Ian Cullen

Ian Cullen
Born (1944-10-20) 20 October 1944
West Boldon, County Durham, England
Occupation Actor
Spouse(s) Yvonne Quenet (m. 1970)

Ian Cullen (born 20 October 1944) is a British actor.[1]

Ian first got the acting bug when appearing in a pantomime aged 4. He trained at RADA with a scholarship when he was 16.

An early television appearance was as David Balfour in the BBC's 1963 adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's Kidnapped, set in Scotland in 1751. Balfour is captured while on board a ship, Here he meets Jacobite rebel Alan Breck Stewart with whom he forges an alliance, escaping to the Scottish Highlands while trying to avoid the redcoats. All twelve episodes are believed missing from the archive.[2]

Another notable early television appearance in 1964 when he played Ixta in the four-part Doctor Who story The Aztecs. He was interviewed for that serial's DVD release in 2002. In 2012, he returned to Doctor Who to play Nadeyan in the Big Finish audio drama 'Dark Eyes'.

Ian has had numerous roles in British film and television, including regular roles in Emergency – Ward 10 during its final year (as Warren Kent - 1966-67), Z-Cars (as Joe Skinner - 1969-75), When the Boat Comes In (as Geordie Watson - 1977-81) and Channel 5's soap opera Family Affairs (as Angus Hart - 1997-99). He has guest starred in numerous television dramas, including The Bill, Dalziel & Pascoe and Sorry!. In 2011, he starred as Baron Sterling in the award-winning feature film Dawn of the Dragonslayer.

When joining the cast of Z Cars in 1969 he became a household name. By this time this popular series was broadcast in a twice-weekly 25-minute format. His character Joe Skinner stayed for six years and a total of 226 episodes. The occasionally troubled Skinner enjoyed popularity with the viewing public, being promoted and un-promoted along the way to and from Detective. In the character's final Z Cars appearance "Distance" (Series 9, Episode 28), Skinner was gunned down in the line of duty. The death of any policeman in real life or fiction was still uncommon in the 1970s and this moment became one of TV's biggest dramatic shocks of the decade.[3]

It was not the first time Ian played a character with an untimely ending. Ian's character Angus Hart was the original lead of the Channel 5 soap opera Family Affairs, appearing in over 400 episodes. Angus Hart was killed in a shock storyline when the entire Hart family were killed in a boat explosion.

Ian's stage work is extensive and has seen him perform all over the Country, with 8 West End productions to his name and 2 years with the Royal Shakespeare Company. He won rave reviews for his performance as Jay in 'Road to the Sea' at the Orange Tree Theatre, in 2003. In 2008 he won a Gold Award for his narration of the feature-length documentary The Destiny of Britain (2007).

As well as his acting commitments, Ian Cullen has also written several television series, films and radio plays. He found time to run a very successful youth drama group in Surrey (Surrey Heath Young Actors Company) for nearly 30 years. He was assisted in this venture by his wife Yvonne Quenet, who is also an actress and drama teacher. They have been married for over 30 years and have three daughters.

Selected TV and filmography

References

  1. "The New York Times". The New York Times. Retrieved 2012-02-03.
  2. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0498965/?ref_=nm_flmg_act_65
  3. http://www.iancullen.com/
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