as Biggles, is the central character
in the children's adventure book
series from former Great War
pilot, Captain WE Johns.
The classic war stories debuted
in 1932, and spanned ninety-
eight volumes until the author's
death in 1968. The works were
first dramatised by Granada TV in
in 1932, and spanned ninety-
eight volumes until the author's
death in 1968. The works were
first dramatised by Granada TV in
1960, then adapted for this prod-
uction in 1986. The film was later released in America as Biggles: Adventures in Time. Shown on Talking Pictures TV today, the story featured
Neil Dickson as the eponymous pilot (reprised a year later for the Pet Shop
Boys' It Couldn't Happen Here), Peter Cushing, Alex Hyde White, and
these twenty-three Doctor Who cast and crew connections:
- Alibe Parsons (Maxine) was Matroni Kani in Mindwarp, then voiced Nora Edgecastle for The Lost Resort (2021)
- Marcus Gilbert (Von Stalhein) was Ancelyn in Battlefield
- James Saxon [born William Smyth] (Bertie) was Oscar Botcherby in The Two Doctors
- Forbes Collins (Soldier) and stuntman Gareth Milne both appeared in Vengeance on Varos, as the Chief Officer and Mortuary Attendant - Milne was also George Cranleigh in Black Orchid, and doubled for Peter Davison on Warriors of the Deep
- Roy Boyd and Sean Barry Weske (German NCOs) were Driscoll in (part 2 of) The Hand of Fear, and Paramilitary in Silver Nemesis
- Christopher [James Alan] Robbie (Clerk) was the Karkus in The Mind Robber, and the Cyberleader in Revenge of the Cybermen
- Pam St Clements (Mother Superior) reprised her EastEnders role of Pat Butcher for Dimensions in Time
- David Cann (Officer) was Narrator of Hello Sailor!, then voiced Albert for Jenny 3 (2024)
- stuntmen Ken Barker, Jim Dowdall, Paul Heasman, Nick Hobbs, Billy Horrigan, Terry Walsh, Dinny Powell, Mark McBride, Rocky Taylor and Chris Webb all worked on the classic series
- three-times Oscar winning costume designer James Acheson also worked on twenty-nine episodes of the classic run (from The Mutants to The Deadly Assassin) and was responsible for designing the Fourth Doctor's first outfit
- Ernest Vincze was also cinematographer on thirty-eight episodes (from Rose to The Waters of Mars)
- Richard Trevor was film editor on Underworld (4) too
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