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Ian McNeice (born 2 October 1950) is an English film and television actor. On television, he has played government agent Harcourt in the 1985 television series Edge of Darkness , Bert Large in the comedy-drama Doc Martin , the Newsreader in historical drama Rome (2005–2007) and Winston Churchill in Doctor Who (2010–2011).
Played By: Ian McNeice, 3 episodes in 1994 and Jeff Nuttal, 6 episodes in 1996; Appears in: Series 2, 3; Gustave LaRoche was a talented chef about ten years before the setting of the show. His real name is Gary Lamston (spelling uncertain), but he changed his name because, in his day, one had to be French to be taken seriously as a chef.
Jedburgh shows Craven the ... Edge of Darkness was an early role for Ian McNeice, ... Darius Jedburgh was listed 84th in its list of the One Hundred Greatest TV ...
He assigns Sharpe to train them and puts him under the command of former Wagonmaster-General Colonel Runciman (Ian McNeice). Kiely's wife, Lady Kiely (Allie Byrne), and his mistress, guerrilla leader Doña Juanita , both show up in camp. In the meantime, Sharpe has enough time to train the men and strengthen the fort's defences, so that when ...
Martin appears on the local radio station in an attempt to alert the village to a potential health scare, but his efforts misfire. Bert Large (Ian McNeice) and his son Al (Joe Absolom) have an argument over college and the future of their family businesses. [7] Martin and Bert believe the cause of the epidemic is the origins of the water supply ...
Chef! is a British situation comedy starring Lenny Henry that aired as twenty episodes over three series from 28 January 1993 to 30 December 1996 on the BBC.The show was created and primarily written by Peter Tilbury based on an idea from Lenny Henry [1] and produced for the BBC by Henry's production company, Crucial Films.
IN FOCUS: As the sprawling franchise returns to our television screens in the form of ‘Dune: Prophecy’, Greg Evans takes a look back at when SyFy boldly adapted Frank Herbert’s first three ...
Spartacus is a 2004 North American miniseries directed by Robert Dornhelm and produced by Ted Kurdyla from a teleplay by Robert Schenkkan.It aired over two nights on the USA Network, and stars Goran Visnjic, Alan Bates (in his final television appearance), Angus Macfadyen, Rhona Mitra, Ian McNeice, Ross Kemp and Ben Cross. [1]