Midsomer Murders: Death of a Stranger


01:00 am - 03:00 am, Today on WIRT Ion+ (13.4)

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About this Broadcast
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Death of a Stranger

Barnaby investigates the death of a man who fell into a pit and died while running from a horse-and-hound stampede during a foxhunt.

repeat 1999 English Stereo
Drama Crime Mystery & Suspense Season Premiere

Cast & Crew
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John Nettles (Actor) .. DCI Tom Barnaby
Daniel Casey (Actor) .. Sgt. Gavin Troy
Jane Wymark (Actor) .. Joyce Barnaby
Laura Howard (Actor) .. Sarah Fitzroy
Richard Johnson (Actor) .. James Fitzroy
Dominic Mafham (Actor) .. Grahame Tranter
Diane Fletcher (Actor) .. Marcia Tranter
Tom Smith (Actor) .. Billy Gurdie
Toby Jones (Actor) .. Dan Peterson
Jennifer Hilary (Actor) .. Sarah Fitzroy
Sarah Winman (Actor) .. Kate Tranter
James Bolam (Actor) .. Ron Pringle
Janet Dale (Actor) .. Betty Pringle
Jeanne Hepple (Actor) .. Linda Wagstaff
Eve Pearce (Actor) .. Lady Bracknell
Peter Bayliss (Actor) .. Tramp
Jane Wood (Actor) .. Cathy Gurdie
Fred Ridgeway (Actor) .. Ben Gurdie
Frank Mills (Actor) .. Fred Rodale
Jonie Broom (Actor) .. Dave Hedges
Simon McBurney (Actor) .. Henry Carstairs
Tim Burrett (Actor) .. Hunt Follower
Patricia Valentine (Actor) .. Sandra
Arlene Cockburn (Actor) .. Charlotte
David Maybrick (Actor) .. Policeman
Shenagh Govan (Actor) .. Matron
Deborah Findlay (Actor) .. Hilary Richards
Mali Harries (Actor) .. Nurse O'Casey
Georgine Anderson (Actor) .. Madge Fielding
Cyril Shaps (Actor) .. Jeweller
Grant Gillespie (Actor) .. Jack Worthing
Sarah Ball (Actor) .. Shop Assistant
Simon Greiff (Actor) .. Director
Richard Dee Roberts (Actor) .. Police officer
David Killick (Actor) .. Waiter
Phyllis Calvert (Actor) .. Alice Bly
Nigel Davenport (Actor) .. William Smithers
Geoffrey Bayldon (Actor) .. Arthur Prewitt
Mary Wimbush (Actor) .. George Watson
Gudrun Ure (Actor) .. Celia Armstrong
Angela Down (Actor) .. Pru Bennett
Colin Tierney (Actor) .. Mungo Mortimer
Clive Wood (Actor) .. Dr. Clive Warnford
Carolyn Pickles (Actor) .. Sister Lovelace
Miranda Kingsley (Actor) .. Nurse Bartlett
Sam Beazley (Actor) .. Cyril Toft
Matyelok Gibbs (Actor) .. Muriel Harrap
Daphne Goddard (Actor) .. Miss Laybourne
Arthur Cox (Actor) .. Landlord
Caroline John (Actor) .. Florist
Katherine Tozer (Actor) .. Hotel Receptionist

More Information
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Did You Know..
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John Nettles (Actor) .. DCI Tom Barnaby
Born: October 11, 1943
Birthplace: St Austell, Cornwall, England
Trivia: Left university to perform with the Royal Shakespeare Company. Was narrator of BBC series Airport between 1996 and 2005. Appointed an OBE in 2010. Awarded an honorary doctorate at the University of Plymouth in 2012. Patron of The Mare and Foal Sanctuary.
Daniel Casey (Actor) .. Sgt. Gavin Troy
Born: June 01, 1972
Birthplace: Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham, England
Trivia: Joined the Stockton Youth Theatre as a 14-year-old. Performed in the award-winning Dead Fish at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. Reprised his role in the touring production of Dead Fish throughout 1994 and 1995. Played the role of DS Gavin Troy in Midsomer Murders between 1998 and 2003. Ran for Leukaemia Research in the 2003 Great north Run.
Jane Wymark (Actor) .. Joyce Barnaby
Born: October 31, 1952
Birthplace: Paddington, London, England
Trivia: Starred in the 1975 Birmingham Rep production of Equus. Played Sasha in a 1978 production of Ivanov at the Old Vic. Portrayed the role of Joyce Barnaby in Midsomer Murders between 1997 and 2011. Performed in a world tour of Hamlet throughout 1978, alongside Sir Derek Jacobi. Is a Drama tutor at London's Guildhall School of Music and Drama.
Laura Howard (Actor) .. Sarah Fitzroy
Birthplace: Chiswick, London, England
Trivia: Made her television debut in the 1992 historical series Covington Cross.Landed her first leading television role in 1992, playing Tammy Rokeby in sitcom So Haunt Me. In 1996, appeared in drama series Soldier Soldier as Deborah Briggs. Is perhaps best known for playing Cully Barnaby in crime-mystery procedural Midsomer Murders between 1997 and 2011. Performed as part of the Royal Shakespeare Company's Making Mischief Season in 2016.
Richard Johnson (Actor) .. James Fitzroy
Born: July 30, 1927
Died: June 05, 2015
Birthplace: Upminster, Essex, England, United Kingdom
Dominic Mafham (Actor) .. Grahame Tranter
Born: March 11, 1968
Diane Fletcher (Actor) .. Marcia Tranter
Born: April 17, 1944
Trivia: British leading lady Diane Fletcher appeared in films during the 1970s and then switched to television.
Tom Smith (Actor) .. Billy Gurdie
Born: September 10, 1892
Died: February 23, 1976
Trivia: Instantly recognizable to fans of B-Westerns, Oklahoma native Tom Smith often appeared as one of the Boss Villain's unshaven henchmen, skulking about in the background or riding in the posse. Onscreen from 1930, Smith began appearing regularly in Westerns from 1935 but was at his busiest in the late 1930s. More often than not unbilled, and only infrequently awarded speaking parts, Smith left films after the 1949 Jimmy Wakely oater Roaring Westward.
Barry Jackson (Actor)
Born: March 29, 1938
Died: May 12, 2013
Birthplace: Birmingham, England
Trivia: At the age of nine, presented radio broadcasts for Children's Hour. Worked as a stage hand at the Birmingham Rep at the age of 16. Moved to London to become an actor immediately upon getting his O-Levels. Worked as a fight director and stunt man throughout the 1960s, under the name 'Jack Barry'. Portrayed Dr George Bullard in Midsomer Murders from 1998 to 2011.
Toby Jones (Actor) .. Dan Peterson
Born: September 07, 1966
Birthplace: Hammersmith, London, England
Trivia: A man with a peculiar face and small stature born into a long line of performers, Toby Jones might seem born to be a character actor. Jones' father, Freddie Jones, has graced the screen in a multitude of projects, from David Lynch's enigmatic sci-fi epic Dune to BBC adaptations of classic works of literature. Meanwhile, Jones' mother was born to a family whose legacy in acting went back seven generations, setting the stage for Toby's career almost before he was born. Jones took to the stage at his school in Oxfordshire, England, where he discovered an aptitude for theatrical acting. Though stage work would remain an important element of his professional life, Jones eventually tried his hand at screen work, beginning with a minor role in the 1992 film adaptation of Virginia Woolf's Orlando. Many of these bit parts would follow in movies like Ever After and Les Miserabes, as Jones' distinct and memorable visage set him apart from the masses. This same unique quality eventually began to win him more substantial roles, like a four-episode run as a pathologist on the U.K. detective show Midsomer Murders, and a chance to explore vocal acting as the voice of the animated Dobby the House Elf in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. More of Jones' usual small but memorable parts would follow, such as Smee, right-hand man to Captain Hook in Finding Neverland. Then in 2004, Jones got the chance to sink his teeth into not one but two substantial characters -- both with considerably more screen time than he was accustomed to. In the U.K. made-for-TV biopic Elizabeth I, Jones played Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury, spymaster, and later secretary of state to Queen Elizabeth, a man infamous for his odd, slight appearance. Exaggerating his quirky physical characteristics and delving deeply into the complex character, Jones was lauded by audiences and critics alike. That same year, Jones won the starring role of controversial writer Truman Capote in Infamous, the big-screen American telling of the writing the true-crime novel In Cold Blood. A dream role both for his artistic sensibilities and the furthering of his career, Jones joined a cast of American stars including Sigourney Weaver, Sandra Bullock, Gwyneth Paltrow, Isabella Rossellini, and Daniel Craig. In typical Hollywood style, the film was green-lit around the same time that another studio was beginning production on a feature with the same subject matter, and Bennett Miller's Capote was scheduled to be released first. The buzz surrounding this rival production, however, was not the kind that Infamous producers were hoping for; instead of generating interest in their film, they feared that the overwhelming praise that Capote was receiving for its script, direction, and acting by star Philip Seymour Hoffman would only overshadow their own film. The release date for Infamous was pushed back as Capote went on to sweep the awards circuit, picking up over 40 awards and nominations including Oscar nods for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Supporting Actress (for Catherine Keener's performance as Harper Lee), and Best Screenplay, as well as an Oscar win for Hoffman in the category of Best Actor. With Capote seeming to have already carved a place in the history of cinema and Philip Seymour Hoffman moving to the top of the list of gifted and respected actors, the cast and crew of Infamous had to worry that for all their hard work, their production would be seen as little more than the "other Truman Capote movie." Its release was finally set for late fall of 2006, roughly a year after its original date. Jones, however, was not going to spend the meantime biting his nails. By the time Infamous hit theaters, Jones had already completed filming on an adaptation of the Somerset Maugham novel The Painted Veil, and begun production on Nightwatching, a film about the life of the artist Rembrandt in which Jones would play the Dutch painter Gerard Dou.
Jennifer Hilary (Actor) .. Sarah Fitzroy
Born: December 14, 1942
Died: August 06, 2008
Sarah Winman (Actor) .. Kate Tranter
James Bolam (Actor) .. Ron Pringle
Born: June 16, 1935
Birthplace: Sunderland, County Durham
Trivia: Supporting actor Bolam was onscreen from 1961.
Janet Dale (Actor) .. Betty Pringle
Jeanne Hepple (Actor) .. Linda Wagstaff
Eve Pearce (Actor) .. Lady Bracknell
Born: April 17, 1929
Peter Bayliss (Actor) .. Tramp
Born: June 27, 1922
Jane Wood (Actor) .. Cathy Gurdie
Fred Ridgeway (Actor) .. Ben Gurdie
Frank Mills (Actor) .. Fred Rodale
Jonie Broom (Actor) .. Dave Hedges
Simon McBurney (Actor) .. Henry Carstairs
Born: August 25, 1957
Birthplace: Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, United Kingdom
Trivia: Englishman Simon McBurney enjoyed two distinct phases of his screen career; he began as a character player, who excelled at playing ruddy-faced, wizened, vaguely sinister types, often of a European or Eastern European origin. His resumé -- in this capacity -- includes such films as Kafka (1991), Eisenstein (as the famous Russian director), and Jonathan Demme's political thriller remake The Manchurian Candidate (2004). As of 2007, however, McBurney shifted gears somewhat by stepping behind the camera, when he executive produced and authored the screen story of the Rowan Atkinson vehicle Mr. Bean's Holiday.
Tim Burrett (Actor) .. Hunt Follower
Patricia Valentine (Actor) .. Sandra
Arlene Cockburn (Actor) .. Charlotte
David Maybrick (Actor) .. Policeman
Shenagh Govan (Actor) .. Matron
Deborah Findlay (Actor) .. Hilary Richards
Born: December 23, 1947
Birthplace: Leatherhead, Surrey, England
Trivia: Performed as part of the Royal Shakespeare Company in the 1980s. In 1997, won the Best Supporting Actress Olivier Award for her role as Hilda in Stanley. Won the 2015 Clarence Derwent Award for Best Supporting Female for her role as Volumnia in Coriolanus. In 2017, was nominated for the Best Featured Actress in a Play Tony Award for her role in The Children. As of 2020, has played Ruth in BBC legal drama The Split since its 2018 debut.
Mali Harries (Actor) .. Nurse O'Casey
Georgine Anderson (Actor) .. Madge Fielding
Cyril Shaps (Actor) .. Jeweller
Born: October 13, 1923
Died: January 01, 2003
Birthplace: Highbury, London
Grant Gillespie (Actor) .. Jack Worthing
Sarah Ball (Actor) .. Shop Assistant
Simon Greiff (Actor) .. Director
Richard Dee Roberts (Actor) .. Police officer
David Killick (Actor) .. Waiter
Desuden Medvirker (Actor)
Phyllis Calvert (Actor) .. Alice Bly
Born: February 18, 1915
Died: October 08, 2002
Trivia: As the heroine of the British romantic melodrama Madonna of the Seven Moons (1946), Phyllis Calvert was placed under a gypsy curse which forced her to be wife, mother and mistress all in one. This triumvirate sums up the range of characters played by Ms. Calvert throughout her career. Starting out as a dancer, Phyllis switched to acting after a suffering an injury. Beginning with 1943's The Man in Grey, Phyllis established herself as Britain's favorite "Gothic" heroine, seldom carrying on a romance unless she was dressed in 19th-century fashion, with her long black hair cascading in the wind. Occasional efforts were made to turn Phyllis into a Hollywood star; the best of these was Appointment with Danger (1950), in which she plays a nun who witnesses a murder committed by future Dragnet co-stars Jack Webb and Harry Morgan! Long married to publisher Peter Murray-Hill, Phyllis Calvert cut back on her filmmaking activities in the 1970s, though she starred on the popular BBC TV series Kate (1970-71).
Nigel Davenport (Actor) .. William Smithers
Born: May 23, 1928
Died: October 25, 2013
Trivia: A character player even in youth, British actor Nigel Davenport spent nearly fifty years in briskly businesslike stage, screen and TV roles. He made his film debut as the police sergeant in Michael Powell's notorious Peeping Tom (1959). Among his many colorful screen characterizations were the Duke of Norfolk in A Man For All Seasons (1966), Bothwell in Mary Queen of Scots (1971), Van Helsing in the 1973 Frank Langella version of Dracula and Lord Birkenbed in the Oscar-winning Chariots of Fire. Nigel Davenport's TV credits include the miniseries Prince Regent (1979, as King George III), and Masada (1981). Towards the end of his career, he made appearances in popular British TV series such as Keeping Up Appearances and Midsomer Murders, and played Dan Peggotty in a TV movie version of David Copperfield (2000). Davenport died in 2013 at age 85.
Geoffrey Bayldon (Actor) .. Arthur Prewitt
Born: January 07, 1924
Birthplace: Leeds
Trivia: A British character actor, Bayldon was onscreen from the '50s.
Mary Wimbush (Actor) .. George Watson
Gudrun Ure (Actor) .. Celia Armstrong
Angela Down (Actor) .. Pru Bennett
Born: June 15, 1946
Colin Tierney (Actor) .. Mungo Mortimer
Trivia: Made his professional television debut in a 1991 episode of Casualty. In 1994, played the role of Harriman in crime drama series Cracker. In 1998, performed in a Royal National Theatre production of Guiding Star. In 2000, performed as part of the Royal Shakespeare Company production of Hamlet. In 2009, played John Lennon's father, Alf, in the biopic Nowhere Boy.
Clive Wood (Actor) .. Dr. Clive Warnford
Carolyn Pickles (Actor) .. Sister Lovelace
Born: February 08, 1952
Birthplace: Wakefield, West Yorkshire, England
Miranda Kingsley (Actor) .. Nurse Bartlett
Sam Beazley (Actor) .. Cyril Toft
Matyelok Gibbs (Actor) .. Muriel Harrap
Daphne Goddard (Actor) .. Miss Laybourne
Arthur Cox (Actor) .. Landlord
Born: April 07, 1934
Caroline John (Actor) .. Florist
Born: September 19, 1940
Katherine Tozer (Actor) .. Hotel Receptionist

Before / After
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