Michael Wisher

Michael Wisher

Born Anthony Michael Wisher
(1935-05-19)19 May 1935
London, England
Died 21 July 1995(1995-07-21) (aged 60)
Dacorum, Hertfordshire, England
Cause of death Heart Attack
Occupation Actor

Michael Wisher (19 May 1935 – 21 July 1995) was a British actor.[1]

A regular character actor in television drama from the 1960s onwards, he appeared in programmes such as Z-Cars, Dixon of Dock Green, Moonbase 3 and Colditz.[2] His theatre work was also extensive (and included a lengthy tour of New Zealand).[3]

He is also remembered for a series of different roles in the British science-fiction television series Doctor Who, becoming the first actor to play Davros, the wheelchair-using scientific mastermind and creator of the Daleks.[4][5] The serial in which the character was first seen, Genesis of the Daleks, was originally broadcast in 1975.[6]

A sudden heart attack resulted in his death in 1995. [7]

Doctor Who roles

Wisher's contributions to Doctor Who began with uncredited voice work in the Second Doctor serial The Seeds of Death (1969).

The director of that story, Michael Ferguson, later asked Wisher to play reporter John Wakefield in the Third Doctor serial The Ambassadors of Death (1970). The following season, he appeared in the Robert Holmes classic Terror of the Autons (1971), playing Rex Farrel. During the later years of the Pertwee era, Wisher provided Dalek voices in stories including Frontier in Space (1973), Planet of the Daleks (1973) and Death to the Daleks (1974) and acted as the villainous Commissioner Kalik in Carnival of Monsters (1973).[8]

He continued to be associated with the series through the early Fourth Doctor years in which he voiced unseen characters in both Revenge of the Cybermen (1975) and Planet of Evil (1975); he also acted on-screen in both serials, as Magrik in Revenge of the Cybermen and Morelli in Planet of Evil.[8]

Wisher was the first actor to portray Davros, the creator of the Daleks, who spoke with an electronically aided voice. Although the character would be revived in further series, commitments to long-running theatre work prevented him from repeating his role when asked to appear in later stories. However, he did reprise the role in 1993 for The Trial of Davros, an amateur theatrical production staged for charity which he also co-wrote.[9]

Doctor Who spin-offs

In the period from 1984 to 1987 he created several characters in the Audio Visuals series, works that started the audio production careers of some of the figures currently associated with the licensed Big Finish Productions.

In 1987 the first video based spinoff, Wartime, was released by Reeltime Pictures, starring John Levene in his television role as Sergeant Benton. Wisher played the ghost of Benton's father.[10]

He followed this by playing a villain with several faces in Summoned by Shadows, produced by BBV in 1991 and as a Minister in The Airzone Solution in 1993.[1] That production included performances by four of the actors who had played the lead character in Doctor Who. Finally, he played a spaceship engineer in Shakedown: Return of the Sontarans in 1994.[11]

One of his final acting roles was as an evil looking theatre commissionaire in Dalekmania, a documentary about the production of the Dalek movies of the 1960s.[12]

References

  1. 1 2 "Michael Wisher". BFI.
  2. "Michael Wisher". TV.com. CBS Interactive.
  3. "DOCTOR WHO Dalek week - Michael Wisher, the original DAVROS". warpedfactor.com.
  4. "Michael Wisher - Movies and Filmography - AllMovie". AllMovie.
  5. Andrew Pettie (3 July 2008). "Doctor Who: Reinventing Davros". Telegraph.co.uk.
  6. "Doctor Who". burrunjor.com.
  7. "Behind The Voice Actors - Michael Wisher". Behind The Voice Actors.
  8. 1 2 "Michael Wisher". aveleyman.com.
  9. "Trial of Davros". Hyde Fundraisers. 2010. Retrieved 31 December 2010.
  10. "Wartime (1987)". BFI.
  11. "Shakedown - Return of the Sontarans (1994)". BFI.
  12. "Dalekmania". digiguide.tv.

External links

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