Birthday:
Birthday:

William Mervyn Pickwoad (3 January 1912 – 6 August 1976) was an English actor best known for his portrayal of the bishop in the clerical comedy All Gas and Gaiters, the old gentleman in The Railway Children and Inspector Charles Rose in The Odd Man and its sequels. Mervyn was born in Nairobi, British East Africa, but educated in Britain at Forest School, Snaresbrook, before embarking on a stage career, spending five years in provincial theatre. He made his West End debut in The Guinea Pig at the Criterion Theatre in 1946, before parts in plays such as Lend Me Robin at the Embassy Theatre, the comedy Ring Round the Moon, The Mortimer Touch, A Woman of No Importance by Oscar Wilde at the Savoy Theatre in 1953 and Charley's Aunt. Mervyn's later stage roles included those of O'Trigger in The Rivals, Lord Greenham in the comedy Aren't We All? and Sir Patrick Cullen in The Doctor's Dilemma. Although he was admired in the theatre, it was with television that he became really well known. One of his first major small screen roles was Sir Hector in the 1962 series Saki. Four years later, he played the Bishop of St. Ogg's in the comedy series All Gas and Gaiters. It was, at that time, breaking with tradition, allowing a laugh at the expense of the established church. He also played the police chief inspector Charles Rose in the Granada TV series The Odd Man and its spin-offs It's Dark Outside and Mr Rose. He played the Hon. Mr. Justice Campbell in the Granada TV series Crown Court. Having taken the part of a Chief Inspector in the 1949 Ealing Studios film The Blue Lamp, in which PC George Dixon first appears (only to be shot dead by a young Dirk Bogarde), he then reappeared in a 1960 Dixon of Dock Green episode "The Hot Seat". He was in the 1966 Doctor Who story The War Machines and several Carry On films in the late 1960s, and also appeared as Mr. Whitty in the Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) episode "A Disturbing Case" in 1969. Usually cast as a wealthy upper class gentleman, he also appeared in The Railway Children (1970), as the children's train passenger friend, and The Ruling Class (1972). Around the same time, he appeared as Sir Hector Drummond, Bt., in the British TV series The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes, in an episode entitled "The Superfluous Finger" (1973). Mervyn was married to Anne Margaret Payne-Cook, a theatre designer and architect who survived him with their three sons - Michael Pickwoad, who in 2010 became the production designer on Doctor Who, Richard, television director and aerial cameraman and Nicholas (Pickwoad), expert on bookbinding. Mervyn's granddaughter Amy Pickwoad became an art director and standby art director for Doctor Who. Description above from the Wikipedia article William Mervyn, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Birthday: January 03, 1912
Death: August 06, 1976

June 01, 1956

September 22, 1964

August 10, 1967

June 03, 1971

April 01, 1960

December 21, 1970

July 14, 1972

September 15, 1957

December 05, 1969

May 14, 1971

May 15, 1967

October 14, 1970

August 14, 1961

January 19, 1950

May 24, 1972

December 17, 1957

June 01, 1969

January 01, 1965

December 31, 1950

August 01, 1976

April 09, 1956

April 01, 1965

September 07, 1968

March 10, 1964

February 12, 1967

February 04, 1960

July 16, 1966

November 02, 1959

July 03, 1968

June 02, 1949

March 29, 1954

February 25, 1960

February 18, 1958

June 08, 1947

March 01, 1965

March 27, 1956

February 14, 1961

December 01, 1975

April 28, 1976

March 18, 1965

September 17, 1971

September 26, 1955

September 16, 1959

January 07, 1962

January 03, 1964

October 31, 1960

October 18, 1957

February 17, 1967

July 06, 1956

October 11, 1972

September 20, 1971

October 19, 1965

April 04, 1959

January 07, 1966

January 31, 1967

February 25, 1977

November 22, 1959

October 19, 1960

December 30, 1960