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Waterhouse guested on a number of shows after it was announced that he would be playing Adric. This included ''Saturday Night At The Mill'' (BBC [[Pebble Mill]], 1980) and [[Top of the Pops]] (BBC, 1980) with Dave Lee Travis. He also guested on Peter Davison's ''[[This Is Your Life]]'' (Thames TV, 1982) and [[Children in Need]] (BBC, 1985) with a range of [[Doctor Who]] actors. Waterhouse's only film appearance was in 1984's arthouse sci-fi thriller ''[[The Killing Edge]]'', directed by Lindsay Shoentoff. Waterhouse, in a minor role, played a knife man.
Waterhouse guested on a number of shows after it was announced that he would be playing Adric. This included ''Saturday Night At The Mill'' (BBC [[Pebble Mill]], 1980) and [[Top of the Pops]] (BBC, 1980) with Dave Lee Travis. He also guested on Peter Davison's ''[[This Is Your Life]]'' (Thames TV, 1982) and [[Children in Need]] (BBC, 1985) with a range of [[Doctor Who]] actors. Waterhouse's only film appearance was in 1984's arthouse sci-fi thriller ''[[The Killing Edge]]'', directed by Lindsay Shoentoff. Waterhouse, in a minor role, played a knife man.


In 1996 he made the science fiction pilot drama ''Ghostlands'' for MJTV Productions, and played the character Tom, alongside actors Sylvester McCoy and Jacqueline Pearce.
In 1996 he made the science fiction pilot drama ''Ghostlands'' for MJTV Productions, and played the character Tom, alongside actors [[Sylvester McCoy]] and [[Jacqueline Pearce]].


Waterhouse's name was used by comedians [[Matt Lucas]] and [[David Walliams]] for a character in their sketch show ''[[Little Britain]]''. Waterhouse in the programme is an unsuccessful inventor of bizarre and ridiculous new versions of things such as [[board game]]s and [[breakfast cereal]]s. ''Little Britain'' has also featured two other characters named after ''Doctor Who'' companion actors, [[Michael Craze]] and [[Mark Strickson]], while the actual programme is narrated by [[Tom Baker]].
Waterhouse's name was used by comedians [[Matt Lucas]] and [[David Walliams]] for a character in their sketch show ''[[Little Britain]]''. Waterhouse in the programme is an unsuccessful inventor of bizarre and ridiculous new versions of things such as [[board game]]s and [[breakfast cereal]]s. ''Little Britain'' has also featured two other characters named after ''Doctor Who'' companion actors, [[Michael Craze]] and [[Mark Strickson]], while the actual programme is narrated by [[Tom Baker]].

Revision as of 02:52, 28 January 2010

Matthew Waterhouse
OccupationActor
Years active1980 - Present

Matthew Waterhouse (born 19 December 1961 in Hertford) is a British actor best known for his role as Adric in the BBC science fiction television series Doctor Who.

Early life

Waterhouse is from Haywards Heath, West Sussex. The son of a solicitor, he was educated at St. Wilfrid’s Primary School, West Sussex and Shoreham Grammar School (now Shoreham College[1]). After leaving the series, he began a stage career mainly because he was influenced by his older brother, Paul, to do so.

Doctor Who

Waterhouse was a great fan of Doctor Who in his younger days. Adric was a companion of Tom Baker and Peter Davison's Doctors from 1980 to 1982. Waterhouse was the youngest male actor and youngest actor to play a companion (Sarah Sutton was the youngest female actor and 2nd youngest to play a companion), and had only appeared in one television drama prior to being appointed in the role. He played the schoolboy Briarley in the BBC2 adaptation of To Serve Them All My Days with John Duttine.

Waterhouse returned to the sphere of Doctor Who and took part in the audio commentaries for the DVD releases of Earthshock and The Visitation released in 2003 and 2004 respectively. He also provided commentary for The Keeper of Traken, released in 2007 as part of the New Beginnings box set. Though released separately, all commentaries were recorded in the same week, as noted by Waterhouse in his commentary for The Keeper of Traken. More recently, in late 2008, he made an audio commentary, jointly with Peter Davison, Janet Fielding and Sarah Sutton for the DVD releases of Four to Doomsday and Black Orchid.

Other work

Waterhouse guested on a number of shows after it was announced that he would be playing Adric. This included Saturday Night At The Mill (BBC Pebble Mill, 1980) and Top of the Pops (BBC, 1980) with Dave Lee Travis. He also guested on Peter Davison's This Is Your Life (Thames TV, 1982) and Children in Need (BBC, 1985) with a range of Doctor Who actors. Waterhouse's only film appearance was in 1984's arthouse sci-fi thriller The Killing Edge, directed by Lindsay Shoentoff. Waterhouse, in a minor role, played a knife man.

In 1996 he made the science fiction pilot drama Ghostlands for MJTV Productions, and played the character Tom, alongside actors Sylvester McCoy and Jacqueline Pearce.

Waterhouse's name was used by comedians Matt Lucas and David Walliams for a character in their sketch show Little Britain. Waterhouse in the programme is an unsuccessful inventor of bizarre and ridiculous new versions of things such as board games and breakfast cereals. Little Britain has also featured two other characters named after Doctor Who companion actors, Michael Craze and Mark Strickson, while the actual programme is narrated by Tom Baker.

Waterhouse has appeared in a wide range of theatre productions in the UK, and has appeared in the Shakespeare productions A Midsummer Night's Dream (as Puck), Twelfth Night (as Fabian), Macbeth (as Fleance) and Hamlet (as the title role). He also appeared in theatre productions of I Am David, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Brighton Beach Memoirs (West Yorkshire Playhouse), Peter Pan (directed by actor Clive Swift) and Torch Song Trilogy.

In 2006, Waterhouse self-published his debut novel, Fates, Flowers: A Comedy of New York (ThisPress).

Waterhouse also wrote and appeared in his own one-man show Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Chipping Norton and UK Tour) which was directed by actor Murray Melvin (Bilis Manger in the Doctor Who spin-off drama Torchwood in 2007).

Waterhouse has lived in Connecticut, in the United States, since July 1998.

References