extensively in theatre in productions as diverse as pantomime and Molière.
He played Grandpa Jock in John McGrath'sA Satire of the Four Estaites () at the Edinburgh Festival. He played the role of Snuff in the macabre BBC Radio 4 comedy series The Cabaret of Dr Caligari.
McCoy missed out on a role in Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl[13] and was the second choice to play the role of Bilbo Baggins in Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings film trilogy.[7] In , he presented the Doctor Who video documentary release The Hartnell Years showcasing selected episodes of missing stories from the First Doctor's era.
McCoy appeared as the lawyer Dowling in a BBC Production of Henry Fielding's novel, The History of Tom Jones, A Foundling. In he appeared in Paul Sellar's asylum comedy "The Dead Move Fast" at the Gilded Balloon as part of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, playing the role of Doctor Mallinson. In he played the part of the suicidal Mr.
Peters in JC Marshall's play, Plume, at the Tron Theatre in Glasgow.[14]
McCoy has appeared with the Royal Shakespeare Company in The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe and in King Lear in , playing the Fool to Ian McKellen's Lear,[15] a performance which made use of McCoy's ability to play the spoons.
The RSC production with McKellen and McCoy was staged in Melbourne, during late July/early August and Wellington and Auckland, New Zealand, during mid to late August It came into residence at the New London Theatre in late , ending its run in January He reprised the role for the television movie of the production.[16]
In May he performed with the Carl Rosa Opera Company in a production of Gilbert and Sullivan's The Mikado, playing the title role.
He only performed with the company briefly, for the week of the show's run performing at the Sheffield Lyceum. Despite being set in Japan, he was able to demonstrate his ability to play the spoons by using his fan. In McCoy played the character of Mr. Mushnik in the Chocolate Factory's production of Little Shop of Horrors.[17]
He has also made guest appearances in the television series The Bill, the Rab C.
Nesbitt episode "Father" as Rab's mentally ill brother Gash Sr.[18] and the Still Game episode "Oot" (AKA "Out"), where he played a hermit-type character adjusting to life in modern Glasgow, having remained in his house for over 30 years. In October , he had a minor guest role as an injured ventriloquist on Casualty.
In the same month McCoy guest starred in an episode of the BBC soap opera Doctors, playing an actor who once played the time-travelling hero of a children's television series called "The Amazing Lollipop Man".
Sophie aldred official: ISBN Ainley's performance was also praised, with the reviewers stating it was "deadly serious and implacably evil, but with occasional flashes of dark humour". He was brought up a Catholic by his maternal grandmother and aunts [ 4 ] but is now an atheist. Arsenic and Old Lace.
The role was written as a tribute to McCoy.[19][20]
In January and February , McCoy appeared in the three-part BBC series The Real Marigold Hotel, which followed a group of celebrity senior citizens including Miriam Margolyes and Wayne Sleep on a journey to India.[21]
In he returned to the stage at the Edinburgh Fringe, in the production A Joke alongside Star Trek: Voyager actor Robert Picardo.[22]
The Hobbit trilogy
McCoy began filming for The Hobbit, a three-part adaptation of the book, in He portrays the wizard Radagast,[23] alongside fellow King Lear actor Ian McKellen who reprises his role as Gandalf.
Although the character of Radagast is only alluded to in The Hobbit, and only a minor character in The Lord of the Rings, the part was expanded for the films.
Personal life
McCoy and his wife, Agnes Verkaik,[24] have two sons. They were filmed for the Doctor Who serial The Curse of Fenric playing Haemovores, but their scenes were deleted from the finished release.[25] According to McCoy, his sons live in Holland and Thailand.[26]
He was brought up a Catholic by his maternal grandmother and aunts[4] but is now an atheist.[27]
During the COVID pandemic, McCoy spent some of lockdown living in France.[26]
Filmography
Film
Television
Theatre
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
An Italian Straw Hat | Fadinard | Theatre Royal, Stratford East | |
Bloody Mary | |||
Bartholomew Fair | Ezechiel Edgworth / Puppet operator | Nottingham Playhouse | |
White Suit Blues | Angel / Ben Rogers / Mark Twain / Pallbearer / Prisoner / Robot | The Old Vic and Nottingham Playhouse | |
Gone With Hardy | Stan Laurel | Nottingham Playhouse | |
Robin Hood | Mrs Campbell | Theatre Royal, Stratford East | |
Can’t Pay?
Won’t Pay! | Sergeant/Inspector/Undetaker/Grandfather | Criterion Theatre | |
The Pirates of Penzance | Samuel | Theatre Royal | |
The Ghost Train | Lyric Theatre | ||
Abracadabra | |||
Bedtime Story | Bristol Old Vic | ||
Dracula, or Out For The Count | Lyric Theatre | ||
Antony and Cleopatra | Theatre Royal | ||
The Taming of the Shrew | |||
The Pied Piper | The Pied Piper | National Theatre – Olivier, National Theatre and Camera Theater Tel Aviv | |
National Theatre – Lyttelton, National Theatre | |||
Love Songs of World War III: The Adrian Mitchell Songbook | Company | National Theatre – Cottesloe Theatre (now National Theatre – Dorfman), National Theatre | |
Aladdin | Palace Theatre | ||
Temptation | Fistula | Westminster Theatre | |
The Marriage of Figaro | Count Almaviva | Watford Palace Theatre | |
Cinderella | Theatre Royal, Bath | ||
Zorro The Musical! | Bernardo | Theatre Royal | |
Life is a Dream | Clarin | Royal Lyceum Theatre | |
Barbican Theatre | |||
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe | Mr.
Beaver | Sadler’s Wells Theatre | |
Noises Off | Selsdon Mowbray | Grand Theatre & Opera House, Leeds, Birmingham Repertory Theatre, and other locations | |
Arsenic and Old Lace | Dr Einstein | Mercury Theatre and Richmond Theatre | |
Aladdin | Abanazar | Yvonne Arnaud Theatre | |
King Lear | Lear's Fool | Courtyard Theatre, Theatre Royal and other locations |
Short films
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
The Shieling of the One Night | Fergus | ||
Pass Them On | The Administrator | ||
The Last Conjuror | Arthur Roberts | ||
Tale of a Timelord | The Doctor | ||
Beauty | Henry | ||
24 Carat | Seventh Doctor | ||
Bananacide | Brunswick |
Direct to video
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
The Hartnell Years | Presenter | ||
The Airzone Solution | Anthony Stanwick | ||
The Zero Imperative | Dr.
Colin Dove | ||
Bidding Adieu | Himself | Documentary | |
Do You Have a License To Save This Planet? | 'The Foot Doctor' | Short film |
Video games
Other works
Stage
Audio drama
References
- ^Cavan Scott; Mark Wright ().
Doctor Who: Who-ology. BBC Books. p. ISBN.
- ^Muir, John Kenneth (). A Critical History of Doctor Who on Television. McFarland & Co. ISBN. Retrieved 23 October
- ^ abcdPelley, Rich (20 November ).
"Sylvester McCoy's teenage obsessions: 'I was the twist king of Dunoon'". The Guardian.
- ^ abcSmith, Kenny (13 March ). "Doctor Who star steps back in time to Dunoon childhood". Scottish Field. Retrieved 8 May
- ^ abcd"Sylvester McCoy in Conversation".
Doctor Who: The Collection Season 24 (special feature).
Sylvester mccoy sophie aldred One of the extras removed her costume and simply walked off the set, causing delays while a replacement was found. The only clue to Ace's whereabouts on television, though, came in a episode of Doctor Who spin-off The Sarah Jane Adventures , which suggested she was running a non-profit business called A Charitable Earth A. Doctor Who: The Novel Adaptations. Archived from the original on 19 JulyBBC Studios.
- ^Sylvester McCoy TV BiographyArchived 3 December at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 19 November
- ^ ab"People buy Doctor Who drinks". icBerkshire. Trinity Mirror. 3 April Archived from the original on 15 January Retrieved 30 May
- ^McCoy, Sylvester (17 November ).
"Sylvester McCoy". My life in a Mixtape. BBC Radio2. Retrieved 23 November
- ^McCoy %, Tom Baker %, Doctor Who Magazine, May
- ^"The Five(ish) Doctors Reboot", BBC programmes, retrieved 26 November
- ^"A Business Proposal for Mel! The Collection: Season 24 Announcement Trailer Doctor Who".
BBC Studios. Retrieved 17 April
- ^"Doctor Who: Welcome to The Whoniverse where every Doctor, every companion and hundreds of terrifying monsters live". BBC Media Centre. BBC. 30 October
- ^Courtney, Kevin (15 September ). "Then & now Sylvester Mccoy, actor". The Irish Times.
Retrieved 23 October
- ^Fisher, Mark (5 March ). "Plume – review". The Guardian. Guardian News and Media Limited. Retrieved 17 April
- ^"King Lear– cast list". RSC web site. Archived from the original on 9 March Retrieved 16 March
- ^Higgins, Charlotte (26 November ).Anthony ainley Al Murray's Multiple Personality Disorder. Greenwich , London , England. BBC Books. Every episode of the innovative ATV schools maths programme Leapfrog featured McCoy as "Bert" in wordless sequences filmed out of doors, as he attempted to form regular geometric patterns from different numbers of logs or carpet squares.
"Ian McKellen's King Lear to ring in the Christmas cheer for Channel 4". The Guardian. Retrieved 23 October
- ^"Little Shop of Horrors (Mon 4 – Sat 9 May )". Liverpool Empire. Archived from the original on 19 July Retrieved 30 April
- ^"Father, Series 5, Rab C Nesbitt – BBC Two".
BBC. Retrieved 11 November
- ^"BBC One Programmes– Doctors, Series 10, "The Lollipop Man"". BBC. Retrieved 28 October
- ^David, Semple. "How I brought back Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who". Den of Geek. Retrieved 28 October
- ^"BBC One - The Real Marigold Hotel, Series 1 - The female residents".
BBC.
- ^"Theatre review: A Joke - The Scotsman".Sophie aldred doctor who Aldred at Re Generation 2 in Direct to video [ edit ]. Lust in Space. Dominic Glynn.
Archived from the original on 17 June
- ^"Sylvester McCoy Is Radagast the Brown". Filmonic. Archived from the original on 4 October Retrieved 28 October
- ^"Sylvester McCoy A Brief History Of Time (Travel)". .
- ^"The Curse of Fenric". Retrieved 5 January
- ^ abMacKenzie, Steven (21 March ).
"Sylvester McCoy: 'Wisdom? Me? What wisdom have I got?'". The Big Issue.
- ^So you believed in God back then?
"I did, yeah",
And do you now?,
"No, I think it's awful",
Doctor Who Magazine, 19 August - ^"Doctor Who movie producer says BBC didn't want Sylvester McCoy to appear". Radio Times.
Retrieved 17 April
- ^Farnell, Chris (13 March ). "Why Has There Never Been a Truly Great Doctor Who Video Game?".
- Sylvester McCoy on his "emotional" return to Doctor Who
- Item 4 of 8
- Item 8 of 8
- Item 2 of 8
- Item 6 of 8
Den of Geek. Retrieved 17 April
- ^McNulty, Thomas (19 May ). "Fallout: London Mod Boasts Doctor Who Voice Talent". ScreenRant. Retrieved 3 February