Doc Martin: Facta Non Verba


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About this Broadcast
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Facta Non Verba

Season 7, Episode 7

Dr Timoney ponders Martin and Louisa's compatibility; the new art teacher has unconventional ideas; Penhale is offered a transfer; and Bert becomes a handyman.

repeat 2015 English Stereo
Comedy-drama Drama

Cast & Crew
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Martin Clunes (Actor) .. Dr. Martin Ellingham
Caroline Catz (Actor) .. Louisa Glasson
Ian McNeice (Actor) .. Bert Large
Joe Absolom (Actor) .. Al Large
Katherine Parkinson (Actor) .. Pauline Lamb
John Márquez (Actor) .. PC Penhale
Lia Williams (Actor) .. Edith Montgomery
Eileen Atkins (Actor) .. Ruth Ellingham
Emily Bevan (Actor) .. Dr. Rachel Timoney
Sigourney Weaver (Actor) .. Tourist
Kelly Adams (Actor) .. Erica Holbrooke
Jessica Ransom (Actor) .. Morwenna Newcross
Selina Cadell (Actor) .. Mrs. Tishell
Nicholas Lumley (Actor) .. Jim Winton
Jason Squibb (Actor) .. Man in Street
Poppy Roe (Actor) .. Mother
Colin Matthews (Actor) .. Postman

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Martin Clunes (Actor) .. Dr. Martin Ellingham
Born: November 28, 1961
Birthplace: Wimbledon, London, England
Trivia: Attended kindergarten with Peter Morgan, the British film writer and playwright. Had his first television role at 22. Featured in art duo Gilbert and George's photographic work The World. Enjoys driving camper-vans. Is close friends with Harry Enfield. Was awarded an honorary doctorate from Bournemouth University in 2007. Elected president of the British Horse Society in June 2011. Became patron of Animal Care in Egypt in 2011. Appointed an OBE (Officer of the Order of the British Empire) by Queen Elizabeth II in her 2015 Birthday Honours. Owns a farm where cart horses are bred. Supports Weldmar Hospicecare Trust in Dorset and The Dog Resue Federation. Has been involved with the Comic Relief charity which funds Survival International and African Initiatives.
Caroline Catz (Actor) .. Louisa Glasson
Born: October 19, 1970
Birthplace: Manchester, England
Trivia: After joining Equity, the trade union for actors in the United Kingdom, she found that somone had the same name as her and so changed to Caroline Catz. Decided on the name Catz after seeing a doodle of a cat. Is allergic to cats. Used to sing in a band called Monoland and a folk band called Sapphire. Appeared in Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds' music video for More News From Nowhere.
Ian McNeice (Actor) .. Bert Large
Born: October 02, 1950
Birthplace: Basingstoke, Hampshire, England
Trivia: A member of the Royal Shakespeare Company, British actor Ian McNeice has found additional success playing supporting roles in feature films and on television. He made his first film appearances in 1983, and has subsequently specialized in comedies, ranging from the gentle The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill and Came Down a Mountain (1995) to the riotous Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls (1995) to the surreal A Life Less Ordinary (1997). McNeice's television credits include performances in several PBS productions, including Edge of Darkness and Nicholas Nickelby.
Joe Absolom (Actor) .. Al Large
Born: December 16, 1978
Birthplace: Reading, Berkshire, England
Trivia: Appeared in Sun-Pat peanut butter adverts as a child. Made his acting debut in Antonia and Jane in 1991. Won the Best Actor Award at the British Soap Awards for his role as Matthew Rose on Eastenders in 2000. Appeared in the celebrity version of Total Wipeout in 2010 and won £10,000 for charity. Is a patron for the Hill Park Autistic Trust.
Katherine Parkinson (Actor) .. Pauline Lamb
Born: March 09, 1978
Birthplace: Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England
Trivia: Met IT Crowd co-star Chris O'Dowd while they were attending the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art. Left the LAMDA to star in the play The Age Of Consent at the Bush Theatre in London in 2002. Won the British Comedy Best TV Actress Award in 2009 for her role in The IT Crowd. Received a second British Comedy Best TV Actress Award and a BAFTA TV Award in 2014 for her role in The IT Crowd. Was nominated for an Olivier Award in the Best Actress category for her role in Home, I'm Darling in 2019. In 2019, her debut work as a playwright Sitting had its London premiere, following a month-long run at the Edinburgh Fringe.
John Márquez (Actor) .. PC Penhale
Born: June 20, 1970
Birthplace: Coventry, England
Trivia: In 1999, performed in the Tennessee Williams play 'Baby Doll' at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre. Between 2007 and 2019, starred as PC Joe Penhale in ITV Drama Doc Martin. In 2012, performed as part of the Royal Shakespeare Company production of The Taming of the Shrew. Starred as Ray Wilson in BBC drama In the Club between 2014 and 2016. Performs as part of comedy duo The Brothers Marquez, alongside his real-life brother Martin.
Lia Williams (Actor) .. Edith Montgomery
Born: November 26, 1964
Birthplace: Birkenhead, England
Trivia: Has a history with Dublin's The Gate Theatre; played Ruth in The Homecoming (2001), Alma in The Eccentricities of a Nightingale (2013) and Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire. In 2009, was about to sign a theatre contract when the part of Edith in Doc Martin came up; took an instant liking to Martin Clunes and the character and signed with Doc Martin instead. While appearing in Harold Pinter's Old Times in London, alternated the two female roles with Kristin Scott Thomas during the play's run in 2013.
Eileen Atkins (Actor) .. Ruth Ellingham
Born: June 16, 1934
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia: One of England's most renowned stage actresses, Eileen Atkins has been a staple of both the Royal Shakespeare Company and London's West End since the 1960s. She has also popped up occasionally on film and television, and she has made numerous contributions to both mediums as a scriptwriter, most notably for the acclaimed series Upstairs Downstairs and House of Eliott and the well-received screen adaptation of Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway.A product of London's East End, where she was born in the Clapton Salvation Army Home on June 16, 1934, Atkins grew up in a council home as the third child of a homemaker and a gas meter reader. She began performing as a tap dancer in working men's clubs at the age of seven, and she had done professional pantomime by the time she was 13. Under the encouragement of a school instructor -- who gave Atkins voice lessons to remove her Cockney accent and introduced her to Shakespeare -- she went on to attend the Guildhall School of Drama, where she did a teaching course and took drama classes.Atkins struggled to begin her professional career, finding it difficult to get stage roles of any substance, to say nothing of stage roles, period. She got her first break when she moved to Stratford with her then-husband, Julian Glover, who had found work with the RSC. Atkins got her start in Stratford as an usherette, and she gradually moved her way up until she was allowed into the company. She first performed on the Stratford stage as Audrey in As You Like It, chosen to fill in for the understudy of Dame Peggy Ashcroft after both had taken ill. Atkins spent several years with the RSC, performing in both classical and contemporary plays alongside the likes of Lawrence Olivier and Alec Guinness. On the London stage, she portrayed numerous characters, earning a Best Supporting Actress Olivier Award for her performance in Peter Hall's production of The Winter's Tale. Her one-woman show, A Room of One's Own, was an international success, earning Atkins a Drama Desk Award for Best Solo Performance and a special Citation from the New York Drama Critics Circle for her portrayal of Virginia Woolf.Although the international stage has been the centerpoint of Atkins' career, she has made many contributions to film and television. Aside from her work on the aforementioned Upstairs, Downstairs, The House of Elliot, and Mrs. Dalloway (the last of which earned her the Evening Standard British Film Best Screenplay award), she has appeared in such films as Let Him Have It (1991), Jack and Sarah (1995), and John Schlesinger's Cold Comfort Farm (1995). Among the endless honors Atkins holds is a Commander of the British Empire. Atkin would appear in several notable projects over the coming years, including Gosford Park, The Hours, Cold Mountain, and TV series like Doc Martin and Psychoville.
Emily Bevan (Actor) .. Dr. Rachel Timoney
Born: January 01, 1982
Birthplace: Shrewsbury, England
Trivia: Is the youngest of four children. Grew up in a boy's boarding school, where her father was headmaster. Her mother is a midwife. Made her film debut in 2007's St.Trinians. Got her breakthrough in the BAFTA-winning series In the Flesh. Is fluent in French and Italian. Appears in films, on TV in series such as Doc Martin (2015) and Grantchester (2017); in theatre plays; and is an audio-book narrator. Is an experienced voice artist, said to have a warm and clear delivery. Is a talented mimic, able to assume a wide range of accents, from American to Australian.
Sigourney Weaver (Actor) .. Tourist
Born: October 08, 1949
Birthplace: New York City, New York, United States
Trivia: Though she is a classically trained dramatic actress and has played a variety of roles, Sigourney Weaver is still best known for her portrayal of the steel-jawed, alien-butt-kicking space crusader Ellen Ripley from the four Alien movies. The formidably beautiful, 5'11'' actress was born Susan Weaver to NBC president Pat Weaver and actress Elizabeth Inglis. Her father had a passion for Roman history and originally wanted to name her Flavia, but after reading F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby at the age of 14, Weaver renamed herself Sigourney, after one of the book's minor characters. After being schooled in her native New York City, Weaver attended Stanford University and then obtained her master's at the Yale School of Drama where, along with classmate Meryl Streep, she appeared in classical Greek plays. After earning her degree, Weaver was only able to find work in experimental plays produced well away from Broadway, as more conventional producers found her too tall to perform in mainstream works. After getting her first real break in the soap opera Somerset (1970-1976), she made her film debut with a bit part in Woody Allen's Annie Hall in 1977. Weaver had her first major role in Madman which was released just prior to Alien in 1979. Though the role of Ripley was originally designed for Veronica Cartwright (who ultimately played the doomed Lambert), scouts for director Ridley Scott saw Weaver working off-Broadway and felt she would be perfect for the part. The actress' take on the character was laced with a subtlety that made her a new kind of female action hero: Intelligent, resourceful, and unconsciously sexy, Weaver's Ripley was a woman with the guts to master her fear in order to take on a terrifying unknown enemy. Alien proved to be one of the year's biggest hits and put Weaver on Hollywood's A-list, though she would not reprise her character for another seven years. In between, she worked to prove her versatility, playing solid dramatic roles in Eyewitness (1981) and The Year of Living Dangerously (1982), while letting a more playful side show as a cellist who channels a fearsome demon in Ghostbusters (1984). In 1986, Aliens burst into the theater, even gorier and more rip-roaring than its predecessor. This time, Weaver focused more on the maternal side of her character, which only served to make her tougher than ever. Her unforgettable performance was honored with a Best Actress Oscar nomination, and was followed up by Weaver's similarly haunting portrayal of doomed naturalist/animal rights activist Diane Fossey in Gorillas in the Mist (1988). The role won Weaver her second Best Actress Oscar nomination, and that same year, she received yet another Oscar nomination -- this time for Best Supporting Actress -- for her deliciously poisonous portrayal of Melanie Griffith's boss in Working Girl. After 1992's Alien 3, Weaver had her next big hit playing President Kevin Kline's lonely wife in the bittersweet romantic comedy Dave (1993). She then gave a gripping performance as a rape/torture victim who faces down the man who may or may not have been her tormentor in Roman Polanski's moody thriller Death and the Maiden (1994). During the latter half of the decade, Weaver appeared in Alien Resurrection -- perhaps the most poorly received installment of the series -- but increasingly surfaced in offbeat roles such as the coolly fragile Janey in Ang Lee's The Ice Storm and the psychotic, wicked Queen in the adult-oriented HBO production The Grimm Brothers' Snow White (both 1997). In 1999, she starred in the sci-fi spoof Galaxy Quest, making fun of her image as a sci-fi goddess while continuing to prove her remarkable versatility.Weaver's first high-profile project of the new millenium saw her swindling Ray Liotta and Gene Hackman as a sexy con-woman teamed up with Jennifer Love Hewitt. Already into her fifties, Weaver proved she still possessed plenty of sex-appeal even alongside a substantially younger starlet like Hewitt. She played up her sultry side some more in the well-received 2002 indie-comedy Tadpole, but changed gears a bit in 2003, playing a villain in the family sleeper hit Holes.In 2004, Weaver could be seen as part of the ensemble cast in M. Night Shyamalan's summer thriller The Village. She played a tough-as-nails network executive in the satire The TV Set, and provided the voice of the ship's computer in WALL-E. In 2008 she appeared in projects as diverse as Baby Mama and Be Kind Rewind. She had a major role in the box-office blockbuster Avatar - teaming up with director James Cameron again. Her very busy 2011 included the role of a government official in the sci-fi comedy Paul, the girlfriend of a sheltered insurance salesman in Cedar Rapids, and a part in Oren Moverman's cop drama Rampart.Weaver has been married to stage director Jim Simpson since 1984. When not appearing in films, she continues to be active in theater.
Kelly Adams (Actor) .. Erica Holbrooke
Jessica Ransom (Actor) .. Morwenna Newcross
Selina Cadell (Actor) .. Mrs. Tishell
Born: June 21, 1953
Nicholas Lumley (Actor) .. Jim Winton
Jason Squibb (Actor) .. Man in Street
Poppy Roe (Actor) .. Mother
Colin Matthews (Actor) .. Postman
Stephanie Cole (Actor)
Born: October 05, 1941
Birthplace: Solihull, Warwickshire, England
Trivia: Made her stage debut in Noel Coward's Blithe Spirit, at the age of 17. Won the 1992 Best TV Actress British Comedy Award for her role in Waiting for God. Reprised her debut role in Noel Coward's Blithe Spirit in 2004, at the age of 63. Made an OBE in 2005, for services to Drama, Elderly People and to Mental Health Charities. Won the 2012 Best Comedy Performance British Soap Award for her role in Coronation Street. Is an ambassador for medical charity Overseas Plastic Surgery Appeal.

Before / After
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