Derek Benfield: Difference between revisions

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His list of guest-starring credits is exceptionally long. Amongst the higher-profile shows on which he appeared were:  {{wi|Peak Practice}}; {{wi|Lovejoy}}; {{wi|Only Fools and Horses}}; {{wi|Remington Steele}}; {{wi|Yes Minister}}; {{wi|Hi-de-Hi!}}; ''[[Z-Cars]]''; and {{wi|Dixon of Dock Green}}, a show for which he also wrote a few episodes.  
His list of guest-starring credits is exceptionally long. Amongst the higher-profile shows on which he appeared were:  {{wi|Peak Practice}}; {{wi|Lovejoy}}; {{wi|Only Fools and Horses}}; {{wi|Remington Steele}}; {{wi|Yes Minister}}; {{wi|Hi-de-Hi!}}; ''[[Z-Cars]]''; and {{wi|Dixon of Dock Green}}, a show for which he also wrote a few episodes.  
== External link ==
== External link ==
* {{imdb name|id=0071005}}
{{imdb name|id=0071005}}


{{Audio cast stub}}
{{Audio cast stub}}

Revision as of 01:46, 23 May 2012

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Derek Benfield (1926-2009) voiced Melanie Bush's uncle, Dr John Hallam, in BFA: Catch-1782.

A stalwart of British television, his career stretched back to at least the mid-1950s. He was known for several recurring characters from the 1960s to the 1990s, including: "Higgenbottom" in 1961's Three Live Wires, a series that is now mostly lost; "Tom Collis" in 1965's Paul Bernard-directed science fiction programme, R3; "Andrew Parsons" in 1965's The Mask of Janus; "Walter Greenhaigh" from 1967 to 1969 on Coronation Street; "Frank Skinner" on 1970's Timeslip; "Bill Riley" on The Brothers, with Colin Baker and Kate O'Mara; "Albert Handyside" on 1979's Rumpole of the Bailey; the lead on First of the Summer Wine in 1988; and "Robert Wainthropp" on Hetty Wainthropp Investigates in the late 1990s.

His list of guest-starring credits is exceptionally long. Amongst the higher-profile shows on which he appeared were: Peak Practice; Lovejoy; Only Fools and Horses; Remington Steele; Yes Minister; Hi-de-Hi!; Z-Cars; and Dixon of Dock Green, a show for which he also wrote a few episodes.

External link

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