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[[Image:Nicholas Courtney.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Nicholas Courtney, agency publicity photo, circa [[1992]].]]
[[Image:Nicholas Courtney.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Nicholas Courtney, agency publicity photo, circa [[1992]].]]


'''Nicholas Courtney''' (born '''William Nicholas Stone Courtney'''; [[16th December]] [[1929]] - [[22nd February]] [[2011]]) played first Colonel and then Brigadier [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart]], beginning in ''[[The Web of Fear]]'' and finally in ''[[Battlefield]]''. He reprised the role for the fan video ''[[Downtime]]'' (later adapted into one of the [[Virgin Missing Adventures]]), and for several audio dramas for the [[BBC]] and [[Big Finish Productions]].
'''Nicholas Courtney''' (born '''William Nicholas Stone Courtney'''; [[16th December]] [[1929]] - [[22nd February]] [[2011]]) played first Colonel and then Brigadier [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart]], beginning in ''[[The Web of Fear]]'' and finally in ''[[Battlefield]]''. He reprised the role for the fan video ''[[Downtime]]'' (later adapted into [[Downtime (novel)|one of]] the [[Virgin Missing Adventures]]), and for several audio dramas for the [[BBC]] and [[Big Finish Productions]].


Courtney was born in [[Cairo]], [[Egypt]], the son of a British diplomat and educated in [[France]], [[Kenya]] and [[Egypt]]. He served his National Service in the British Army, leaving after 18 months as a private, not wanting to pursue a military career. He next joined the Webber Douglas drama school, and after two years began doing repertory theatre in [[Northampton]], and from there moved to [[London]].
Courtney was born in [[Cairo]], [[Egypt]], the son of a British diplomat and educated in [[France]], [[Kenya]] and [[Egypt]]. He served his National Service in the British Army, leaving after 18 months as a private, not wanting to pursue a military career. He next joined the Webber Douglas drama school, and after two years began doing repertory theatre in [[Northampton]], and from there moved to [[London]].

Revision as of 17:25, 24 February 2011

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File:Nicholas Courtney.jpg
Nicholas Courtney, agency publicity photo, circa 1992.

Nicholas Courtney (born William Nicholas Stone Courtney; 16th December 1929 - 22nd February 2011) played first Colonel and then Brigadier Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart, beginning in The Web of Fear and finally in Battlefield. He reprised the role for the fan video Downtime (later adapted into one of the Virgin Missing Adventures), and for several audio dramas for the BBC and Big Finish Productions.

Courtney was born in Cairo, Egypt, the son of a British diplomat and educated in France, Kenya and Egypt. He served his National Service in the British Army, leaving after 18 months as a private, not wanting to pursue a military career. He next joined the Webber Douglas drama school, and after two years began doing repertory theatre in Northampton, and from there moved to London.

Courtney's first appearance in Doctor Who was in the 1965 serial The Daleks' Master Plan, where he played Space Security Agent Bret Vyon opposite William Hartnell as the Doctor. The director Douglas Camfield liked Courtney's performance, and when Camfield was assigned the 1968 serial The Web of Fear, he cast Courtney as Captain Knight. However, David Langton, who was to play the character of Colonel Lethbridge-Stewart, gave up the role to accept another offer of work elsewhere, so Camfield recast Ralph Watson in the role of Captain Knight and gave the Colonel's part to Courtney instead.

Lethbridge-Stewart reappeared later that year in The Invasion, now promoted to Brigadier and in charge of the British contingent of UNIT, an organization that protected the Earth from alien invasion. It was in that recurring role that he became most famous, appearing semi-regularly from 1970 to 1975. Courtney made return appearances in the series in 1983 and his last Doctor Who television appearance was in 1989 (in the serial Battlefield).

Courtney played Lethbridge-Stewart, either on television or in audio dramas, alongside every subsequent Doctor up to and including Paul McGann. Unfortunately, he never got the opportunity to appear with Christopher Eccleston as the Ninth Doctor nor David Tennant as the Tenth. While he acted with David Tennant in the Doctor Who Unbound audio play Sympathy for the Devil, Tennant was playing a different character at the time. Courtney has also appeared in some fan-made productions, providing the voice of the Brigadier for the 1995 updating of 1987's Wartime, and also appearing as a BBC official in the Reeltime Pictures spoof The Corridor Sketch. He also hosted – partly in character as the Brigadier – the More than Thirty Years in the TARDIS documentary.

Courtney continued to act extensively in theatre and television after he left Doctor Who, guest-starring in such popular television programmes as Minder, The Bill, Only Fools and Horses and Yes, Prime Minister. He also had a regular role in the comedy French Fields between 1989 and 1991.

He regularly made personal appearances at science-fiction conventions, and was also the Honorary President of the Doctor Who Appreciation Society. His theatrical agent was former Doctor Who actress Wendy Padbury.

Courtney was occasionally seen in other productions, such as the late 1980s comedy film Bullseye! in which he played a small role opposite Michael Caine and Roger Moore.

Courtney's autobiography, published in 1998, was titled Five Rounds Rapid!, (ISBN 1852277823), after a popular catchphrase of the Brigadier's heard in The Dæmons; the volume was edited by John Nathan-Turner. A second, updated autobiography, entitled Still Getting Away With It, was published in 2005, which was co-authored by Michael McManus. He lived in London with his second wife Karen until his death.

In 2008, 19 years after last playing the role on television, Courtney once again played the Brigadier for the spin-off series The Sarah Jane Adventures, appearing in the two-part story SJA: Enemy of the Bane. He was cast after initial plans to have Freema Agyeman appear as Martha Jones fell through.

Courtney died on 22nd February 2011, aged 81.[1] A number of people paid tribute to him, including Tom Baker,[2] Mark Gatiss[3] and Jon Culshaw.[4] Big Finish also paid tribute on their website, with Nicholas Briggs adding a tribute.[5]

Footnotes

External links

Nicholas Courtney