Malcolm Tierney

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Malcolm Tierney
Born (1938-02-25)25 February 1938
Failsworth, Lancashire, England
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Occupation Actor

Malcolm Tierney (25 February 1938 – 18 February 2014[1][2]) was an English actor who appeared in many film and television roles.

Early life

Tierney's father, Ernest, was a boilermaker and trained draughtsman, from Warrington, who worked at the Blackpool Pleasure Beach. His mother, Agnes, née Kennedy, worked in the cotton mills.

He attended St Mary's Roman Catholic school in Failsworth, Oldham and studied design at the Manchester School of Art. While working as a textile designer and printmaker, he became involved in amateur dramatics at the Little Theatre, in Bolton, which had been set up by John Wardle, father of the drama critic Irving Wardle, whose wife, Norma, became a mentor to Tierney. As a result, he began a scholarship with the Rose Bruford drama school, in Sidcup, Kent, in 1958 and landed his first acting job in 1962.[3]

Career

His roles included the part of Tommy McArdle in Brookside between 1983 and 1987, Charlie Gimbert in Lovejoy (26 Episodes 1986 and 1993), Geoffrey Ellsworth-Smythe in A Bit of a Do, Patrick Woolton in House of Cards and Chief Const. Raymond in Dalziel and Pascoe. In science fiction, he appeared in Star Wars in 1977 and the Doctor Who serial The Trial of a Time Lord in 1986. He also appeared in Braveheart as the English sheriff who executes the wife of William Wallace, and is then subsequently executed by Wallace.

He appeared with the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1974–75 and 2005. In 2007 he played Dr Hugo Eckener in the docudrama Hindenburg: The Untold Story, which was about the crash of the airship Hindenburg and the investigation after it. This was aired for the 70th anniversary of the disaster.

In 2008 he played Captain Smith of the RMS Titanic in the docudrama Titanic: The Unsinkable Ship.

Death

Malcolm Tierney died of pulmonary fibrosis, at the age of 75. Vanessa Redgrave wrote in his obituary of a "loving man" and a "brilliant actor".[3]

Selected filmography

References

External links


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