‘I don’t know anything about Doctor Who’.įor some reason, they think that talking about their work on Doctor Who is going to amount to some sort of quiz on the history of Doctor Who, upon which they’ll be marked, graded as ‘failures’ and dismissed. and I still am.Īnd during all that time I spent at conventions or on video shoots, interviewing Doctor Who celebrities,īig paranoia that they always expressed - and indeed, it’s the same paranoia that all the actors who appear in Big Finish productions still express - is this. Hopefully not ‘The Imposter of Baker Street’, which was one of the working titles of Michael Caine and Ben Kingsley’s ‘Without a Clue’, but I have an intense feeling of paranoia that you might ask me something I don’t know the answer to.Īs you may know, I’ve had a long association with Doctor Who.Įven before I was the voice of the Daleks,Įven before I was the executive producer of the Big Finish audio adventures of Doctor Who,Įven before I worked for Big Finish Productions at all. On the basis that honesty is the best policy, I have to confess to you that I feel like a bit of an imposter, standing here before you tonight. This is an extract from a speech he delivered to the Sherlock Holmes Society of London's Film Evening, hosted by the esteemed Matthew J Elliott. Nicholas Briggs on his history with Holmes.
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