Midsomer Murders: Birds of Prey, Part 1


02:00 am - 02:51 am, Today on KYUK HDTV (15.1)

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About this Broadcast
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Birds of Prey, Part 1

Season 6, Episode 9

Part 1 of 2. A body is found in a car at the bottom of a river.

repeat 2003 English Stereo
Crime Drama Mystery & Suspense Season Finale

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) .. Cully Barnaby
Barry Jackson (Actor) .. Dr Bullard
Kate Buffery (Actor) .. Mallory Edmonton
David Calder (Actor) .. George Hamilton
Alexandra Gilbreath (Actor) .. Naomi Sinclair
Robert Morgan (Actor) .. Julian Shepherd
Rosalind Knight (Actor) .. Eleanor Macpherson
Sheila Shand Gibbs (Actor) .. Jane Macpherson
Anton Lesser (Actor) .. Eddie Darwin
Candida Benson (Actor) .. Sarah Pearce
Janet Maw (Actor) .. Eileen Hamilton
Trevor Cooper (Actor) .. Sean Moorcroft
Richard Todd (Actor) .. Charles Edmonton
Kenneth Gilbert (Actor) .. Hilary Carlton
Bernard Gallagher (Actor) .. Vernon Surtees
Neil Conrich (Actor) .. PC Angel
Jemma Churchill (Actor) .. Maisie Cullen
Harry Gostelow (Actor) .. Dr. Robertshaw
Nicholas Pritchard (Actor) .. Solicitor
Neville Phillips (Actor) .. Vicar
Edward Clayton (Actor) .. Butcher
Tim Treloar (Actor) .. Thames Valley Constable

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) .. Cully Barnaby
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.
Barry Jackson (Actor) .. Dr Bullard
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.
Kate Buffery (Actor) .. Mallory Edmonton
Born: July 23, 1957
Birthplace: Cambridge, Cambridgeshire
David Calder (Actor) .. George Hamilton
Born: August 01, 1946
Birthplace: Portsmouth
Alexandra Gilbreath (Actor) .. Naomi Sinclair
Born: March 28, 1969
Robert Morgan (Actor) .. Julian Shepherd
Rosalind Knight (Actor) .. Eleanor Macpherson
Born: December 03, 1933
Birthplace: Marylebone, London
Trivia: Rosalind Knight is a highly versatile English actress with a particular flair for comedy. She was the daughter of leading man Esmond Knight -- best remembered for his postwar work in the films of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger -- and the former Frances Clare; her stepmother was the actress Nora Swinburne. Knight studied at the Old Vic and, after a stint as assistant stage manager at the Midland Theatre Company in Coventry, she moved to the Ipswich Repertory Company, where the other assistant stage manager was future playwright Joe Orton (she subsequently played a small role in the 1987 Orton biopic Prick Up Your Ears).In 1956, Knight was seen by a film producer and signed up for her movie debut, as a schoolgirl in the comedy Blue Murder at St. Trinian's (1956). That same year, she starred with her father, cast as father and daughter, in a BBC adaptation of Nicholas Nickleby. Her next film was the trans-Atlantic hit Carry on Nurse (1959), playing Nurse Nightingale, and she subsequently appeared in a co-starring role in Carry on Teacher. She also worked in James Hill's The Kitchen (1961) and Tony Richardson's Tom Jones (1963), in which she played Mrs. Fitzpatrick. Knight was busy in theater for the next few years, although she did get her first exposure on American television through an appearance in the Beverly Hillbillies episode "War of the Roses," part of a five-show story arc that was filmed in England. She also appeared in the French Revolution spoof Start The Revolution Without Me (1970), but most of her work over the next decade was on the stage. Knight returned to the St. Trinian's fold at the end of the decade, this time as a teacher, in The Wildcats of St. Trinian's (1980). She is a familiar figure on British television, in mysteries and comedies alike, even portraying a retired prostitute -- a break from the usual aristocratic parts of her later career -- on Gimme Gimme Gimme.
Sheila Shand Gibbs (Actor) .. Jane Macpherson
Anton Lesser (Actor) .. Eddie Darwin
Born: February 14, 1952
Birthplace: Birmingham, England
Trivia: Joined the dramatic society at university where he made most of his friends, including his best friend to this day. Although he had trained as an architect, he watched a British Council screening of a film about the RSC and Stratford-upon-Avon in Nigeria where he was working as a trainee architect, and knew straightaway that he wanted to become an actor. While studying at RADA in 1977, he won the Bancroft Gold Medal for acting. Frequently performs with the Royal Shakespeare Company; played Bolingbroke in Richard II in 1990 and Petruchio in The Taming of the Shrew in 1992. Has been associated with reading novels by Charles Dickens for Naxos Audio Books since 2012, including Oliver Twist. Is a patron of the Lynx Animal Welfare Trust. In 2013, for two months played the part of Robin Carrow in Ambridge Extra, a BBC Radio 4 Extra spin-off from the BBC Radio 4 drama The Archers. Was announced a public supporter of Chapel Lane Theatre Company located in Stratford-upon-Avon, UK in 2015.
Candida Benson (Actor) .. Sarah Pearce
Janet Maw (Actor) .. Eileen Hamilton
Born: May 16, 1954
Trevor Cooper (Actor) .. Sean Moorcroft
Born: May 21, 1953
Richard Todd (Actor) .. Charles Edmonton
Born: June 11, 1919
Died: December 03, 2009
Trivia: Born in Ireland, Richard Todd spent a few of his childhood years in India, where his father served as an army physician. Later his family relocated to West Devon, England. Todd trained for a potential military career at Sandhurst before inaugurating his acting training at the Italia Conta school. He helped organize the Dundee Repertory Theatre, then spent six years' service in World War II, first as an officer in the Yorkshire Light Infantry, then as a paratrooper with the 6th Airbourne. Todd was among those who parachuted into France during the D-Day Invasion of 1944; eighteen years later, he played a cameo in Darryl F. Zanuck's D-Day recreation The Longest Day (1946). After the war, he rejoined the Dundee rep, then made his West End debut as The Scot, the ill-tempered, dying protagonist of John Patrick's play The Hasty Heart. In 1949, Todd began his film career when he was tapped to recreate his Hasty Heart characterization before the cameras; the performance would earn him an Academy Award nomination. Highlights of Todd's 1950s film output include his portrayal of Marlene Dietrich's castaway beau in Hitchcock's Stage Fright (1950), his swashbuckling heroics in Disney's The Story of Robin Hood (1952), The Sword and the Rose (1953) and Rob Roy, The Highland Rogue (1954), his sensitive performance as "Chaplain of the Presidents" Peter Marshall in A Man Called Peter, and his military derring-do in the 1956 British box-office smash The Dam Busters. Although he devoted more and more of his energies to the stage in the late 1950s-early 1960s, Todd served as executive producer on 1961's Why Bother to Knock and later portrayed a Timothy Leary clone in 1967's The Love-Ins. More recently the actor's achievements include stage actor and producer. Todd listed Equus as his favorite stage production, though it's likely that his eight-year run in the Mayfair Theatre presentation The Business of Murder was kinder to his bank account. In 1987, Richard Todd published Caught in the Act, the first volume of his memoirs. He died in 2009 at the age of 90.
Kenneth Gilbert (Actor) .. Hilary Carlton
Bernard Gallagher (Actor) .. Vernon Surtees
Neil Conrich (Actor) .. PC Angel
Jemma Churchill (Actor) .. Maisie Cullen
Harry Gostelow (Actor) .. Dr. Robertshaw
Nicholas Pritchard (Actor) .. Solicitor
Neville Phillips (Actor) .. Vicar
Born: July 15, 1927
Edward Clayton (Actor) .. Butcher
Born: October 09, 1940
Tim Treloar (Actor) .. Thames Valley Constable

Before / After
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