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Ray Barrett

 
Actor: Ray Barrett
 
  • Born: May 02, 1927 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '60s-'90s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Thriller
  • Career Highlights: The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith, Don's Party, Hotel de Love
  • First Major Screen Credit: Doctor Who: The Rescue, Episode 1 (1965)

Biography

Australian actor Ray Barrett was one of the more popular leading men on British television in the 1960s; he was on the series The Troubleshooters from 1965-1971 and did voices on the Gerry Anderson marionette series Stingray and Thunderbirds. It was only in the decades that followed that he emerged to big-screen stardom in his native country. Born in Brisbane in 1927, he was fascinated by radio -- then a marvelous new entertainment medium -- and won an on-air talent competition in 1939. At the age of 16, Barrett went to work as an announcer, and later did interviews and even sang on the air. Eventually, he started doing plays, and was put under contract to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, through which he did everything from Shakespeare to tales of Tarzan. He made the jump to television in the early '50s, including an appearance on the adventure series Long John Silver (1955), starring Robert Newton. Barrett also worked with John Bluthal (A Hard Day's Night, Help!) on a comedy series called The Idiot Weekly, and with Spike Milligan on a 1958 television special. In 1959, Barrett moved to England and, over the next few years, appeared in a string of series, including Educating Archie, Armchair Mystery Theatre, Emergency Ward 10, Man of the World, First Night, Harpers West One, Z Cars, Doctor Who, The Saint, and The Avengers. He also made a lasting impression as a voice artist on Gerry and Sylvia Anderson's series Stingray as the voice of Commander Sam Shore (heard at the beginning of every episode's credit sequence) as well as several other characters. He also did the voice of John Tracy (in addition to numerous other characters) in the Anderson series Thunderbirds and the movie adaptation Thunderbirds Are Go!

Barrett's film career began in 1960 with a prominent appearance in the drama The Sundowners, starring Robert Mitchum. His other movies during this period included the Val Guest mystery film Jigsaw (1961) and a starring role in the Hammer Films chiller The Reptile (1966). Inn of the Frightened People (1971) was a good showcase for his talents, but it was in the mid-'70s (when he returned to Australia) that he finally became a star. He was cast by Bruce Beresford in a major role in Don's Party (1976), which was widely seen around the world, and then Fred Schepisi used him in a leading role as a racist constable in The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith (1978). That portrayal earned Barrett the Australian Film Institute award for Best Supporting Actor (the Aussie equivalent of an Oscar). His performance in Goodbye Paradise (1982) won him the Best Actor Award and he enjoyed starring roles right into the '90s. In the years since, Barrett played major supporting and character roles in such pictures as Blood Oath (1991) and In the Winter Dark (1998). He primarily did TV work in the early 2000s. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Ray Barrett
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Ray Barrett
Born Raymond Charles Barrett
2 May 1927 (1927-05-02) (age 82)
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Raymond Charles "Ray" Barrett (born 2 May, 1927) is an Australian actor. He was one of the more popular leading men on British television in the 1960s, appeared in Doctor Who in 1965 as a murderer, and back in Australia has been a leading man in many TV series over the decades.

Biography

Barrett was born in Brisbane, Queensland. He was fascinated by radio from an early age and won an on-air talent competition in 1939. At the age of 12 he won an Eisteddfod, which was broadcast on 4BH radio, with a musical monologue about a dog named 'Paddy'. This was to set him on a different path from his dream of boatbuilding. Many acting jobs on Australian radio followed, but he left Brisbane for Sydney in 1954, and then travelled further from Australia to England in 1957.

He was given character and tough guy roles from an unusually young age. In Britain he played one of the lead roles in the British TV series Emergency - Ward 10, and later played one of the main characters, hard-nosed oilman Peter Thornton, in the long-running BBC series about the oil industry The Troubleshooters (1965 to 1971). He was also the voice of a number of characters in Gerry Anderson marionette series: he voiced Commander Shore and Titan in Stingray, and later was John Tracy, The Hood and many of the extra characters in Thunderbirds. He appeared in the Doctor Who serial The Rescue in 1965.

It was only in the decades that followed that he emerged to big-screen stardom in his native country, earning roles as a central character in many TV series. Barrett was the Prime Minister (who was assassinated) in Burn the Butterflies and a tough miner in Golden Soak, and he had secondary roles in many others, including Something in the Air. He won the 2005 Australian Film Institute Awards Longford Life Achievement Award.

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Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Ray Barrett" Read more

 

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