Gary Warren (born 5 July 1954) is an English former child actor, best remembered for his role as Peter in the 1970 film The Railway Children.
Retired actor Gary Warren was born in Neasden, London. He played Cedric Collingford ("Owl Face") in series 2 of the 1970 television series Catweazle, appearing as the main 20th century contact of Catweazle.[1] He later played the role of Taplow in the British sitcom Whack-O!, as well as starring as Alexander in his own TV sitcom Alexander the Greatest (1971). In the West End, he played the nephew of Mame in the musical Mame starring Ginger Rogers. He played Lambert Simnel in the 1972 BBC series The Shadow of the Tower.[2]
Warren was interviewed by Danny Baker on Radio London twice in 2010. Warren appeared on the Word In Your Attic YouTube show hosted by David Hepworth and Mark Ellen in 2020.[citation needed]
He has written a memoir of his acting years and his passion for music entitled If My Memoir Serves Me Well. It is available on Kindle and the audiobook is available on Audible. He has also written a novel, 1961 Greenwich Village; a Fable, also available on Kindle and in audiobook format on Audible. Warren presents a weekly show on Fridays on Kpiss Radio.[3] He is a supporter of Queens Park Rangers.[citation needed]
Filmography
edit- 1966 Disney Wonderland (TV series)
- 1967 Z-Cars (TV series)
- 1967 The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists (TV movie)
- 1970 The Railway Children
- 1970–1971 Catweazle (TV series)
- 1972 The Shadow of the Tower (TV series)
- 1972 Whack-O! (TV series)
- 1971–1972 Alexander the Greatest (Title Role)
Works
edit- Gary, Warren (2 June 2024). If My Memoir Serves Me Well: A Memoir From The Man Who Played The Boy In The Railway Children. ASIN B0D52BM3F4.
- Gary, Warren (23 May 2024). 1961 Greenwich Village; a Fable. ASIN B0D5WS19KW.
References
edit- ^ Ruth Inglis (2003). The Window in the Corner: A Half-century of Children's Television. P. Owen. p. 83. ISBN 978-0-7206-1105-2.
- ^ Michael Klossner (2002). The Europe of 1500-1815 on Film and Television: A Worldwide Filmography of Over 2550 Works, 1895 Through 2000. McFarland & Company. p. 360. ISBN 978-0-7864-1223-5.
- ^ https://kpiss.fm/show/awoodstockbrit
External links
edit- Gary Warren at IMDb