| Peter Egan | |
|---|---|
| Born | 28 September 1946 London, England |
Peter Egan (born 28 September 1946) is a British actor known for playing smooth neighbour Paul Ryman in 1980s sitcom Ever Decreasing Circles.
Egan was born in London, England, the son of Doris (Pilk) and Michael Thomas Egan.[1] He attended St. George's Secondary school, Maida Vale. His first television role was as the sex-and-cinema-obsessed Seth Starkadder in the BBC serialisation of Cold Comfort Farm in 1968. In 1969 he had come to notoriety as the acid-throwing gangster Hogarth in the controversial Granada TV series Big Breadwinner Hog. Later he had other starring roles as John Everett Millais in the 1975 BBC serial The Love School, and as Oscar Wilde in 1978 in the serial Lillie, starring Francesca Annis as Lillie Langtry; in the John le Carré dramatisation A Perfect Spy and another BBC sitcom Joint Account. He played the title-role as the future King George IV in the 1979 BBC series Prince Regent, and was a sinister immortal Knight Templar in Michael J. Bird's BBC series The Dark Side of the Sun (1983). Egan also played Fothergill in the very successful tv-series Reilly, Ace Of Spies.(1984) In 1986 he had a major role in the TV series Paradise Postponed. He also starred in one of the episodes of A Touch of Frost.(Private Lives)1999.
Other roles include Michael Cochrane in the 1998 programme The Ambassador, and on film as the suave secret agent Meres in TV spin-off Callan (1974), & the Duke of Sutherland in Chariots of Fire (1981), Academy Award Best Picture winner. In 2007 he took the role of Victor in the film Death at a Funeral. He recently starred in the BBC sitcom Home Again. In 2009 Egan toured as lead Sir Hugo Latymer in Nikolai Foster's revival of Noel Coward's A Song at Twilight.[2]
He is married to actress Myra Frances.
He is also the voice of Forza Motorsport 3. He does the voices for all the menus and help screens.
References
- ^ Peter Egan Biography (1946-)
- ^ [ http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/culturecritics/dominiccavendish/4928335/A-Song-at-Twilight-review.html A Song at Twilight, review at telegraph.com]
External links
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