Peter Hawkins

{{Short description|English actor (1924–2006)}}

{{for multi|the English footballer|Peter Hawkins (footballer)|the Irish cyclist|Peter Hawkins (cyclist)}}

{{EngvarB|date=May 2023}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2023}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Peter Hawkins

| image = Peter Hawkins.jpg

| caption = Hawkins in 1996

| birth_name = Peter John Hawkins

| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=y|1924|4|3}}

| birth_place = Brixton, London, England

| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=y|2006|7|8|1924|4|3}}

| death_place = London, England

| occupation = Actor, voice artist

|years_active = 1949–1992

| spouse = {{marriage|Rosemary Miller|1956}}

| children = 1}}

Peter John Hawkins (3 April 1924 – 8 July 2006) was a British actor. From the 1950s to 1980s, he was one of the most sought-after voice artists for television.

Early life

Peter John Hawkins was born on 3 April 1924 in Hargwyne Street in Brixton, south London, to Detective Inspector John Stephen and piano player Doris Matilda. According to his son Silas, his father's talent was derived from his mother's ability to mimic others. Hawkins made his first stage appearance as a member of the chorus in a musical. During his last year at school, he wrote, with three friends, a revue entitled The Five Bs, the name of their form. He worked at Pitman's from the ages of 16 to 18, writing similar shows at a youth club. Hawkins joined the Royal Navy, entertaining with impressions for which he wrote scripts, and survived when HMS Limbourne sank after being torpedoed escorting the cruiser Charybdis near Guernsey. He was rescued by Ronnie Hill, a theatre actor at the time, and while recovering, Hawkins took part in plays, which resulted in his being taken into Combined Operations' Entertainments productions of the Royal Naval Barracks' Scran Bag.{{cite journal|last=Hawkins|first=Silas|title=Voices-Voices-Voices!|journal=Doctor Who Magazine|issue=477|pages=66|publisher=Panini Comics|date=October 2014}}

Career

Following his time with Scran Bag, Hawkins won a two-year place at the Central School of Speech and Drama, and in 1949, his television career began with an adaptation of J.B. Priestley's The Good Companions.{{cite web

|url=https://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/a9c11679a51d455a94f929def6070574

|title=The Good Companions - 30th January 1949

|date=30 January 1949

|access-date=20 May 2023}} His first television role. He began his long association with children's television with the magazine programme Whirligig voicing several characters, including Mr. Turnip, Alexander Scrope, Petrio in Stranger from Space, Albert in Jeremy Make-Believe and the Can We Help You? segment. Hawkins joined the show after being asked by the producer of a children's serial he was playing the villain for.

In 1952, Hawkins became the voices of both Bill and Ben, the Flower Pot Men, for which he invented their Oddle-Poddle language. He made Bill's voice higher-pitched and Ben's lower-pitches to distinguish them, and praised the puppetry of Audrey Atterbury.{{cite web |url=https://twitter.com/Radiojottings/status/1604503000776572932?cxt=HHwWiICwpc2-q8QsAAAA |title=Andy Walmsley (18th December 2022) "70 years ago today BBC tv airs the first showing of Bill and Ben 'The Flower Pot Men'. Actor Peter Hawkins and puppeteer Audrey Atterbury talk to Jane Markham in 1989" - Twitter |access-date=20 May 2023}} The scripts would be written in English, and Peter would translate them into Oddle-Poddle,{{cite web

|url=https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=9aEkfGZVzdw&pp=ygUPVHJ1bXB0b24gUmlvdHMg

|title=Trumpton Riots - Pugwash, Windy and Barney McGrew

|website=YouTube

|date=February 2014

|access-date=20 May 2023}} creating words similar to "Slogalog" (Slowcoach the Tortoise) and "Haddap" (Hello).{{cite web

|url=https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=XrBzOvlNEs4&pp=ygUWc2l4IGZpZnR5IGZpdmUgc3BlY2lhbA%3D%3D

|title=Six Fifty-Five Special - Puppets

|website=YouTube

|access-date=20 May 2023}} He, Audrey and Gladys Whitred would keep in touch for at least thirty years afterwards.{{cite episode |title=Norman Wisdom|series=The Time of Your Life}}

In 1956, Hawkins married actress Rosemary Miller, who he met doing voices on Toytown.{{cite news|title=He Speaks with a Hundred Voices|author=London, Peter|url=https://archive.org/details/The_Childrens_Newspaper_1959-05-16 |newspaper=The Children's Newspaper|date=16 May 1959|accessdate=28 April 2023}} Hawkins was Ernest the Policeman, and reprised the role for the 1972 series.{{cite web

|url=http://www.toonhound.com/toytown.htm

|title=Stories from Toytown featuring Larry the Lamb - Toonhound

|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240226134441/http://www.toonhound.com/toytown.htm

|access-date=20 May 2023|archive-date=26 February 2024

}} Hawkins would also meet Roy Skelton during Toytown, becoming a close friend.{{cite web

|url=https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=TU76KJQHwO8&pp=ygULcm95IHNrZWx0b24%3D

|title=Roy Skelton at The Day of the Daleks convention

|website=YouTube

|date=29 May 2019

|access-date=20 May 2023}} He would also be offered the role of a Doctor in Miller's star series Emergency Ward 10, although due to his many voice roles, he was unable to appear.

One of his best-known roles was all the voices in Captain Pugwash. Creator John Ryan praised him for his ability to perform many different voices,{{cite web

|url=http://www.jedisparadise.com/Captain_Pugwash_Puffin1.htm

|title=Puffin Annual No. 1 - Captain Pugwash article

|access-date=20 May 2023}} although he had to be hidden behind a monitor due to his facial expressions distracting the animators.{{Cite web|title=Captions, Animations and Captain Pugwash|publisher= A Tech-Ops History|url=http://tech-ops.co.uk/next/captions-animations-and-captain-pugwash/|access-date=23 August 2023}} Because of this, he could write down notes about incidental characters in the script and be reminded by them appearing onscreen.

Hawkins gained a reputation for pulling off difficult character voices,{{cite AV media | title=Talking Daleks}} The Dalek Invasion of Earth DVD which led to him being cast as the Daleks in Doctor Who in 1963. After a trial session he settled on a monotone, which caused worry among executives that it would become monotonous. He solved this problem by raising the voice's pitch when the Daleks got angry. Hawkins would voice the Daleks in every subsequent 1960s story they appeared in, as well as the two 1960s feature films, The Curse of the Daleks stage play and Out of the Unknown, and he and fellow Dalek voice David Graham would become lifelong friends, although star William Hartnell and guest star Kevin Stoney would also strike up a relationship. Despite his son Silas being a Doctor Who fan, he did not find it strange that it was his father voicing the Daleks, although the Daily Express framed it as if he boasted to his friends about it, which Hawkins hated.

In 1966, Hawkins voiced the Cybermen in the fourth and final part of the Doctor Who serial The Tenth Planet, originated by Roy Skelton. For the subsequent three Cyberman serials he used an electrolarynx, which he described as very uncomfortable. He considered the story and cast of his last Dalek story, The Evil of the Daleks, to be the best. Hawkins never returned afterwards, as he had enough of having to fund it himself. He was, however, going to be the voice of K9 before John Leeson, with whom Hawkins had worked with on the first year of Thames Television's Rainbow, won the role.

One of his most prominent live-action roles in the period was 1965's The Big Spender, for which he grew and curled his hair for three months.{{cite web

|url=https://cuttingsarchive.org/index.php/Voice_Behind_the_Daleks

|title=Voice Behind the Daleks - The Doctor Who Cuttings Archive

|access-date=20 May 2023}} As well, throughout the late 1950s and early 1960s he appeared in many advertising magazine programmes.{{cite magazine |last=Noble|first=Peter|date=1959 |title=British Film and Television Year Book, Volume 9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aOlkAAAAMAAJ |magazine=British Film and Television Year Book|location=United Kingdom|publisher=Cinema TV Today|access-date=7 July 2024}}{{cite magazine |last=Noble|first=Peter|date=1960 |title=British Film and Television Year Book, Volume 10|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9yXp6KR4PdYC|magazine=British Film and Television Year Book|location=United Kingdom|publisher=British and American Press|access-date=7 July 2024}} In 1969 he played an Albanian interpreter speaking English in The Power Game, which he considered his hardest role to play.[https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1524175/Peter-Hawkins.html Daily Telegraph obituary]

In 1972, Hawkins joined the ensemble of Dave Allen at Large, even writing various skits, and staying until 1978, as well as voicing Zippy in Rainbow. In the pilot, he also voiced Sunshine, Bramble and Pillar, but after many policy changes they were removed. He tried to rewrite gags, which proved hard for the target audience, and so left the series, despite being asked to stay. He was eventually replaced by Roy Skelton, whom he recommended.{{cite web

|url= http://www.btinternet.com/~acbarrett/rsi.htm

|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20060505064255fw_/http://www.btinternet.com/~acbarrett/rsi.htm

|url-status= dead

|archive-date= 2006-05-05

|title=www.rainbow.web.com (Wayback Machine) - Roy Skelton interview|access-date=20 May 2023}}

Throughout the 1980s, as well as providing voices in SuperTed, The Family-Ness and Jimbo and the Jet-Set, Hawkins reprised his roles of Bill and Ben for various shows, including Six Fifty-Five Special and Blue Peter.{{cite web

|url=https://twitter.com/BBCArchive/status/1075082589923434496

|title=BBC Archive - #OnThisDay 1952: Bill and Ben, Flower Pot Men, made their television debut. In 1984, Blue Peter reunited them with Peter Hawkins - the only person who truly understood them.

|access-date=20 May 2023}} He claimed the reason for being able to remember such voices was that he believed that the right voice would appear if the right ideas were thought in a live-action role, and used the same thoughts to reprise the role. In 1988 he, his wife Rosemary Miller and David Graham did voices together for the English dub of the German animated film Stowaways on the Ark.

Due to Hawkins' role as Spotty Dog in The Woodentops, he was chosen by Nick Park to voice Gromit in his short film A Grand Day Out.{{cite web

|url=https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=g6fecmst7dM&pp=ygUZbmljayBwYXJrIGEgZ3JhbmQgZGF5IG91dA%3D%3D

|title=Nick Park on making 'A Grand Day Out" at the NFTS

|website=YouTube

|date=15 November 2021

|access-date=20 May 2023}} He eventually decided to make Gromit a mute character to save on the effort required to animate his mouth, instead using his eyes and monobrow to communicate.{{cite web

|url= https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/3831833/Wallace-and-Gromit-one-man-and-his-dog.html

|title=Wallace and Gromit: one man and his dog - The Telegraph

|date=18 December 2008

|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090209101515/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/3831833/Wallace-and-Gromit-one-man-and-his-dog.html

|access-date=20 May 2023|archive-date=9 February 2009

}} None of Hawkins' original dialogue has been publicly released. Although Gromit snores and whimpers in A Grand Day Out, whether or not these were recorded by him is unconfirmed.{{cite web

|url= https://lostmediawiki.com/A_Grand_Day_Out_(lost_Peter_Hawkins%27_%22Gromit%22_dialogue_from_stop-motion_animated_film;_1989)

|title= A Grand Day Out (lost Peter Hawkins' "Gromit" dialogue from stop-motion animated film; 1989)

|access-date=20 May 2023}}

Silas believed his father had the most involvement with the Flower Pot Men, although he also enjoyed the diverse cast of Captain Pugwash, being very proud when it appeared in The Times as a crossword clue: "The captain is all for the dog having a bath". By comparison, when it was claimed Hilda Brabban created the Flower Pot Men, Hawkins immediately wrote a rebuttal.{{cite web

|url=http://www.toonhound.com/sept2005.htm#flobbadob

|title=The Hound: September 2005 - Toonhound|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240301174849/http://www.toonhound.com/sept2005.htm#flobbadob |access-date=20 May 2023|archive-date=1 March 2024 }} According to Silas, Hawkins gave thought to every role, yet never looked back at them.

Personal life

Hawkins was interested in jewellery, fossils, "serious" music and eating out. He supported Chelsea F.C.. He used his record collection to expand his vocal range, and also had a collection of Japanese sword guards and Impressionist works, including those of Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Camille Pissarro and Claude Monet, much to the delight of Gale Pedrick. He considered his collection as "applause" for his busy yet anonymous voice work. In 1977, however, he sold his collection of sword guards at Sotheby's, with the highest-selling, by Seiyoken Hagiya Katsuhira and depicting the Three Sake Tasters, fetching £4,200, an auction record.{{cite web

|url=https://archive.org/details/NewsUK1977UKEnglish/Oct%2014%201977%2C%20The%20Times%2C%20%2360134%2C%20UK%20%28en%29/page/n16/mode/1upq=Peter+Hawkins|title=£4,200 paid for a tsuba sets auction record - The Times (14th October 1977)|access-date=2023-08-29}}

His wife, Rosemary Miller, whom he had married in 1956, also had an interest in collecting paintings. On 27 August 1959, they had a son named Silas, who was named in case he grew up to become an actor, which he did, going to follow his parents' careers and provide voiceovers on shows such as Summerton Mill. Despite his busy schedule, Hawkins spent lots of time with his son, reading bedtime stories as if he was recording, which Silas thought was overwhelming.

Health problems

Hawkins regularly smoked 20 Olivier cigarettes in his prime, and, later, it would give him eczema. According to his son Silas, Hawkins' wife Rosemary would constantly dress his rashes. In 1992, Hawkins had an operation to remove a tumor in his brain, which left him unable to read and made him very drowsy.

Death

Hawkins died on 8 July 2006, aged 82, of pneumonia. The funeral was held at St. Matthews in Queensway, where Silas was baptised. A showing of "The Survivors", his first Doctor Who episode, was arranged, and Silas scattered his ashes at Fermain Bay, Guernsey, where HMS Limbourne sank.

Filmography

= Film =

class="wikitable"

!Year

!Title

!Role

!Notes

1952

|The Lost Hours

|Mechanic

|Uncredited

1964

|No Short Cut

|Narrator

|voice only, uncredited

rowspan="2" |1965

|Dr. Who and the Daleks

|Daleks

|voice only, uncredited

Look at Life: James Bond's Island

|Narrator

|Part of Look at Life, voice only

1966

|Daleks' Invasion Earth 2150 A.D.

|Daleks

|voice only, uncredited

1973

|Assassin

|Passport Officer

|

rowspan="2" |1975

|Great

|Voices

|

Super Natural Gas

|Voices

|

1978

|Kingdom of Gifts

|Voices

|voice only, uncredited

1979

|The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe

|Dwarf

Fox

|voice only

rowspan="2"|1980

|Rail Report 13: On Track for the Eighties

|Narrator

|rowspan="3"|British Transport Films, voice only, uncredited for latter two

Centenary Express

|Narrator

rowspan="2"|1981

|The Train Makers

|Narrator

Moon Man

|Narrator

|voice only

1984

|And the Walls Came Tumbling Down

|Narrator

|documentary film, voice only

1988

|Stowaways on the Ark

|Willi Worm

|English version, voice only

1989

|Asterix and the Big Fight

|Getafix

|English version, voice only

1990

|Peter in Magicland

|Sandman

|English version, voice only

= Television =

class="wikitable"

!Year

!Title

!Role

!Notes

rowspan="2" |1949

|The Good Companions

|Albert Tuggeridge

|rowspan="2"|TV movie

Old English

|Reporter

1950-1956

|Whirligig

|Mr. Turnip

Alexander Scrope

Petrio

Albert

|91 episodes

1951-1953

|Saturday Special

|Porterhouse

|35 episodes

1951

|Aladdin

|Lord High Chamberlain

|TV movie

1952

|Three Little Mushrooms

|Voices

|5 episodes

1952-1953

|Flower Pot Men

|Bill

Ben

|26 episodes

1953

|Peter and the Wolf

|Narrator

|TV movie

1954-1957

|Billy Bean and His Funny Machine

|Billy Bean

|30 episodes

1954

|Harlequinade

|Voices

|TV movie

1955

|The Travelling Musicians

|Voices

|TV movie

rowspan="2"|1955-1956

|A Rubovian Legend

|Lord Chamberlain

Albert Weatherspoon

|Series 1: (4 episodes)

The Woodentops

|Spotty Dog

|26 episodes

rowspan="4"|1956

|The Bird of Truth

|Voices

|TV movie

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

|Cheshire Cat

|TV Movie

Meet the Penguins

|Voices

|5 episodes

The Holy Mice

|Voices

|TV Movie

1956-1958

|Toytown

|Ernest the Policeman

|18 episodes

rowspan="6"|1957

|The Emperor's Nightingale

|Voices

|TV movie

Beauty and the Beast

|Voices

|TV movie

The Machine Breakers

|Tom Thorpe

|3 episodes

The Stolen Miniatures

|Henry

|TV movie

Studio E

|Willoughby

|7 episodes

Treasure Island

|Narrator

|7 episodes

rowspan="2"|1958

|The Thompson Family

|Ron Hicks

|3 episodes

Life with the Lyons

|Unknown

|Episode "Who's Your Lady Friend?"

rowspan="2"|1959

|Call Me Sam

|Unknown

|Episode 2

Adolphus

|Narrator

|6 episodes

1959-1960

|Small Time

|Bruin and other voices

|In shows Brock and Bruin, The Lost Invitation and Cookery Tales of Oaktree Kitchen

rowspan="2"|1960

|Friday Magazine

|Presenter

|7 episodes

The Days of Vengeance

|P.C. Harris and Narrator

|6 episodes

1960-1962

|Playbox

|Ben Cooke

Jack Royde

|2 episodes

rowspan="2"|1962

|Tintin and the Broken Ear

|Narrator

|7 episodes

The Tommy Steele Show: Quincy’s Quest

|Topper

|TV movie

rowspan="2"|1963

|Blue Peter

|Narrator (In Search of a Unicorn and Little Watha segments)

|6 episodes

ITV Play of the Week

|Sparks

|Episode “The Seventh Wave”

1963-1968

|Doctor Who

|Dalek voices

Cyberman voices

|51 episodes

1964-1966

|Songs for the Times

|Narrator

|5 episodes

rowspan="2"|1964

|Boatswain on the Ice

|Narrator

|German film dubbed for TV

Fred Hoyle’s Universe

|Narrator

|Documentary

1964-1969

|Bleep and Booster

|Narrator

|44 episodes

rowspan="2"|1965

|The Roy Castle Show

|Dalek

|1 episode

The Newcomers

|Radio announcer

|2 episodes

1965-1966

|The Big Spender

|Spiro

|5 episodes

rowspan="5"|1966

|The Wednesday Play

|Mr Willis

|Episode "A Walk in the Sea"

Softly, Softly

|Detective Sergeant Thorne

|Episode 14 "Blind Man's Buff"

The Prizewinners

|Narrator (A Policeman's Lot)

|TV movie

Five for Venice

|Narrator

|TV Movie

Eugene Onegin

|Narrator

|TV Movie

rowspan="2"|1966-1967

|Disney Wonderland

|Goofy

|59 episodes

Captain Zeppos

|Voices

|English version, 15 episodes

1967

|Merry-Go-Round

|Narrator

|Episode "The Flying Breeze"

1968

|The White Horses

|Voices

|English version, 13 episodes

rowspan="3"|1969

|Hark at Barker

|Shoong Pu Teng

|Series 1, episode 7: "Rustless and the Solar System"

The Power Game

|Interpreter

|Episode "Standard Practice"

Out of the Unknown

|Dalek

|Episode "Get Off My Cloud"

rowspan="2"|1970

|Doomwatch

|Computer

|Episode 5: "Project Sahara"

Paulus the Woodgnome

|Paulus

|English version, 39 episodes

1970-1971

|The Tomfoolery Show

|Voices

|17 episodes

1971

|A Family at War

|Dimmock

|Episode "We Could Be a Lot Worse Off"

1972-1974

|Larry the Lamb

|Voices

|26 episodes

rowspan="2"|1972

|The Adventures of Sir Prancelot

|All characters

|31 episodes

The Dick Emery Show

|Unknown

|1 episode

1972-1978

|Dave Allen at Large

|Various

|19 episodes

1972

|The Shadow of the Tower

|Voice

|Episode 5: "The Serpent and the Comforter"

1972-1973

|Rainbow

|Zippy

|Series 1: (50 episodes)

rowspan="4"|1973

|Son of the Bride

|Mr. Cuthbertson

|Episode 3 "Of Unsound Mind"

The Count of Monte Cristo

|Voices

|17 episodes

Tymancha’s Friend

|Voices

|English version of Russian film

Black and Blue

|Voices

|Episode 4, "Rust"

1973-1975

|The Daily Fable

|Mr. Owl

|English version, 30 episodes

rowspan="2"|1974

|Dial M for Murder

|Sergeant Maclean

|Episode 7 "Dead Connection"

Father Brown

|Gibbs

|Episode 1: "The Hammer of God"

1974-1975

|Captain Pugwash

|All characters

|30 episodes

1975

|Sadie, It's Cold Outside

|Radio announcer

|Episode 4

rowspan="2"|1976

|Bless This House

|Radio announcer (uncredited)

|Episode "Beautiful Dreamer"

Agaton Sax

|Narrator

|English version, 4 episodes

1976-1977

|Noah and Nelly in.. SkylArk

|Voices

|30 episodes

rowspan="2"|1977

|Rudy Schokker Cries No More

|Voices

|Dutch film dubbed for TV

The Eieheiji Temple

|Voices

|Japanese film dubbed for TV

1978

| The Glorious Musketeers

|Rochefort

|French film dubbed for TV

rowspan="2"|1979

|The Perishers

|Marlon

BH

|20 episodes

Quincy's Quest

|Voices

|TV movie

1980-1986

|The Adventure Game

|Opening narration

|11 episodes, uncredited

1983-1986

|SuperTed

|Narrator

|36 episodes

1984

|C.Q.

|Voices

|TV movie

1984-1985

|The Family-Ness

|Voices

|25 episodes

1985

|Seaview

|Mynah bird

|Episode "The Godfather" credited in Radio Times only

1986-1987

|Jimbo and the Jet-Set

|Voices

|25 episodes

rowspan="3"|1989

|Windfalls

|All characters

|12 episodes

The Storyteller

|Devil

|Episode 1: "The Soldier and Death"

Theatre Night

|Michael Lomax

|Episode "Knuckle", uncredited

1989-1990

|Penny Crayon

|Dennis

|12 episodes

1991

|The Storyteller: Greek Myths

|Vulture

|Episode 4 "Daedalus and Icarus"

= Radio =

class="wikitable"

!Year

!Title

!Role

!Notes

rowspan="4"|1949

|Sheppey

|Unknown

|rowspan="4"|Play

Leopold the Beloved

|Martial

An English Summer

|Willie Wishart

The Taverna Brothers

|Hermann

rowspan="2"|1950

|Eden End

|Wilfred Kirby

|Play

The Ivory Door

|Titus

|Play

1953

|Just Fancy

|Unknown

|24 episodes

1954

|The Mystery of Robert the Devil

|Various

|Play

rowspan="5"|1955

|No Peace for the Wicked

|Various

|3 episodes

Mrs Dale's Diary

|Tiffin

|rowspan="2"|Play

The Good Soldier

|Jimmy

A Tinker's Tale

|Raven

|Play

Ray's a Laugh

|Daisy the Turkey

|Episode 11 "Let's Talk Turkey"

1955-1958

|Educating Archie

|Various

|6 episodes

1956

|Floggits

|Unknown

|Play

rowspan="2"|1957

|Mrs. Dale's Diary

|Monument

|Unrelated to 1955 production

Life with the Lyons

|Unknown

|Christmas Edition

1958

|Round the Bend

|Unknown

|30 episodes

rowspan="2"|1960

|We're in Business

|Parrot

|Episode “The Parrot”

Something to Shout About

|Joey the Parrot

|Play

1960-1961

|Spy-Catcher

|Various

|2 episodes

rowspan="2"|1960

|Meet the Huggetts

|Unknown

|2 episodes

Law and Disorder

|Various

|2 episodes

1961-1964

|Listen on Saturdays

|Narrator

|82 episodes

rowspan="2"|1961

|Inspector Scott Investigates

|Mr. Faraday

|1 episode

Shadow on the Sun

|Unknown

|3 episodes

1963

|Clancy of the Outback

|Wright

|Episode 2 "The Youno Prospector"

1964-1967

|Emery at Large

|Unknown

|4 episodes

1964

|A State of Chaos

|Unknown

|Play

rowspan="2"|1965

|Moonstrike

|Various

|3 episodes

Marriage Lines

|Various

|3 episodes

rowspan="2"|1966

|The Morecambe and Wise Show

|Unknown

|4 episodes

Scandal!

|Various

|4 episodes

1966-1967

|Steptoe and Son

|Unknown

|2 episodes

rowspan="5"|1967

|A Life of Bliss

|Unknown

|Episode “The Homecoming”

Six Steps in the Dark

|Unknown

|Episode 1

The Young Pioneers

|Voices

|Episode 1 "The Sempill Inheritance"

The Likely Lads

|Scoutmaster

|1 episode

The Bird's Nest

|Unknown

|Play

1968

|Strange

|Major Marcos

|Play

rowspan="2"|1969

|A Scent of New Mown Hay

|Mavranin

|Episode 1

The Dark Island

|Major Williams

|5 episodes{{Cite web |title=The Dark Island |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/series/m000b0dy |access-date=2023-10-28 |website=www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/series/m000b0dy}}

rowspan="2"|1970

|Mister Pybus

|Stan Cullen

|Episode 26 "Brigshaw and Son"

A Batchelor Confirmed

|Narrator

|Special

1971

|The Music of Exile

|Narrator

|Special

1974

|And the Wall Came Tumbling Down

|Leonard Gile

|Episode 6 "The Last Map"

rowspan="2"|1975

|Home to Roost

|Various

|2 episodes

Galbraith

|Lander

|2 episodes

rowspan="3"|1978

|Chanson francaise

|Narrator

|6 episodes

Strains of Moravia

|Narrator

|Play

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

|Frankie Mouse

|Fit the Fourth

1979

|The Biggest Cream Bun in the World

|rowspan="3"|Voices

|rowspan="3"|Part of Listen with Mother

rowspan="2"|1980

|Uncle Ben's Big Dinner

The Milkman Wouldn't Get Up
1990

|Spinsters on the March

|Narrator

|Play

= Sources =

  • {{cite web

|url=https://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/search/0/20?order=first&q=“peter+hawkins”#top

|title= Search results for "Peter Hawkins" at the BBC Programme Index|access-date=10 March 2025}}

  • {{Cite web|url=https://www.bfi.org.uk/films-tv-people/4ce2b9fcd2b4b|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200811042459/https://www.bfi.org.uk/films-tv-people/4ce2b9fcd2b4b|url-status=dead|archive-date=11 August 2020|title=Peter Hawkins|website=BFI|language=en|access-date=10 March 2025}}
  • {{cite journal|last=Hawkins|first=Silas|title=Voices-Voices-Voices!|journal=Doctor Who Magazine|issue=477|pages=66|publisher=Panini Comics|date=October 2014}}
  • {{cite magazine |last=Noble|first=Peter|date=1959 |title=British Film and Television Year Book, Volume 9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aOlkAAAAMAAJ |magazine=British Film and Television Year Book|location=United Kingdom|publisher=Cinema TV Today|access-date=7 July 2024}}
  • {{cite magazine |last=Noble|first=Peter|date=1960 |title=British Film and Television Year Book, Volume 10|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9yXp6KR4PdYC|magazine=British Film and Television Year Book|location=United Kingdom|publisher=British and American Press|access-date=7 July 2024}}
  • {{cite magazine |last=Noble|first=Peter|date=1962|title=British Film and Television Year Book, Volume 12|url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/British_Film_and_Television_Year_Book/u8r2iHhgjq0C?hl=en&gl=GB|magazine=British Film and Television Year Book|location=United Kingdom|publisher=British and American Press|access-date=10 March 2025}}
  • {{cite magazine |last=Noble|first=Peter|date=1970|title=British Film and Television Year Book|url= https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=E223AAAAIAAJ|magazine=British Film and Television Year Book|location=United Kingdom|publisher=Cinema TV Today|access-date=10 March 2025}}
  • {{cite magazine |last=Noble|first=Peter|date=1974|title=British Film and Television Year Book|url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=EZlmAAAAMAAJ|magazine=British Film and Television Year Book, Volume 29|location=United Kingdom|publisher=Cinema TV Today|access-date=10 March 2025}}
  • {{cite magazine |last=Noble|first=Peter|date=1978|title=British Film and Television Year Book|url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/International_Film_and_TV_Year_Book/wZpmAAAAMAAJ?hl=en&gl=GB|magazine=International Film and TV Year Book, Volume 33|location=United Kingdom|publisher=Screen International|access-date=10 March 2025}}
  • {{cite book|title=Imagination and Innovation: The Story of Weston Woods|author=John Cech|publisher=Scholastic|date=September 2009}}
  • {{cite web

|url=https://ctva.biz/UK/ATV/Palladium_08_(1962-63).htm

|title=Sunday Night at the London Palladium (Season 8, 1962-63)|website=The Classic TV Archive|access-date=10 March 2025}}

  • {{cite web

|url=https://transdiffusion.org/2016/03/31/tonights-anglia-tv-in-1967/

|title=Tonight’s Anglia TV… in 1967|author=Jessica Fielding|date=31 March 2016|website=Transdiffusion|access-date=10 March 2025}}

References

{{reflist}}