Paul Darrow | |
Birth Name: | Paul Valentine Birkby |
Birth Date: | 2 May 1941 |
Birth Place: | Chessington, Surrey, England |
Alma Mater: | Royal Academy of Dramatic Art |
Education: | Haberdashers' Aske's Boys' School |
Known For: | Blake's 7 |
Occupation: | Actor |
Years Active: | 1963–2019 |
Spouse: | Janet Lees Price |
Paul Darrow (born Paul Valentine Birkby; 2 May 1941 – 3 June 2019) was an English actor and writer. He became best known for playing Kerr Avon in the BBC science fiction television series Blake's 7 between 1978 and 1981.[1] His many television roles included two appearances in another BBC science fiction series, Doctor Who, playing Captain Hawkins in Doctor Who and the Silurians (1970) and Tekker in Timelash (1985). He was also the voice of "Jack" on independent radio stations JACKfm and Union JACK, whose lines included dry-witted comments pertaining to current events.
Darrow was born Paul Valentine Birkby in Chessington, Surrey, on 2 May 1941. He received his formal education at Haberdashers' Aske's Boys' School, before studying at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.[2] Whilst at RADA, he shared a flat with fellow actors John Hurt and Ian McShane.[3]
Darrow worked extensively in theatre and television.
His television appearances include: Emergency Ward 10, The Saint, Z-Cars, Dixon of Dock Green, Within These Walls, as the Sheriff of Nottingham in the 1975 BBC series The Legend of Robin Hood, as Mr. Tallboy in the 1973 adaptation of Dorothy L. Sayers' Murder Must Advertise, as Thomas Doughty in the television film Drake's Venture, Dombey and Son, Maelstrom, Making News, Pie in the Sky, Hollyoaks, Toast of London and Little Britain. He provided the voiceover for Biblical quotations in Richard Dawkins's The Root of All Evil?. He had a one-off appearance in the 1990 series of Cluedo, but did not play the murder victim. He was also the presenter of the BBC3 reality series Hercules (2004).
Darrow appeared as the character Avon, for which he was best known, in all but the first episode of Blake's 7. In the mid-to-late 1990s, he purchased the rights to Blake's 7 and attempted to produce a big-budget follow-up mini-series, Blake's 7: A Rebellion Reborn. According to Darrow, it would have been set 25 years after the final episode of the BBC series.[4]
His film credits are few, but include roles as doctors in The Raging Moon (1971) and the Bond movie Die Another Day (2002), for which he filmed but much of his material was deleted before the film went on release to cinemas. Darrow appears briefly in the final product.
Darrow recorded voice-overs and straplines for UK JACKfm station in Oxfordshire. He also provided the voice of the character Grand Moff Tarkin in the computer game .[5] He also voiced the character of Zarok in the PlayStation game MediEvil; his recordings were re-used in the game's 2019 remake. Darrow appeared in Emmerdale from 13 July 2009, playing Eddy Fox, Alan Turner's friend; he knows Turner as "Tank". He also played the character of Kaston Iago in the Kaldor City audio releases.
Darrow also provided the voice of a main character in the PC game . The actress Glynis Barber, who played Soolin in Blake's 7, provided the voice for the main female character. The game was narrated by Tom Baker of Doctor Who fame.[6]
Darrow played the role of Sam Vimes in the 1998/99 touring production of the play based on Terry Pratchett's Discworld novel Guards! Guards!.[7]
In 2004, Darrow was the subject of the fourth volume of MJTV's "The Actor Speaks" audio CDs, featuring frank interviews and dramatic pieces, alongside guest Peter Miles, with a piece specifically written by Tanith Lee.
Darrow narrated the 2008 audio book of Terry Nation's classic children's story Rebecca's World: Journey to the Forbidden Planet (2008)
In December 2011, Darrow voiced the character of Overseer Tremel in the Bioware MMORPG release .
In 2012, Darrow returned to the role of Kerr Avon in Big Finish Productions' Blake's 7: The Liberator Chronicles, a series of dramatic readings which take place during Series One, Two and Three of the original show. He also reprised the part in Blake's 7: The Classic Audio Adventures, a full-cast audio drama series.
In 2015, Darrow starred as Paul Rand, the enigmatic business man in charge of the business institute Atlas in the interactive video game . A sequel was planned in 2016, but never came to fruition.
Darrow was Patron of the University of York Astronomy Society (AstroSoc) from 1981 to 1984.
An extinct crocodile from the Miocene of Australia, Baru darrowi, was named after Darrow.[8]
On 27 October 2018, Darrow appeared on (and won) a celebrity sci-fi edition of the quiz show Pointless, along with fellow Blake's 7 star Michael Keating.[9]
In the mid-1960s Darrow married the actress Janet Lees Price. They were married almost fifty years, until her death in 2012, and lived in later life in Billingshurst, West Sussex.[10]
In his last years Darrow suffered a decline in health. In October 2014, he had an aortic aneurysm, and due to complications during its treatment, surgeons had to amputate both his legs.[11] [12] He died on the morning of 3 June 2019 at the age of 78.[13] [14] [15] The 2019 remake of MediEvil, which featured Darrow as the voice of the main antagonist Zarok, was dedicated to his memory.
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1970 | Mister Jerico | Receptionist | ||
1971 | The Raging Moon | Doctor | ||
2002 | Die Another Day | Doctor | ||
2006 | Battlespace | Horondo the Computer | Direct-to-video |
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1963 | The Odd Man | Salesman | Episode: "A Pattern of Little Silver Devils" | |
1965–1966 | Emergency Ward 10 | Mr Verity | 56 episodes | |
1967 | The Saint | Omar | Episode: "The Gadic Collection" | |
1968 | Virgin of the Secret Service | Sayid | Episode: "The Pyramid Plot" | |
1968 | Frontier | Captain Hume | Episode: "His Lordship" | |
1968, 1978 | ITV Playhouse | Anthony Eden / Julian | 2 episodes | |
1969 | The Newcomers | Cedric McDermott | 2 episodes | |
1969 | Special Branch | Lawyer | Episode: "Smokescreen" | |
1969 | Coronation Street | Doctor | 2 episodes | |
1969–1971 | The Flaxton Boys | Captain Sterman / Wellington Moth / The Venerable | 3 episodes | |
1969, 1973 | Z-Cars | Trench/Jerry Shand | 3 episodes | |
1970 | Manhunt | Eddie | Episode: "The Losers" | |
1970, 1985 | Doctor Who | Captain Hawkins / Tekker | Doctor Who and the Silurians/Timelash | |
1971 | The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes | Doctor Hart | Episode: "A Message from the Deep Sea" | |
1973 | Lord Peter Wimsey | Mr Tallboy | Serial: "Murder Must Advertise" | |
1974 | Churchill's People | Marcellus | Episode: "Pritan" | |
1974–1975 | Within These Walls | Dr Green | 2 episodes | |
1974, 1976 | Dixon of Dock Green | Tony Kinsley/Pearce | 2 episodes | |
1975 | The Poisoning of Charles Bravo | Charles Bravo | 3 episodes | |
1975 | Prometheus: The Life of Balzac | Cador | Episode: "The Human Comedy" | |
1975 | The Legend of Robin Hood | Sheriff of Nottingham | TV miniseries | |
1976 | Couples | Ralph Hewitt | 6 episodes | |
1976 | Killers | Edward Abinger | 2 episodes | |
1976 | When the Boat Comes In | Barford | Episode: "A Pillowful of Buttercups" | |
1977 | Rooms | Peter Wishart | 3 episodes | |
1977 | Yes, Honestly | Bernard | Episode: "The Man Who Shot Bernard Vallance" | |
1978–1981 | Blake's 7 | Kerr Avon | 51 episodes | |
1979 | Penmarric | Robert Yorke | 1 episode | |
1980 | Hammer House of Horror | Andrews | Episode: "Guardian of the Abyss" | |
1980 | Drake's Venture | Thomas Doughty | TV movie | |
1983 | Dombey & Son | James Carker | TV miniseries | |
1985 | Maelstrom | Oliver Bridewell | TV miniseries | |
1989 | Storyboard | George | Episode: "Making News" | |
1990 | Making News | George | 6 episodes | |
1991 | Dark Justice | Perth | Episode: "Nowhere to Hide" | |
1991 | Fiddlers Three | Reggie Parsons | Episode: "The Man Most Likely To" | |
1991–1992, 2009 | Emmerdale | Eddy Fox/Patrick | 12 episodes | |
1992 | Haggard | Jack | Episode: "Mad Jack" | |
1992 | Science Fiction | Sir Arthur Conan Doyle | Episode: "Sherlock Holmes and the Case of the Missing Link" | |
1996 | Pie in the Sky | Colin Wilkes | Episode: "New Leaf" | |
2000 | The Strangerers | C.D. | 6 episodes | |
2000 | Rough Magik | Mr Moon | TV movie | |
2002 | Hollyoaks | Judge | 1 episode | |
2004 | Little Britain | Conservative MP | 1 episode | |
2005 | Twisted Tales | Mr De Vere | Episode: "Flat Four" | |
2009–2011, 2013–2014 | Prentice | 7 episodes | ||
2014 | Toast of London | Duncan Clench | Episode: "Desperate Measures" |
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1996 | Gender Wars | Professor Jonathan Henry Smythe | Voice actor | |
1997 | Voices | Voice actor, also wrote the novelisation based on the game | ||
1998 | MediEvil | Zarok | Voice actor | |
2000 | English version, various voices | Voice actor | ||
2001 | Hostile Waters | Walker | Voice actor | |
2003 | Primal | Ferai Shaman/The Watcher | Voice actor | |
2005 | Zarok | Voice actor | ||
2006 | Voice actor | |||
2011 | Overseer Tremel/Additional voices | Voice actor | ||
2014 | Elite Dangerous | MinuS | Voice actor, DLC pack | |
2015 | Contradiction: The Interactive Murder Mystery Movie | Paul Rand | FMV | |
2019 | MediEvil | Zarok | Archive sound, dedicated to Paul Darrow |
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1998–1999 | Blake's 7 | Kerr Avon | 2 stories: "The Sevenfold Crown" and "The Syndeton Experiment" | |
2005 | Doctor Who - The Monthly Adventures | Guidance | Serial: "The Next Life" | |
2005 | The Adventures of Luther Arkwright | Cromwell | ||
2010 | Rebecca's World - Journey to the Forbidden Planet | Narrator | ||
2012–2016 | Blake's 7: The Liberator Chronicles | Kerr Avon/Narrator | 17 episodes | |
2013–2020 | Blake's 7: The Classic Audio Adventures | Kerr Avon | 33 episodes |