Philip Voss
Philip Voss | |
---|---|
Born | Philip James Voss 20 August 1936 Leicester, Leicestershire, England |
Died | 13 November 2020 Watford, Hertfordshire, England | (aged 84)
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1963–2016 |
Partner | John Peacock (died 2017) |
Philip James Voss (20 August 1936 – 13 November 2020) was a British stage, radio, film and television actor.
Early life
Voss was born in Leicester, the elder son of James Voss, a pharmacist, and his wife, Viola (née Walmsley). He had a younger brother, John. When he and his family moved to the village of Wollaton, near Nottingham, he attended Nottingham High Pavement Grammar School. He joined a local amateur theatre and, after national service with the RAF, trained for the stage at RADA.
Career
Voss played roles in the Doctor Who serials Marco Polo and The Dominators,[1] Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell, the 1981 Lord of the Rings radio series,[2] Indian Summer, an RSC 1996 revival of The White Devil, The Brides in the Bath, two plays in the Arkangel Shakespeare and a small role in an audio dramatisation of an Anton Chekhov short story.[3] He also played recurring roles in the TV series Fish as Ivan Vishnevski and Vicious as Ian McKellen's cynical brother Mason Thornhill.
Other credits include a stint at the London Shakespeare Workout, two roles for the Shared Experience Company (in Three Sisters and The Seagull), and playing Serebryakov in a West End rendition of Anton Chekhov's The Wood Daemon. At the RSC during the 1990s, he played Menenius in Coriolanus, Sir Epicure Mammon in Ben Jonson’s The Alchemist, Ulysses in Troilus and Cressida, Malvolio in Twelfth Night, Shylock in The Merchant of Venice, and Prospero in The Tempest.
Personal life and death
From the 1970s onwards, Voss lived in Bushey, Hertfordshire, with his partner, writer John Peacock. They entered into a civil partnership in 2006, and remained together until Peacock’s death in 2017. Voss died from cancer and complications of COVID-19 in Watford, Hertfordshire, on 13 November 2020, aged 84. He was survived by his brother.[4]
Filmography
Film
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1974 | Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell | Ernst | |
1980 | Hopscotch | Helicopter Pilot | Wrong Philip Voss |
1983 | Octopussy | Auctioneer | |
1986 | Lady Jane | Herald | |
Clockwise | Headmaster #9 | ||
1990 | Mountains of the Moon | Colonel Rigby | |
1992 | Northern Crescent | Education Chief | |
1993 | The Secret Rapture | Civil Servant | |
1994 | Four Weddings and a Funeral | Laura's Father - Wedding One | |
1996 | Indian Summer | Duncan | |
2013 | About Time | Theatre Judge |
Television
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1963 | Suspense | Randolph Yerbray | Season 2, episode 31: "The White Hot Coal" |
Maupassant | Belloncle | Season 1, episode 10: "Bachelors" | |
1964 | No Hiding Place | Jaroslav Konowski | Season 6, episode 2: "Who Takes the Blame?" |
1964
1968 |
Doctor Who | Acomat
Wahed |
Season 1: "Marco Polo" (3 episodes)
Season 6, episode 1: "The Dominators: episode 1" |
1965 | Out of the Unknown | Police Officer | Season 1, episode 5: "Time in Advance" |
1967 | Theatre 625 | Piotr Ollendorf | Season 4, episode 15 "Hotel Torpe" |
1968 | Virgin of the Secret Service | Captain Nigel Bratby | Season 1, episode 6: |"The Rajah and the Suffragette" |
1970 | The Troubleshooters | Bosun | Season 6, episode 1: "The Slick and the Dread" |
1971 | Elizabeth R | King Richard | TV mini-series |
1972 | Crime of Passion | Chief Inspector Marsan | Season 3, episode 11: "Baptiste" |
1974 | Dial M for Murder | Inspector | Season 1, episode 13: "Recording Angel" |
Melissa | Detective Chief Inspector Carter | Season 1: (3 episodes) | |
1975 | Raffles | Albany Manager | Season 1, episode 1: "The Amateur Cracksman" |
1977 | Jubilee | Newsreader | Season 1, episode 4: "Nanny's Boy" |
1978 | Lillie | Edward Carson | Season 1, episode 11: "Mr. Jersey" |
1980 | Crossroads | Raymond Hilier | Season 1, episode 3254 |
Spy! | Solms | Season 1, episode 5: "The Venlo Incident" | |
Ladykillers | Auguste de Mean | Season 1, episode 6: "Miss Madeleine Smith" | |
Escape | Unknown | Season 1, episode 2: "Hijack to Mogadishu" | |
1983 | Pig in the Middle | Police Inspector | Season 3: (2 episodes) |
Goodnight and God Bless | George | Season 1, episode 3: "Did You Hear the One About?" | |
1985 | C.A.T.S. Eyes | Mr. Jenkins | Season 1, episode 11: "Fingers" |
Shine on Harvey Moon | Vicar | Season 4, episode 2: "Anything Goes" | |
Me and the Girls | Professor Lembach | TV movie | |
1986 | Murrow | Censor | TV movie |
1987 | Inspector Morse | Coroner | Season 1: (2 episodes) |
Floodtide | Vicar | TV mini-series | |
1994 | The Dwelling Place | Cunnimgham | Season 1: (3 episodes) |
Shakespeare: The Animated Tales | Shepard
Judge |
Season 2, episode 5: "The Winter's Tale" | |
1995 | A Village Affair | Richard Jordan | TV movie |
Boon | Jeremy Walters | Season 7, episode 14: "Thieves Like Us" | |
1996 | Testament: The Bible in Animation | Lord Potiphar
Judge |
Season 1, episode 7: "Joseph" |
A Royal Scandal | Sir Robert Gifford | TV movie | |
1999 | Where the Heart Is | Gerald Webster | Season 3, episode 14: "The Letter" |
Let Them Eat Cake | Physician | Season 1, episode 1: "The Pox" | |
2000 | In Motion | Narrator | TV short |
Fish | Ivan Vishnevski | Season 1: (6 episodes) | |
Trial & Retribution | Lord Justice Henry Bradpiece | Season 4, episode 2 | |
North Square | Judge Christopher Darling | Season 1, episode 1 | |
Second Sight: Hide and Seek | David Ingham | TV movie | |
2002 | Dinotopia | Cortez | Season 1, episode 3: "Handful of Dust" |
2003 | The Brides in the Bath | Mr. Justice Scrutton | TV movie |
2011 | Law & Order: UK | Justice Reynolds | Season 6, episode 5: "Line Up" |
2013–2016 | Vicious | Mason Thornhill | Season 1: (4 episodes) / Season 2: (6 episodes) |
Theatre
- Ivanov as Shabelsky, Director Trevor Nunn, National Theatre
- Love's Labour Lost as Boyet, Director Trevor Nunn, National Theatre
- As You Like It as Jaques, Director Peter Hall, Theatre Royal Bath/USA
- The Royal Hunt of the Sun as Miguel Estete, National Theatre
- Uncle Vanya as Alexandr Vladmiirovich Serebryakov, Director Hugh Fraser, Wilton's Music Hall
- The Giant as Lodovico/Soderini, Director Gregory Doran, Hampstead Theatre
- The Circle as Lord Porteous, Director Joanthan Church, Chichester Festival Theatre
- Apologia as Hugh, Director Josie Rourke, Bush Theatre
- Canary (2010) as Older Tom, Director Hettie MacDonald, Liverpool Everyman
Radio
- Aspects of Love as Sir George, BBC Radio
- The Lord of the Rings as the Lord of the Nazgûl, BBC Radio
- Tulips in Winter as Rabbi Menasseh Ben Israel, BBC Radio
References
- ^ Doctor Who BBC Home. Retrieved March 2011
- ^ Philip Voss naxos.com. Retrieved March 201
- ^ The Black Monk BBC Radio 4. Retrieved March 2011
- ^ Coveney, Michael (20 November 2020). "Philip Voss obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
External links
- Philip Voss home Page
- Philip Voss at IMDb
- Philip Voss discography at Discogs
- 1936 births
- 2020 deaths
- 20th-century English male actors
- 21st-century English male actors
- Alumni of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
- English gay actors
- Deaths from cancer in England
- Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in England
- English male film actors
- English male radio actors
- English male stage actors
- English male television actors
- People educated at Nottingham High Pavement Grammar School
- Actors from Bushey
- Male actors from Leicester
- Royal Shakespeare Company members
- 20th-century English LGBTQ people
- 21st-century English LGBTQ people
- Male actors from Hertfordshire
- Male actors from Nottingham
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