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| Patrick Allen | |
|---|---|
| Born | John Keith Patrick Allen 17 March 1927(1927-03-17) Nyasaland (now Malawi) |
| Died | June 28, 2006 (aged 79) |
| Occupation | Actor and Voice actor |
| Spouse(s) | Sarah Lawson |
John Keith Patrick Allen (March 17, 1927 - July 28, 2006) was a British actor and voice actor.
Allen was born in Nyasaland (now Malawi), where his father was a tobacco farmer. After his parents returned to Britain, he was evacuated to Canada during the War where he stayed to finish his education at McGill University in Montreal. He gained experience as a local radio broadcaster and appeared on television in plays and documentaries, before returning to Britain.
He returned to England in 1953 and made his film debut in Hitchcock's Dial M for Murder (1954). He subsequently appeared in character roles in many films, including Night Creatures, The Wild Geese, The Sea Wolves and Who Dares Wins. He was also lead actor in the adventure series Crane. He also appeared in The Survivors, a series of four plays for the BBC.
He was a regular in ITC television series during the 1960s and early 1970s including The Baron, The Champions and UFO, although he never had an ongoing role in any of these series.
Allen also worked with the Royal Shakespeare Company in a number of stage roles, along with many BBC productions.
Allen's distinctive, authoritative voice was familiar across Britain, even amongst those who did not recognise him as an actor.
He narrated the British Government's Protect and Survive series of instructional videos in the 1970s; some of his lines in that production were re-recorded and sampled into the single Two Tribes by the band Frankie Goes to Hollywood. He was also the voiceover artist for Vic and Bob's comedy series Vic Reeves Big Night Out, The Smell of Reeves and Mortimer and Shooting Stars, and appeared in and voiced numerous commercials for house builder Barratt Homes and for the Ford Sierra, among many others. His voice-over work led him to start up his own business, running a very successful recording studio for voice-over work.
He also narrated the first series of Blackadder, and appeared in the last episode 'The Black Seal' as Edmund's arch-nemesis, Phillip of Burgundy - known to his enemies as 'The Hawk'.
He provided the narration (the voice of Captain Star) for the 1989 children's series TUGS. Allen remained uncredited for his work, which was revealed in later interview with one of the show's producers.
In 2005, he became the voice of the British television channel E4, providing voiceovers for many of its idents and promotions. Some of the slogans are rather irreverent, and match the tone of the channel well, especially during the channel's recent campaigns. These include:
Since his death the E4 voice-overs have continued with Peter Dickson imitating Allen's style.
In 2005, he did an altered re-recording of the Two Tribes version of the Protect and Survive narration for German cover band Welcome To The Pleasuredome, which is featured in their live performances.
Also, not long before his death, he narrated parody versions of these films for Kerrang! TV.
He was also the voice of the Christian O'Connell Breakfast Show on XFM, the late show on 103.2 Power FM, Hirsty's Daily Dose on Galaxy Yorkshire and briefly Virgin Radio, until he fell ill early in 2006.
He died on the 28 July 2006. [1] He left a widow, the actress Sarah Lawson and two sons, Stephen and Stuart.
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