Peter Halliday
One of the UK's most prolific television actors for 50 years, Peter Halliday was the son of an auctioneer and estate agent. He was schooled in Shropshire. Halliday failed his exam as apprentice auctioneer, worked briefly for Rolls-Royce, then served in the British Army during the Second World War, based in Iraq, Palestine and Egypt, until 1947. He graduated from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in 1949. He became a member of the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, which later became the Royal Shakespeare Company. He achieved his greatest fame in the BBC's science-fiction television drama A for Andromeda (1961). He also gained further cult status for several appearances in Doctor Who (1963), which included providing monster voices for two serials and appearing under heavy makeup to play the alien Pletrac in Robert Holmes' witty parody of television and its viewers, Carnival of Monsters: Episode One (1973).
Acting
Movie
The Remains of the Day
as Canon Tufnell
1993
TV
Doctor Who
as Soldier
1963
TV
Doctor Who
as Pletrac
1963
TV
Doctor Who
as Packer
1963
TV
Doctor Who
as Aliens (voice)
1963
TV
Doctor Who
as Silurians (voice)
1963
TV
The Avengers
as Perrier
1961
Movie
Lassie
as Vicar
2005
Movie
Sunday Bloody Sunday
as Rowing Husband
1971
TV
The Saint
as Vargas
1962
Movie
Madhouse
as Psychiatrist
1974
Movie
The Black Windmill
as Customs Officer (uncredited)
1974
Movie
Captain Clegg
as Sailor Jack Pott
1962
Movie
Dunkirk
as Battery Major
1958
Movie
Tiger Bay
as Seaman (uncredited)
1959
TV
UFO
as Dr. Segal
1970
Movie
Virgin Witch
as Club Manager
1972
TV
Lovejoy
as Mr. Reynolds
1986
Movie
Esther
as Karschena
1999
TV
Dalziel and Pascoe
as Mr Edward Soper
1996
TV
The Sweeney
as Chief Insp. Gordon
1975
TV
Our Friends in the North
as Speaker
1996
Movie
Doctor Who: Remembrance of the Daleks
as Vicar
1988
Movie
Doctor Who: The Invasion
as Packer/Cyberman Voice
1968