- (1980) Stage: Appeared (as "Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart") in the original stage production of "Amadeus."
- (1996) Biography: "Orson Welles - The Road to Xanadu"
- (1984) Book: "Being An Actor"
- (1987) Biography: "Charles Laughton: A Difficult Actor"
- (April 2002) Stage: Appeared (as "Charles Dickens") in "The Mystery of Charles Dickens" by Peter Ackroyd (Belasco Theater, New York City)
- (April 2002) Stars (as "Charles Dickens") in "The Mystery of Charles Dickens" on Broadway
- (2005) TV commercial (voice-over): Kit Kat Editions
- (12/06-2/07) Stage: Appears (as "Falstaff") in "Merry Wives" (musical version of William Shakespeares "The Merry Wives of Windsor"), Royal Shakespeare Company.
- (1990) Stage: Directed "Stevie Wants to Play the Blues" on Broadway. Musical. Cast: Paula Kelly, Amy Madigan
- (1975) Stage: Appeared in "The Plumber's Progress", at London's Prince of Wales Theatre, with Harry Secombe, Roy Marsden. Directed by Mike Ockrent.
- (1978) He acted in David Edgar's play, "Mary Barnes," at the Studio of Birmingham Repertory Theatre in Birmingham, West Midlands, England with Ann Mitchell, Timothy Spall OBE, Roger Allam, Patti Love, Thelma Whiteley, directed by Peter Farago.
- (1978) He acted in Bill Morrison's play, "Flying Blind, with Pete Postlethwaite OBE at the Royal Court Theatre in London, England.
- (1981) He acted in Edward Bond's play, "Restoration," which Bond also directed at the Royal Court in London, England, with Irene Handl.
- (1981) He acted in Dunleavy's play, "The Beastly Beatitudes of Balthazar B," at the Duke of York's Theatre in London, England with Patrick Ryecart, Sylvia Coleridge, directed by Ron Daniels.
- (1975) He acted in Sir George Bernard Shaw's play, "The Doctor's Dilemma," at the Mermaid Theatre in London, England with Derek Godfrey, Tony Jay, Frank Thornton, Sir Nigel Hawthorne CBE, James Villiers, James Cairncross, Lynn Farleigh, and Ken Cranham in the cast. Robert Chetwyn was director.
- (1989) He acted in Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe's play, "Faust Parts I and II," at the Lyric Theatre in Hammersmith, London, England with Peter Lindford, Jack Ellis, Alyson Spiro, Andy Serkis, and Paul Brightwell in the cast. David Freeman was director.
- Provided a commentary on the episode The Unquiet Dead (2005) for The Complete First Series Doctor Who (2005) DVD box set.
- (1989) Wrote foreword for "Profiles", a selection of profiles written by Kenneth Tynan.
- (1996) He adapted Jacques Prevert's story, "Les Enfants Du Paradis," and directed in a Royal Shakespeare Company production at the Barbican Theatre in London, England with Colin Farrell, James Purefoy, Helen McCrory, Joseph Fiennes, Rupert Graves, Colin George, Sylestra Le Touzel, Robert Demeger, Maggie Wells, Peter Spoule, James Ellis, and James Faulkner in the cast.
- (1998) He acted in William Shakespeare and Orson Welles' play, "Chimes at Midnight," in a Chichester Festival Production at the Chichester Festival Theatre in Chichester, West Sussex, England with Keith Baxter, Sarah Badel, Tam Williams, Rowland Davies, Timothy Bateson, Rebecca Egan, John Warner, and David Weston in the cast. Patrick Garland was director.
- (1986) He directed Jean Coctrau's play, "The Infernal Machine," at the Lyric Theatre in Hammersmith, London, England with Maggie Smith, Robert Eddison, and Jim Carter in the cast.
- (January 1979 - December 1979) He acted in the Repertoire Season in the National Theatre production at the Lyttelton Theatre, Olivier Theatre, and Cottesloe Theatre in London, England in John Galsworthy's play, "Strife;" William Congreve's play, "The Double Dealer;" play, "The Woman; William Shakespeare's plays, "Macbeth," "As You Like It," and "Richard III;" Harold Pinter's play, "Betrayal;" George Bernard Shaw's play, "The Philanderer;" P.L. Travers's play, "Plunder;" play, "Herod;" Charles Wood's play, "Has 'Washington' Legs?;" play, "The World Turned Upside Down;" Thomas Middleton's play, "A Fair Quarrel;" Eugene O'Neill's play, "The Long Way Home;" Leo Tolstoy's play, "The Fruits of Enlightenment;" Somerset Maugham's play, "For Services Rendered;" Keith Dewhurst's plays, "Lark Rise" and "Candleford;" play, "Beowulf;" Simon Gray's play, "Close of Play;" Aeschylus's play "The Oresteia;" Friedrich Schnitzler and Tom Stoppard's play, "Undiscovered Country;" play, "Dispatches;" Peter Logan's play, "Fall;" Arthur Miller's play, "Death of A Salesman;" Arthur L. Kopit's play, "Wings;" Peter Shaffer's play, "Amadeus;" J.B. Priestley's play, "When We Are Married;" play, "A Country Calendar;" and Henrik Ibsen's play, "The Wild Duck;" with Robin Bailey, Brenda Blethyn, Judi Bowker, Michael Bryant, Yvonne Bryceland, Selina Cadell, Anna Carteret, Oliver Cotton, Andrew Cruickshank, Constance Cummings, J.G. Devlin, Edna Dore, Michael Feast, Albert Finney, Alison Fiske, Susan Fleetwood, Paul Freeman, Michael Gambon, Brian Glover, Gawn Grainger, Nicky Henson, Greg Hicks, Ian Hogg, Bob Hoskins, Harold Innocent, Peter Jeffrey, Felicity Kendall, Sara Kestelman, Dinsdale Landen, Phyllida Law, Doreen Mantle, Anna Massey, Daniel Massey, Mark McManus, Warren Mitchell, Stephen Moore, John Normington, Bill Owen, Joyce Redman, Ralph Richardson, Joan Sanderson, Leslie Sands, Paul Scofield, Jack Shepherd, John Standing, Robert Stephens, Dorothy Tutin, June Watson, Penelope Wilton, and John Wood in the cast.
- (1979) He acted in Peter Shaffer's play, "Amadeus," in a National Theatre production at the Olivier Theatre in London, England with Paul Scofield, Felicity Kendal, and John Normington in the cast. Peter Hall was director.
- (1979) He acted William Shakespeare's play, "As You Like It," in a National Theatre production at the Olivier Theatre in London, England with Sarah Kestelman, Andrew Cruickshank, and Michael Bryant in the cast. John Dexter was director.
- (1980) He acted in Peter Shaffer's play, "Amadeus," in a British National Theatre production at the Olivier Theatre in London, England with Paul Scofield, Felicity Kendal, and John Normington in the cast. Peter Hall was director.
- (January, April, June-December 1980) He acted in the British National Theatre Season Repertoire of Athol Fugard's play, "A Lesson From Aloes," Peter Shaffer's play, "Amadeus," William Shakespeare's plays, "As You Like It," "Othello," and Richard III;" Arthur Miller's plays, "Death of a Salesman and "The Crucible;" David Storey's play, "Early Days," Terence Rattigan's plays, "Harlequinade" and "The Browning Version;" Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's play, "Hiawatha," Eugene O'Neill's plays, "Hughie," "The Iceman Cometh," and "The Long Voyage Home;" Nigel Williams's play, "Line 'Em," Alan Ayckbourn's play, "Sisterly Feelings," Henrik Ibsen's play, "The Wild Duck," Bernard Pomerance's play, "The Elephant Man," Howard Brenton's play, "The Romans in Britain," Bertolt Brecht's play, "The Life of Galileo," John Vanbrugh's play, "The Provok'd Wife," religious plays, "The Passion" and "The Nativity;" Harold Pinter's play, "The Caretaker," play, "Thee and Me," Tom Stoppard's play, "Undiscovered Country," Lillian Helman's play, "Watch on the Rhine," and J.B. Priestley's play, "When We Are Married," at the Olivier Theatre, Lyttelton Theatre, and Cottesloe Theatre in London, England with Peggy Ashcroft, Robin Bailey, Gillian Barge, Brenda Blethyn, Michael Bryant, Yvonne Bryceland, David Burke, Selina Cadell, Anna Carteret, Kenneth Cranham, Andrew Cruickshank, Phil Daniels, J.G. Devlin, Mark Dignam, Edna Dore, Lindsay Duncan, Susan Engel, Michael Gambon, Brian Glover, Gawn Grainger, Nicky Henson, Greg Hicks, Ian Hogg, Harold Innocent, Peter Jeffrey, Felicity Kendall, Sara Kestelman, Michael Kitchen, Phyllida Law, Alec McCowen, Peter McEnery, Geraldine McEwan, Mark McManus, Warren Mitchell, Stephen Moore, John Normington, Bill Owen, Jonathan Pryce, Joyce Redman, Ralph Richardson, Joan Sanderson, Leslie Sands, Paul Scofield, Jack Shepherd, Frederick Treves, Dorothy Tutin, Penelope Wilton, and John Wood in the cast.
- (January 1981 - April 1981) He acted in the British National Theatre production repertoire season in George Bernard Shaw's play, "Man and Superman;" Henry Wadsworth Longellow's play, "Hiawatha;" Howard Brenton's play, "The Romans in Britain;" "Bertolt Brecht's play, "The Life of Galileo;" Alan Ayckbourn's play, "Sisterly Feelings;" William Shakespeare's plays, "Othello" and "Measure for Measure;" Peter Shaffer's play, "Amadeus;" Harold Pinter's play, "The Caretaker;" John Vanbrugh's play, "The Provok'd Wife;" Lillian Hellman's play, "Watch on the Rhine;" Bernard Pomerance's play, "The Elephant Man;" Terrence Rattigan's plays, "The Browning Version," and "Harlequinade,;" the play, "The Nativity," Ivan Turgenev's play, "A Month in the Country;" Tom Taylor's play, "The Ticket-Of-Leave Man;" and Moliere's play, "Don Juan," with Francesca Annis, Peggy Ascroft, Norman Beaton, Brenda Blethyn, Michael Bryant, David Burke, Yvonne Bryceland, Jane Carr, Anna Carteret, Paul Copley, Kenneth Cranham, Andrew Cruickshank, J.G. Devlin, Lindsay Duncan, Michael Gambon, Brian Glover, Michael Gough, Nicky Henson, Greg Hicks, Felicity Kendall, Michael Kitchen, Daniel Massey, Alec McCowen, Geraldine McEwan, Warren Mitchell, Stephen Moore, John Normington, Jonathan Pryce, Ralph Richardson, David Schofield, Paul Scofield, Nigel Terry, Penelope Wilton, and John Wood in the cast.
- (1988) He acted and directed Alan Bennett's play, "Single Spies," in a British National Theatre production at the Lyttelton Theatre in London, England with Alan Bennett and Prunella Scales in the cast. Alan Bennett was also director.
- (January 1988 to June 1988; August 1988 to December 1988) He acted in the British National Theatre Repertoire Season at the Cottesloe Theatre, Lyttelton Theatre, and Olivier Theatre in London, England in John Ford's play, "'Tis A Pity She's A Whore;" Alan Ayckbourn's play, "A Small Family Business;" Athol Fugard's play, "A Place with the Pigs;" William Shakespeare's plays, "Antony and Cleopatra," "Cymbeline," "The Tempest," and "The Winter's Tale;" Ben Jonson's play, "Bartholomew Fair;" Tennessee Williams's play, "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof;" play, "Countrymania;" A.R. Gurney's play, "Entertaining Strangers;" David Hare's plays, "Fanshen," and "Secret Rapture;" Brian Friel's plays, "Fathers and Sons," and "Making History;" Lope De Vega's play, "Fuente Ovejuna;" Adrian Mitchell's play, "Love Songs of World War III;" Harold Pinter's play, "Mountain Language;" Nicholas Wright's play, "Mrs Klein;" Arnold Wesker's play, "Roots;" Caroline Chapmans' play, "Russell of the Times;" Alan Bennett's play, "Single Spies;" Thomas Middleton's play, "The Changeling;" August Strindberg and John Osborne's play, "The Father;" the play, "The Magic Olypmical Games;" David Wood's play, "The Pied Piper;" the play, "The Shaughraum;" Nick Ward's play, "The Strangeness of Others;" Nick Darke's play, "Ting Tang Mine;" and Samuel Beckett's play, "Waiting for Godot;" with Polly Adams, John Alderton, Francesca Annis, Eileen Atkins, Robin Bailey, Jill Baker, David Bamber, Jim Barclay, Gillian Barge, Alan Bennett, Richard Bonneville, Jim Broadbent, Michael Bryant, David Burke, Ian Charleson, Garry Cooper, Jonathan Cullen, Judi Dench, Sally Dexter, Paola Dionisotti, Russell Dixon, Lindsay Duncan, Nick Dunning, Robert Eddison, Ralph Fiennes, Susan Fleetwood, Mick Ford, Clive Francis, Michael Gambon, Henry Goodman, Rupert Graves, George Harris, Tony Haygarth, Guy Henry, Anthony Hopkins, Colin Jeavons, Barbara Jefford, Paul Jesson, Barbara Leigh-Hunt, Mark Lockyer, Steven Mackintosh, Maggie McCarthy, Alec McCowen, Sylvester McCoy, Sarah Miles, Stephen Moore, Richard Pasco, Tim Pigott-Smith, Eric Porter, Stephen Rea, Paul Shelley, Kate Spiro, Alison Steadman, Ken Stott, Sian Thomas, Niall Tobin, Bridget Turner, Philip Voss, Julian Wadham, Zoe Wanamaker, John Wells, Penelope Wilton and Peter Woodward in the cast.
- (1989) He acted and directed Alan Bennett's play, "Single Spies: An Englishman Abroad & A Question of Attribution," in a British National Theatre production at the Lyttelton Theatre in London, England with Alan Bennett, Prunella Scales, David Terence, Crispin Redman, and Brett Fancy in the cast. Alan Bennett was also director.
- (1989) He acted in Alan Bennett's play, "Single Spies: An Englishman Abroad & A Question of Attribution," in a British National Theatre production at the Queens Theatre in London, England with Alan Bennett and Prunella Scales in the cast. Alan Bennett was also director.
- (1989) He directed Alan Bennett's play, "Single Spies: An Englishman Abroad & A Question of Attribution," in a British National Theatre production at the Queens Theatre in London, England with Alan Bennett, Prunella Scales, and Clive Francis in the cast. Alan Bennett was also director.
- (1981) He acted in Edward Bond''s play, "Restoration," at the Royal Court Theatre in London, England with Irene Handl in the cast. Edward Bond was also director.
- (1981) He acted in J.P. Donleavy's play, "The Beastly Beatitudes of Balthazar B.," at the Duke of York's Theatre in London, England with Patrick Ryecart and Sylvia Coleridge in the cast. Ron Daniels was director.
- (1981) He acted in J.P. Donleavy's play, "The Beastly Beatitudes of Balthazar B.," at the Duke of York's Theatre in London, England with Patrick Ryecart, Sylvia Coleridge, Lally Bowers, Susan Gilmore, and Noel Howlett in the cast. Ron Daniels was director.
- (January 1988) He directed Willy Russell's play, "Shirley Valentine," at the Vaudeville Theatre in London, England with Pauline Collins in the cast.
- (1991) He directed Georges Bizet and Oscar Hammerstein's musical, "Carmen Jones," at the Old Vic Theatre in London, England with Sharon Benson and Michael Austin, Gregg Baker, and Clive Rowe in the cast.
- (1991) He directed Georges Bizet and Oscar Hammerstein's musical, "Carmen Jones," at the Old Vic Theatre in London, England with Paula Ingram, Damon Evans, Gregg Baker, and Clive Rowe in the cast.
- (1992) He directed Sharman MacDonald's play, "Shades," at the Albery Theatre in London, England with Patricia Hodge, James Cosmo, and Rona Anderson in the cast.
- (1997) He directed the play, "H.R.H.," at the Playhouse Theatre in London, England with Corin Redgrave and Amanda Donohoe in the cast.
- (1997) He acted in the Thom Ross' play, "The Importance of Being Oscar," at the Savoy Theatre in London, England. Patrick Garland was director.
- (1981) Promotional music video for the band Adam and the Ants "Stand and Deliver" cameo
- (2006) Did character voices for the video game Caesar IV.
- (2007) Did character voices for the video gamer Circus Empire [english].
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