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News David Warner has died

The Nth Doctor

Wanderer in the Fourth Dimension
Premium Member
There's already a thread in the TV & Media forum but I figured since he had such a prolific career with Doctor Who (if mostly with Big Finish), he deserved his own thread here.

He was one of the finest actors of our time, magnificent in everything he did, from television and film to stage and audio, with his unforgettable voice. Sympathy for the Devil remains one of my absolute favorite Big Finish audio plays.

The good folks at Big Finish paid tribute to him and I have to include the touching anecdotes they shared...

From Nicholas Briggs:

“I feel proud and honoured to have had the privilege of working with David Warner, not just on the many Big Finish productions he’s performed in over the years, but also when I directed him in the Radio 4 comedy series Nebulous, in which he played returning, dastardly villain Dr Klench.

“I remember how David’s long association with us began. During a cast lunch, he suddenly gesticulated at me impatiently, sounding furious. ‘You!’ he said accusingly, ‘Are you in charge here?!?’ I said that I was. ‘I want a word with you!’ he said. ‘Come with me.’ And he marched me behind a pillar, just a few feet away from where the rest of the cast were eating. ‘I want to do a lot more of this audio stuff. In fact, I’d like to do it all day every day, because I love it!’ It was quite a relief that I didn’t get the roasting I’d assumed I was in for from his tone of voice.

“Ever since that moment, I’ve always been delighted not just to work with him, but also just to see him and chat to him. His sly comments, his very particular way of conveying his meaning with so few words that he’d often just resort to patting me on the arm, nodding and asserting, ‘Well, you know. I don’t have to tell you’, and his dogged assertion that, ‘I don’t do accents’ which once meant I had to constantly, at his request, give him the note ‘Ee bah gum’ before every take of him performing the part of Cuthbert, the intergalactic profiteer with a Northern accent.

“Well, you know, I don’t need to tell you, he was one of the greats. So many of us will miss him deeply, and my heart goes out to those closest to him.”
David Richardson:

“When I was very young, a mere slip of a lad in Nottingham, the name David Warner on a film poster was always enough to draw me into a cinema. I continued to follow his work all my life and – when I was first offered the job at Big Finish – one of my first thoughts was ‘What if I meet David Warner? What will I actually say to him?!’

“And meet David I did – I was lucky enough to produce many audio dramas in which he would star or guest star, always happy to be either the leading man or a small role. He didn’t mind – he enjoyed just being there. He was very easy company and I have very fond memories of sharing drives back at the end of the studio day to Victoria, and sitting and chatting and him sharing anecdotes of his time in Hollywood. I knew even then how precious this was.

“He loved one-on-one conversation, but hated parties. Even so, he always appeared at every Big Finish party and to my surprise and delight he arrived at my 50th birthday party in Tunbridge Wells. ‘I’m here for you,’ he said. As someone who doesn’t like attending other people’s parties myself, this was the best birthday gift.

“So that’s how I’ll remember him – an extraordinary actor, one of the best this county has ever produced. But also, just a really lovely man. He will be greatly missed.”
Jason Haigh-Ellery:

“David was a great friend to all of us at Big Finish. He was a sweet, shy and caring gentleman. I was lucky enough to occasionally direct him and he was a joy to work with as all he wanted was the best. The best for the production, the best for the director and the best for the other actors he was working with. Not that David needed directing much – he was such a wonderful actor that his first instinct was always spot on.

“I do remember apologising to David during a recording of Sapphire and Steel because it was 2pm and I hadn’t had to say anything to him all day – since his performance was so good! (I didn’t want him to think I was ignoring him). He smiled bashfully and made a funny quip.

“Having dinner with David was always a joy – he would chat about Hollywood and tell me stories covering everything from the RSC to the filming of Titanic. One particular story about putting James Cameron in his place will always make me smile. I tried endlessly to talk David into doing a proper retrospective interview about his life and work – but he didn’t think he was important enough.

“Sorry David, but you were wrong – you were very important and we will all miss you greatly.”
Not only was he an amazing actor, he was a class act.

Rest in peace, David Warner. Thank you for the decades of memorable characters, both good and evil.
 
He started playing the Doctor two years before the series came back and his last appearance will be with Christopher Eccleston as part of BF's 60th anniversary celebrations. A pretty damn amazing run for what was supposed to be a one off appearance.

Also, I hadn't known until today that Lisa Bowerman was his partner in real life. Was that general knowledge that just passed me by?
 
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I’ve seen a few tweets today from people who knew or met him and the consensus seems to be that he was as lovely in real life as he was magnetic onscreen (or indeed in audio dramas). A great screen presence (and a state one too, apparently, though I never saw him there). RIP and thanks for the numerous great performances.
 
Jason Haigh-Ellery:

“I tried endlessly to talk David into doing a proper retrospective interview about his life and work – but he didn’t think he was important enough.

“Sorry David, but you were wrong – you were very important and we will all miss you greatly.”​
David Morrissey had David Warner on his podcast, Who Am I This TIme?, and it's a wonderful interview. Warner talks at length about filming The Omen and how it was really supposed to be this really minor, nothing role, and he bonded so strongly with Gregory Peck on the film that he made a lifelong friend and pissed the producers off because Peck wanted him around on set.

Also, I hadn't known until today that Lisa Bowerman was his partner in real life. Was that general knowledge that just passed me by?
I didn't know that. Good for them! :)
 
It's certainly not an "absolute", but it just kinda' seems as though the actors who play the more despicable characters are usually the the most sweethearted in real life. No, Warner certainly did not play only villains, but those roles tended to be his better remembered.
 
Reportedly, Warner was to return for the (now never to be made) third Tron film:

Apparently, Cillian Murphy's appearance in Tron Legacy was no cameo. Dillinger Jr. was in cahoots with his father the whole time, ultimately planning to wrest control of ENCOM away from Alan Bradley.
 
He started playing the Doctor two years before the series came back and his last appearance will be with Christopher Eccleston as part of BF's 60th anniversary celebrations. A pretty damn amazing run for what was supposed to be a one off appearance.

Also, I hadn't known until today that Lisa Bowerman was his partner in real life. Was that general knowledge that just passed me by?
I didn't know that. Good for them! :)
Yeah, I didn't either until Relayer mentioned it in the TV & Media thread. Wasn't sure if that was true since it's not mentioned in either of their Wikipedia articles.

David Morrissey had David Warner on his podcast, Who Am I This TIme?, and it's a wonderful interview. Warner talks at length about filming The Omen and how it was really supposed to be this really minor, nothing role, and he bonded so strongly with Gregory Peck on the film that he made a lifelong friend and pissed the producers off because Peck wanted him around on set.
Oh, man, I bet that's quite the tale! Not surprised he and Peck got along famously. Stupid producers. :lol:

It's certainly not an "absolute", but it just kinda' seems as though the actors who play the more despicable characters are usually the the most sweethearted in real life. No, Warner certainly did not play only villains, but those roles tended to be his better remembered.
Indeed. Although, to be fair, he did play the occasional genuinely good person (Bablyon 5, The Final Frontier, Doctor Who).

Reportedly, Warner was to return for the (now never to be made) third Tron film:

Apparently, Cillian Murphy's appearance in Tron Legacy was no cameo. Dillinger Jr. was in cahoots with his father the whole time, ultimately planning to wrest control of ENCOM away from Alan Bradley.
Yeah, I'm still really bummed out we never got that follow-up. I knew they had plans to bring back Murphy for the sequel but Disney didn't allow it to happen. :(

Much like how they sabotaged Tron: Uprising. Yes, I'm still bitter.
 
First Paul Sorvino and now David Warner. Wow. It's ironic, but one of my favorite David Warner roles was a supporting one he did in an Agatha Christie adaptation. It was a Jane Marple story and I really enjoyed his performance in that production. I also remember his performance in a Season One episode of "Babylon 5".
 
Also, I hadn't known until today that Lisa Bowerman was his partner in real life. Was that general knowledge that just passed me by?

I heard about it at some point in the last year or two, most likely through the BF forum on Gallifrey Base. My assumption is that they didn't make a big public thing about it but it wasn't a secret.
 
Having a look at Big Finish there's at least one more series of the Bernice Summers New Adventures to come with a Sept release for volume 7.

Not sure if they'll have time to include any sort of retrospective for David.
 
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