“If only I could play it as me!” he wails about playing Holmes. There is much mirth and colourful language as Nick gains a new regard for the actors playing the Doctor. Despite (or because of?) the huge amount of unintentional innuendo we’ve detected in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s writing, all is going swimmingly.Ī cast of thousands! Andrew Havil, Rebecca Tanwen, John Dorney and James Albrecht (who Nick met on Victory of the Daleks) as well Dan Starkey and Terry Molloy along with scriptwriter, George Mann. Actors Nick, Richard and John are joined today by Alan Cox, who played Watson in the 1987 film Young Sherlock Holmes, He gives us a wonderfully measured performance as Moriarty. “The energy was too good to miss!” he explains. Nick has abandoned his idea of treating the morning as rehearsal time. He spends every second in studio and often asks to do pick-ups unbidden! As Toby dishes up one of his haute cuisine lunches it strikes me that Richard Earl is the rock upon which the foundation of these audios is built. The recording is amazingly slick, the actors buzzing. Richard Earl (Watson) arrives followed by John Banks, Barnaby Edwards, Charlie Norfolk and Samuel Clemens. Nick Briggs, Ken Bentley, David Richardson and I meet early at the studio. Assistant Producer, Richard Dinnick reminisces about the week that was Sherlock Holmes, series two
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