Wednesday 10 September 2014

Alan Dobie


Alan Dobie in 'Cribb'

Alan Dobie:

Alan Dobie seems a rather dour, astringent sort of actor, but perhaps that's because I find it a little difficult to separate him from the character of Inspector Cribb, as seen in the '80s Victorian detective series of that name. His career on the big screen has been one interesting oddities, with early roles including 'Captured' (1959), originally an army training film about resisting interrogation that has come to be seen as a classic POW drama, and the Brit-noir 'Seven Keys' (1961) in which he plays an ex-con unravelling a mystery while seeking hidden loot.    
In 'Captured' (1959), a military training film that remained
unseen by the general public until 2004


He also appears in the popular Disney adventure serial, later released as a feature film, 'Dr Syn, Alias The Scarecrow' (1963) opposite Patrick McGoohan as the eponymous smuggler, and he's in the curiously seedy Kenneth More drama, 'The Comedy Man' (1964).

In the Walt Disney adventure serial 'Dr Syn' (1963)
For much of the '60s and '70s, he became a stalwart of the television play, appearing in various strands such as 'The Wednesday Play', 'BBC Sunday-Night Play', 'Theatre 625', and 'Play For Today'. He also in some heavy drama serials like 'Resurrection',  'The Plane Makers', 'War and Peace' and 'Hard Times', before getting the starring role in 'Cribb', itself a spin-off from an original play. Other highlights of the '80s include the post-'Secret Army' series 'Kessler', the highbrow, but rather fleshy, drama-documentary about the life of Ingres, 'Artists and Models', and the tour-de-force portrayal of Rabbi Moses Ben Nachman in the medieval religious debate of 'The Disputation'.           

As Prince Bolkonsky in the 1972 BBC epic 'War and Peace' 
As befits such an accomplished actor, he's more often been seen on the stage and is a regular of the Peter Hall Company at the Old Vic Theatre in London and the Theatre Royal, Bath.

Alan Dobie - imdb

5 comments:

  1. ALAN DOBIE -UNDER RATED EXTREMELY TALENTED ACTOR, UNIQUE VOICE, HUMBLE AND KIND, AND, WONDERFUL HUMAN BEING.
    SHOULD BE GIVEN A 'LIFETIME BAFTA FELLOWSHIP AWARD

    ReplyDelete
  2. Couldn't agree more - I can't understand why he has not be knighted

    ReplyDelete
  3. To be honest, I thought he was dead! Great in the Planemakers, simply for the line:'My God'.......

    ReplyDelete
  4. Well I for one am glad he is not dead.
    This amazing man and brilliant actor certainly has been overlooked in the acknowledgement stakes.
    Kindest Regards Alan
    Barbara Downs. NZ

    ReplyDelete
  5. he now has a Facebook group private family/friends/those who knew him/worked with him do join -www.facebook./groups/dobie

    ReplyDelete