Stephen Fry: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
m (Robot: Changing Category:Actors who appeared in the Sherlock Holmes franchise to Category:Actors who appeared in Sherlock Holmes adaptations)
No edit summary
Line 16: Line 16:


{{NameSort}}
{{NameSort}}
[[Category:Doctor Who voice actors]]
[[Category:Doctor Who voice actors]]
[[Category:Doctor Who webcast actors]]
[[Category:Doctor Who webcast actors]]
Line 25: Line 24:
[[Category:Actors who appeared in Sherlock Holmes adaptations]]
[[Category:Actors who appeared in Sherlock Holmes adaptations]]
[[Category:Actors who appeared in Extras]]
[[Category:Actors who appeared in Extras]]
[[Category:Actors who appeared in The Lord of the Rings franchise]]

Revision as of 18:10, 1 January 2012

RealWorld.png

Stephen Fry (born 24 August 1957) is an English actor and author who voiced the Minister of Chance in Death Comes to Time.

Fry also wrote the initial script for episode 11 of series 2 of the revived Doctor Who.[1] Believing the script to be too complex however, Russell T Davies decided it would be better suited for season three, giving the crew more time for preparation. The script was replaced with Fear Her, and was never made as Fry could not find the time to make the necessary alterations to the script. [2] No details of the story have been released.

Fry is a well-known TV and film personality and writer in the UK. Among his credits are Fry and Laurie and the Richard Curtis-written Blackadder series (the latter alongside Rowan Atkinson and both featuring a pre-House Hugh Laurie), and Whose Line is it Anyway. He was the narrator of the UK editions of the Harry Potter audiobooks, as well as several videogames based on the series. He performed the voice of the eponymous Guide in the 2005 film version of Douglas Adams' The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, and appeared in the 2007 revival of St. Trinians. Most recently, he voiced the Cheshire Cat in Tim Burton's update of Alice in Wonderland.

In June 2010, Fry stirred controversy in Who fandom in a speech in which he described programmes such as Doctor Who as "wonderfully written" but "not for adults". Steven Moffat responded by saying the show was "was designed specifically to be a family programme, that's what it's for." [3]

External links

Footnotes