
Birthday: June 02, 1924
Death: February 19, 2012
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).

November 23, 1963

January 02, 1975

June 28, 1962

June 19, 1966

June 18, 1969

September 28, 1955

October 16, 1976

January 10, 1986

November 12, 1961

April 23, 2001

February 16, 1995

January 15, 1996

February 15, 1975

October 04, 1962

October 03, 1961

January 07, 1961

September 16, 1970

October 19, 1965

May 24, 1975

June 29, 1963

June 19, 1983

February 22, 1999

May 03, 1964

December 30, 1974

December 29, 1975

October 04, 1965

July 08, 1956

March 16, 1996

March 29, 1999

January 02, 1964

May 17, 1974

October 14, 1972

June 13, 1962

January 01, 1971

September 21, 1971

October 30, 1976

August 01, 1954

January 01, 1962

March 01, 1959

July 03, 1983

March 28, 1974

May 02, 1970

February 06, 1956

October 20, 1979

November 05, 1993

January 21, 1969

July 15, 1958

July 28, 1976

October 26, 1988

December 16, 2005

September 28, 2001

January 04, 1974

February 02, 2002

April 01, 1972

March 20, 1958

February 17, 1973

December 21, 1968

November 01, 1982

January 01, 1967

January 01, 1978

March 14, 1970

December 15, 2003