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Colin Baker

Colin Baker

Birthday: 8 June 1943, Waterloo, London, England, UK
Height: 183 cm

Colin Baker was born in 1943 in the Royal Waterloo Lying-In Hospital in London during an air raid. He spent his earliest years in London with his mother, while his father served in the armed forces. H ...Show More

Colin Baker
Fighting monsters is dead easy. Just walk away from 'em at a brisk pace and you're safe. Fighting monsters is dead easy. Just walk away from 'em at a brisk pace and you're safe.
A lot of people say "I used to love Doctor Who (1963) and those shaky sets" but I think their memory Show more A lot of people say "I used to love Doctor Who (1963) and those shaky sets" but I think their memory is letting them down. We didn't actually notice the shaky sets then. That was state-of-the art television. When we watched those in 1963, it was ground-breaking stuff. Yes of course it looks tired and silly now - but back then we willingly suspended our disbelief because there was something exciting on that little box in the corner. Hide
[on Jon Pertwee] He was a man of such presence and stature. I can't believe he has gone - it is a gr Show more [on Jon Pertwee] He was a man of such presence and stature. I can't believe he has gone - it is a great shock. Of all of the interpretations of the Doctors, his was the most straight in terms of avoiding comedy. Hide
[on leaving Doctor Who (1963) in 1986] When the time came for the option on my contract to be taken Show more [on leaving Doctor Who (1963) in 1986] When the time came for the option on my contract to be taken up by the BBC, which was the end of October, he (John Nathan-Turner) rang up and said, 'I don't even know if we're doing the programme. They haven't even told me if I'm producing it next year, so I can't take up the option at the moment.' So the option lapsed. Then, at the beginning of November, he rang me up and said, 'Look, I've got a bit of bad news. The programme is going ahead but Michael Grade has instructed me to replace the Doctor. I was quite surprised by this! You know that sort of blood-draining- from-your-veins kind of feeling? John said he had told them that he thought it was a dreadful mistake and he wanted me to play the Doctor, but they were adamant. 'Grade says three years is quite enough. He's said nothing derogatory about your performance, he thinks you are fine, but he thinks a new Doctor will give the programme a boost. I have pointed out that you have not done three years, and that you have done only one and a half seasons, but he remains adamant that that is long enough and it's time for a change.' So there was nothing much I could do about it. It goes against what I was asked to do, when I started the show, by David Reid - Powell's (Jonathan Powell) predecessor. He asked me if I was prepared to commit myself to the programme for four years. Having said yes in 1983 to four years of 26 episodes a year, I actually did one year of 26 episodes (or the equivalent), nothing at all the next year, and just fourteen episodes the next. Then I was unceremoniously bundled out. So I felt fairly aggrieved. Hide
I never turn down scripts without good reason. If I did, I would probably never work. I never turn down scripts without good reason. If I did, I would probably never work.
[speaking in 2010] I don't think I'll ever move away from that and to be honest I have no particular Show more [speaking in 2010] I don't think I'll ever move away from that and to be honest I have no particular desire to move away from it. I don't understand those who are precious about these things. I don't get it when actors say 'Oh that's something I did 20 years ago I don't want to talk about'. Let's be honest, Doctor Who (1963) is special, it's played a huge part in the British public's consciousness. It's good to see the BBC appreciating it and valuing it now, which they didn't do during my time in the late '80s. I've enjoyed immensely watching it. However when I left, the ratings were exactly the same, 5-6 million, as they are now, they were no different. I know the television landscape has changed but it's ironic nonetheless. Hide
It is heartening that they are still prepared to tolerate the old fogies who used to portray the nat Show more It is heartening that they are still prepared to tolerate the old fogies who used to portray the nation's favourite Time Lord in the age of the new improved programme and the ever youthening Doctor. As if David Tennant hadn't already proved the visibly beneficial power of time travel on the genes, the imminent new one, Matt Smith, we are told, is so young that he is likely to be asked for ID if he tries to purchase an intergalactic gargle blaster in licensed premises either side of the Atlantic. Hide
I was a little unhappy that [script editor] Eric Saward took the opportunity to say he thought I sho Show more I was a little unhappy that [script editor] Eric Saward took the opportunity to say he thought I should never have been cast in the first place, which given the fact that this was a guy I'd entertained in my home and never indicated to me how he felt - I thought it was a bit shabby. When people you think are your friends let you down that's crappy, but Michael Grade wasn't a friend of mine. Before he came to the BBC he was talking about not liking Doctor Who (1963) and thinking that it was a bit of tired old rubbish that ought to be cancelled. So it was perfectly acceptable when he came there that he cancelled it, and when he brought it back it was entirely his prerogative as head of BBC One to say that it was time to change the actor. I don't actually think it was personal. At the time I thought 'he doesn't like me and thinks I'm a rubbish actor'. But with the benefit of information from third parties it's quite clear that he just didn't like the programme. Hide
I'm an actor. If you had said to me before I started acting that I'd get two bites of the cherry - y Show more I'm an actor. If you had said to me before I started acting that I'd get two bites of the cherry - you would do things that people will remember forever like The Brothers (1972) which I did in the '70s and now Doctor Who (1963) - I'd have been overjoyed and I still am. Hide
[on playing Inspector Morse (1987) on stage] For me to have the opportunity to follow in John Thaw's Show more [on playing Inspector Morse (1987) on stage] For me to have the opportunity to follow in John Thaw's footsteps and bring this sullen, intuitive intellectual to life on-stage, is both daunting and very exciting. When I saw the size of the role I was quite taken aback. I'm on stage a lot of the time although I do get a breath occasionally, but with the nature of the piece it jumps very quickly between scenes. In that respect I took a deep breath and threw myself into it. Alma Cullen who wrote four of the hugely successful TV episodes has written the play, which given its setting I think is quite ingenious. I didn't watch any of the TV series, as it's such a strong role that is so inextricably linked to John. I didn't want to just re-enact the part as an imitation or an impression of the role he played on TV. It certainly is an iconic role. Hopefully I can take the spirit of Morse and make it my own while endeavouring to fill the shoes of the late and very great John Thaw with as much distinction as I can. So really all I have to do is learn the lines and hope that the audiences will accept me. I worked my way through the novels during the summer. I found them incredibly useful in getting into the skin of the grumpy genius but I have also enjoyed reading them as stories. However, I have been astonished, and slightly appalled, at the similarities between Morse and myself. Whilst I may not be of slight build with a paunch, well not the slight bit anyway, I share many of his characteristics. I did Greek at grammar school. I don't like spiders, blood or heights. I prefer instant to ground coffee. I love doing the Times crosswords and when I did it on a daily basis could do it in much the same time as Morse. I get hot under the collar about the misuse of English and correct people's grammar. I cannot wear wool. I was emphatically not a boy scout. I played a bit of tennis and had a mean backhand. I didn't study physics. I could never bear not knowing what words meant and always had to go and look them up in books too. I had a Meccano set and read the Dandy and the Beano. Add to that the fact that I took my driving test in my father's car when I was 19 and he suddenly had a stroke so I had to learn to drive quickly - and that car was a maroon Mk 2 Jaguar. Also all my children were born in Oxford as well! Hide
I met Jimmy Savile briefly in the 1980s when I was working on Doctor Who (1963). A young man had wri Show more I met Jimmy Savile briefly in the 1980s when I was working on Doctor Who (1963). A young man had written asking if he could "fix it" for him to meet the Doctor and travel in the Tardis. After the lad had saved the day and the Sontarans had been "fixed", Savile entered the set and did his usual self-congratulatory shtick. I didn't warm to him. His demeanour was neither friendly, nor inclusive. He behaved much as one might expect a child to behave who had been indulged and led to believe that life revolved around them. There was certainly none of the professional respect that one would expect to be shared when two programmes combine for a special purpose. Even though we were on the Tardis set, it was very much his territory and his agenda. A special scene was written, called A Fix with the Sontarans, which we duly rehearsed and recorded. The other actors and I had worked hard over a couple of days to create a relaxed atmosphere, but the first and only time he saw Savile was when he came on the set when the cameras were rolling. His eyes were cold and his demeanour patronising. I recall clearly the disappointment I felt for the young boy for whom I suspect the whole experience was daunting and overwhelming. At least it was I who got to put the Jim'll Fix It medallion around his neck. There is of course a huge difference between finding someone creepy and patronising and suspecting them of being a sexual predator. I only hope that the BBC's failure to investigate him does not tarnish, in the eyes of the world, an organisation that has rightly been regarded as a bastion of honest and honourable broadcasting for decades. There may have been individuals who could or should have been braver in confronting the unpleasant possibility of his depravity when rumours and accusations surfaced, but that is evidently also true of the hospitals and mental institutions that trusted him to the extent that he had his own set of keys for Broadmoor with living quarters on the site and a bedroom at Stoke Mandeville Hospital. A picture is emerging of a man unusually adept at manipulation and concealment. Identifying willing co-conspirators and abusers is much more important than demonising the bamboozled who may have thought their suspicions so far off the scale of decent human behaviour as to be unbelievable. Hide
As any actor will tell you, the hardest thing to do is small parts, because you focus all your atten Show more As any actor will tell you, the hardest thing to do is small parts, because you focus all your attention and concentration on that small part. When you're playing the lead part, you don't have time to think about the whole of it, so you just have to steam on and get on with it. Hide
[after the Challenger explosion] I would still like to go up in the space shuttle. It's appalling th Show more [after the Challenger explosion] I would still like to go up in the space shuttle. It's appalling that the accident happened, but it was an accident and obviously if I knew there was any risk, I'd be foolish to do it. I'd love to stand outside the Earth and look at it. Extraordinary feeling that, something that we've been tied to for millions of years, and a handful of people have looked at it, to be able to do that would be stunning. Hide
None of my daughters saw Doctor Who (1963). All the tapes are on the shelf and every now and then I' Show more None of my daughters saw Doctor Who (1963). All the tapes are on the shelf and every now and then I've said 'are you interested in seeing one?' 'Oh, no, pur-leeze, Dad ...' Then they watch the new one and ask, 'was that what you were in?', and they've started watching them. And the accolade of all accolades - 'oh, you're not bad - almost as good as Christopher Eccleston!' Hide
I'd enjoyed playing the part enormously; it's not often in an actor's career that he gets a plum par Show more I'd enjoyed playing the part enormously; it's not often in an actor's career that he gets a plum part like Doctor Who (1963), and to say that I foresaw myself going on a little longer is a bit of an understatement. Hide
I know there are some people who rate my Doctor quite highly. It's just there's an even greater numb Show more I know there are some people who rate my Doctor quite highly. It's just there's an even greater number of people who don't rate him at all. And it wounds me. I should be able to rise above it, and pretend I don't care, but I actually do care. Hide
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