Bill Paterson (actor)

Actor

Birthday June 3, 1945

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Glasgow, Scotland

Age 78 years old

Nationality Glasgow

#20024 Most Popular

1945

William Tulloch Paterson (born 3 June 1945) is a Scottish actor with a career in theatre, film, television and radio.

Throughout his career he has appeared regularly in radio drama and provided the narration for a large number of documentaries.

William Tulloch Paterson was born in Glasgow on 3 June 1945.

Paterson was raised in Dennistoun by his father, a plumber, and his mother, a hairdresser.

1961

He states that his interest in acting began with a school trip to the Citizens Theatre in the Gorbals in 1961.

However, after school he chose to initially pursue a career based on an interest in architecture and spent three years as a quantity surveyor's apprentice before deciding to attend the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama.

1967

Paterson made his professional acting debut in 1967, appearing alongside Leonard Rossiter in Bertolt Brecht's The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui at the Glasgow Citizens Theatre.

1970

In 1970, Paterson joined the Citizens' Theatre for Youth.

1972

He remained there as an actor and assistant director until 1972, when he left to appear with Billy Connolly in the musical comedy The Great Northern Welly Boot Show at the Edinburgh Festival in 1972.

Paterson would work with Connolly again, some years later, when he performed in Connolly's play An Me Wi' a Bad Leg Tae.

After having seen Paterson perform at the Festival, John McGrath invited him to join his theatre company, 7:84, touring the United Kingdom and Europe with plays such as The Cheviot, the Stag, and the Black Black Oil.

1976

He was a founding member of 7:84, and made his London debut in 1976 with the company.

He appeared in the Edinburgh Festival and London with John Byrne's first play, Writer's Cramp.

1978

His first appearances in 1978 were as a police Sergeant of Scotland Yard in The Odd Job and then in BAFTA award winning drama Licking Hitler.

He then played King James in the UK television serial Will Shakespeare the same year.

Paterson would later recall that the biggest regret of his career was during this period, when in 1978 he failed to attend an audition for a role in the film Alien.

He provided the voice of the Assistant Arcturan Pilot in Episode 7 of the original BBC Radio 4 version of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy in 1978.

1979

He first appeared in the West End when he took over the lead role in Whose Life Is It Anyway? at the Savoy Theatre in 1979.

Paterson's career began to centre as much on television than the theatre.

1980

The early 1980s also saw Paterson beginning to appear in films, including The Killing Fields, Comfort and Joy and A Private Function (all 1984).

1981

He played Lopakhin in the BBC production of The Cherry Orchard in 1981.

1982

Paterson did not, however, entirely neglect the theatre, and in 1982, he was nominated for a Laurence Olivier Award for his performance as Schweyk in another Brecht play, Schweik in the Second World War at the National Theatre.

He was in the original National Theatre production of Guys and Dolls (1982).

He also appeared in Smiley's People (1982), The Singing Detective (1986), Traffik (1988).

1984

He has appeared in films and TV series including Comfort and Joy (1984), Traffik (1989), Auf Wiedersehen, Pet (1986), Truly, Madly, Deeply (1990), Wives and Daughters (1999), Sea of Souls (2004–2007), Amazing Grace (2006), Miss Potter (2006), Little Dorrit (2008), Doctor Who (2010), Outlander (2014), Fleabag (2016–2019), Inside No. 9 (2018), Good Omens (2019), and Brassic (2020).

He is a recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award of the Scottish BAFTAs.

1985

Other film credits include Dutch Girls (1985) and The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1987).

1986

In television, his extensive and award-winning TV career includes a memorable portrayal of property villain Ally Fraser in series 2 of Auf Wiedersehen, Pet (1986).

1990

In 1990, he performed the role of Mr Jenkins, father to a child who gets turned into a mouse in, The Witches (1990).

He went on to act in Truly, Madly, Deeply (1990), Chaplin (1992), Sir Ian McKellen's Richard III (1995).

1991

Paterson performed in Death and the Maiden at the Royal Court and Duke of York's (1991–92).

1996

He also performed in The Crow Road (1996), a miniseries from the novel by Iain Banks and Doctor Zhivago (2002).

1997

Other theatre roles in this period include Ivanov at the Almeida, London and Maly Theatre, Moscow (1997).

In 1997, he appeared as Brian, a cafe owner who knows the Spice Girls, in Spice World.

1999

He also played the role of Dr Gibson in the 1999 production of Wives and Daughters, and appeared in the 2008 BBC production of the Charles Dickens novel Little Dorrit as Mr Meagles, as DS Box in the first series of Criminal Justice (2008), and as Dr James Niven in Spanish Flu: The Forgotten Fallen.

Paterson has also narrated for various television and radio programmes.

2003

He later performed in the films Bright Young Things (2003), Miss Potter (2006), How to Lose Friends & Alienate People (2008) and Creation (2009).

In 2003, Paterson began broadcasting radio stories about his childhood in Glasgow, Tales From the Back Green on BBC Scotland, which led to them being published by Hodder in 2008 and appearances at many book festivals throughout the UK.

2004

In television, much of his later work has been for the BBC, starring as Dr Douglas Monaghan in three seasons of the supernatural drama series Sea of Souls (2004–2007).

2005

In 2005, he would take a role as Rob McKenna, a lorry driver and unknowing Rain God, in Fits the 19th, 20th, and 22nd of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: Quandary Phase.