Tardis

New to Doctor Who or returning after a break? Check out our guides designed to help you find your way!

READ MORE

Tardis
Tardis
m (Bot: Replacing category Time Lord Victorious voice actors with Big Finish Time Lord Victorious voice actors)
Line 859: Line 859:
 
{{NameSort}}
 
{{NameSort}}
   
 
[[fr:Nicholas Briggs]]
 
[[ru:Николас Бриггс]]
 
 
[[Category:Doctor Who semi-regular cast]]
 
[[Category:Doctor Who semi-regular cast]]
 
[[Category:Torchwood guest actors]]
 
[[Category:Torchwood guest actors]]
Line 970: Line 967:
 
[[Category:Auton Trilogy actors]]
 
[[Category:Auton Trilogy actors]]
 
[[Category:Auton Trilogy writers]]
 
[[Category:Auton Trilogy writers]]
[[Category:Time Lord Victorious voice actors]]
+
[[Category:Big Finish Time Lord Victorious voice actors]]
 
[[Category:BFP hosts]]
 
[[Category:BFP hosts]]
  +
 
[[fr:Nicholas Briggs]]
 
[[ru:Николас Бриггс]]

Revision as of 17:10, 11 November 2020

RealWorld

Nicholas Briggs (born 29 September 1961[1]) sometimes credited under the pseudonyms David Sax or Arthur Wallis, wrote, directed and performed in various media. Most of all, he participated in many ways in the production of Big Finish audio stories as well as writing and performing in licenced spin-off videos for BBV Productions. In the revived series of Doctor Who as well as Big Finish Doctor Who, he voiced the Daleks, Cybermen, Ice Warriors, Judoon, Zygons, and a variety of one-time aliens.

Briggs has the distinction of being the only actor to have regular roles in the revived TV series for the BBC and Big Finish Productions (guest stars from the revival have appeared in the audios, but none of the other regulars appear in both, including Elisabeth Sladen who ended her Big Finish Sarah Jane Smith series when she began reprising the role on TV).

He also took part in The Weakest Link: Doctor Who Special but was voted out early on.

Career

1980s and 1990s

Briggs was one of several actors/writers/directors (Mark Gatiss and Gary Russell among them) who cut their teeth on fan-made Doctor Who-related/inspired productions and who later got to work on the official series. As well as under his own name, Briggs has also written for video and audio under the pen-names Arthur Wallis and Martin Peterson.

Prior to his work on the revived TV series, Briggs played an active role in Doctor Who fandom since the 1980s. He portrayed a future incarnation of the Doctor in a series of unofficial audio dramas by Audio Visuals, the forerunner of Big Finish Productions. He also worked with Reeltime Pictures, hosting Myth Makers, a long-running series of made-for-video interview documentaries featuring cast and crew of Doctor Who. He also played the title role in Myth Runner, a parody of Blade Runner built around bloopers from the Myth Makers series.

His writing included productions such as Auton 2: Sentinel for BBV Productions and two entries in The Stranger series, one of which, In Memory Alone, co-starred him with Colin Baker and Nicola Bryant. He also wrote independent science fiction-dramas such as The Airzone Solution, also produced by BBV Productions which starred all of the actors who had played the Doctor, with the exception of Tom Baker.

2000s

Briggs is the executive producer of the Big Finish audio dramas line. Among his notable works for Big Finish has been writing and directing the Dalek Empire series of audio dramas.

When Russell T Davies brought Doctor Who back to television in 2005, he chose Nicholas Briggs to voice the Daleks, as he was a subscriber of the Big Finish range, and heard Briggs doing the Dalek voices for The Genocide Machine and other Big Finish productions.

Since then, Briggs has been the "go to guy" for voices for various alien races. Besides the Daleks and Cybermen, Briggs has also given voice to the Nestene Consciousness and the Judoon, also providing the voice of the latter for an episode of The Sarah Jane Adventures.

In 2009, Briggs made his on-screen debut in a BBC Doctor Who franchise production when he appeared as Rick Yates in Torchwood Children of Earth: Day Four, also his first work for the Torchwood spinoff.

2010s

As well as reprising his role as the voice of the Cybermen and Daleks for series 5, his voice can also be heard as the narrator of the National Museum video Amy Pond watches in The Big Bang.

In the 2010 stage play The Monsters Are Coming!, Briggs portrayed Winston Churchill, as well as voicing the Daleks, Cybermen and Judoon.

In 2011, Briggs became the sole host of the BBC Radio 4 Extra radio anthology series 7th Dimension, which has broadcast a number of Doctor Who audio dramas over the past few years.[1] In 2013, he became part of a rotating team of presenters for the series. As of 2020, Briggs is still a presenter of 7th Dimension.[2]

In 2013, he played Peter Hawkins in the docu-drama An Adventure in Space and Time; Hawkins, like Briggs, provided Dalek voices for Doctor Who. The film was written by his longtime colleague, Mark Gatiss.

Briggs also contributed to the charity reference book Behind the Sofa: Celebrity Memories of Doctor Who.

He also voiced REMUS, a computer AI, in the pilot minisode for Gerry Anderson's Firestorm.

In 2017, archive audio of Nicholas Briggs exclaiming "Exterminate!", originally recorded for The Parting of the Ways, was used to represent the Daleks in The Lego Batman Movie.

2020s

In 2020, Briggs provided the voices for the Judoon, especially Judoon Captain Pol-Kon-Don, in the series 12 episode Fugitive of the Judoon.

Later, he also provided the voice for Ashad, the Lone Cyberman in The Haunting of Villa Diodati, though he went uncredited for this piece of work.[2]

In the DWU

Acting credits

Television

Doctor Who

The Sarah Jane Adventures

Torchwood

Other

Video

BBV Productions

Reeltime Pictures

Tardisodes

Webcasts

Audio

Big Finish Main Range

Special releases

Lost Stories

Fourth Doctor Adventures

Eighth Doctor Adventures

The Further Adventures of Lucie Miller

Dark Eyes

The Eighth Doctor: The Time War

Time Lord Victorious

The War Doctor

The Tenth Doctor Adventures

Out of Time

Classic Doctors, New Monsters

Novel Adaptations

The Stageplays

The Early Adventures

The First Doctor Adventures

Third Doctor Adventures

Destiny of the Doctor

Companion Chronicles

Short Trips

Dalek Empire

Cyberman

I, Davros

Bernice Summerfield

The New Adventures of Bernice Summerfield

Sarah Jane Smith

Unbound

Gallifrey

The War Master

Susan's War

Charlotte Pollard

The Churchill Years

The New Counter-Measures

UNIT: The New Series

Kaldor City

New Series Adventures

Novelisation readings

Past Doctor Adventures

Time Lord Fairy Tales

Puffin eshort

Twelve Angels Weeping

BBV Audio

Video games

Adventure Games

Browser games

Doctor Who Infinity

Other

Production credits

Video

BBV Productions

Prose

Novels

Short Trips

Doctor Who Storybook

Comics

Doctor Who Magazine

Audio

Doctor Who main range

Special releases

The Lost Stories

Fourth Doctor Adventures

Novel Adaptations

The Comic Strip Adaptations

Eighth Doctor Adventures

The Further Adventures of Lucie Miller

Dark Eyes

Doom Coalition

The War Doctor

Tenth Doctor Adventures

Out of Time

Third Doctor Adventures

The First Doctor Adventures

The Early Adventures

Companion Chronicles

Short Trips

Unbound

Dalek Empire

Cyberman

I, Davros

The War Master

Bernice Summerfield

The Stageplays

Counter-Measures

The New Counter-Measures

Charlotte Pollard

BBV

BBC Radio

External links

Footnotes