Paul McGann: Difference between revisions
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== External links== | == External links== | ||
* {{imdb name|id=0001524|name = Paul McGann}} | * {{imdb name|id=0001524|name = Paul McGann}} | ||
* [http://www.mcgannlibrary. | * [http://www.mcgannlibrary.org The McGann Library fan forum] | ||
* [http://www.kasterborous.com/articles.asp?id=24 On Borrowed Time - Paul McGann article at Kasterborous.com] | * [http://www.kasterborous.com/articles.asp?id=24 On Borrowed Time - Paul McGann article at Kasterborous.com] | ||
{{Wikipedia|Paul_McGann}} | {{Wikipedia|Paul_McGann}} |
Revision as of 06:00, 30 May 2008
Paul McGann (born 14 November, 1959) played the eighth incarnation of the Doctor in the 1996 Doctor Who television movie and also voices the role in audio dramas for BBC Radio and Big Finish Audio Dramas. His is considered to be either the longest or shortest tenure as the Doctor, depending on whether one counts the non-television stories to be canon or not. (A few do not recognize the canonicity of the television movie at all.)
McGann made his name on the BBC serial The Monocled Mutineer, in which he played the lead role. Following on from that part, he was cast as the eponymous "I" in Bruce Robinson's cult film comedy, Withnail and I (1987). He also starred as Anton Skrebensky in Ken Russell's 1989 adaptation of D. H. Lawrence's The Rainbow.
Since then his career has concentrated on television work including the Hornblower series and he has had small roles in a number of high-profile American films including Alien³ and Queen of the Damned. His voice also featured in the 1997 video game Ceremony of Innocence together with those of Isabella Rossellini and Ben Kingsley. Coincidentally, his co-star in Withnail, actor Richard E. Grant, also played the Doctor in the 2003 animated webcast Scream of the Shalka, and also played the (Quite Handsome) 10th Doctor in the Doctor Who parody sketch, "The Curse of Fatal Death."
Although McGann played the Doctor on screen only once, he has reprised the role of the Eighth Doctor in an extensive series of audio plays by Big Finish Productions and was treated as the "current" Doctor by the majority of fandom until Christopher Eccleston assumed the role in 2005. McGann continues to play the Eighth Doctor on audio.
He was born in Surrey, although his family moved to Liverpool when he was a young child. His brothers Mark, Joe, and Stephen are also actors; the four of them starred together (as four brothers) in the 1995 television miniseries The Hanging Gale. They also formed the pop quartet "The McGanns", releasing the single "Everything But The Boy".