Ginger haired and bubble chinned actor Dave Carter had a career that spanned three decades in small roles, often without a character name or any dialogue. Perhaps his most enduring and remembered roles were his varied appearances in Doctor Who during the 1960s and 1970s.His earliest traceable credits are in two Lindsey Shonteff directed British films in uncredited small roles starting with the James Bond cash in Licensed to Kill (1965) and followed by Run with the Wind (1966). He made his debut appearance on television in the Adam Adamant Lives episode 'Death Has a Thousand Faces' (30th June 1966) with uncredited background roles of a tourist and party goer. He also had an uncredited role as a rebel in the first episode of the newly regenerated Doctor Who incarnation Patrick Troughton’s debut story 'The Power of the Daleks' (5th November 1966). He would make several appearances in the series all the way through to the Fourth Doctor’s era.
1969 would see Carter in small roles in several highly regarded drama series including being a barman in the Softly Softly episode 'A Quantity of Gelignite' (30th January 1969), playing a guard (uncredited) in the Callan instalment 'Death of a Hunter' (16th April 1969), a prisoner in The Expert episode 'A Question of Guilt' (16th May 1969), a shop customer in the Dixon of Dock Green episode 'Notify If Found' (18th October 1969), an electrician in the first Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) episode, 'My Late, Lamented Partner', and playing a policeman in the Codename episode 'Warhead' (12th May 1970). Film wise Carter made an appearance credited as “1st Torpedo” in the Lindsey Shonteff film Clegg AKA The Bullet Machine (1970).
Later in the year Carter appeared as Dave in 'A School For Grievances' (4th June 1971), an episode of the BBC sitcom Take Three Girls and this was followed with the role of Dennis Rack in 'The Missing Witness Sensation' (27th September 1971) an episode of the detective anthology series The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes.
The Love Box (1972) was a saucy British sexploitation film which was actually a portmanteau with individual stories derived from a lonely hearts column. Carter appears in the vignette 'The Bored Housewife' as the husband of Kathy. The film also features Marianne Morris who also appeared in the Beasts episode 'Buddyboy' as an usherette. Carter’s work on television during 1972 would see him undertake his first recurring character role in an ongoing series, but first were several small roles in episodes of established programmes including a billing as Kazakov in 'Zenia', an episode of adventure series Jason King, a small role in 'Hawk Street Horror' (14th July 1972) - an episode of the BBC series The Man Outside, playing a prison officer in 'Papa Charlie' an episode of the crime drama New Scotland Yard and featuring as Mr Heyes in 'Last Bus To Newtown' (3rd January 1972), an episode of Z Cars. He also made another uncredited Doctor Who appearance as a skybase guard in the first episode of the Pertwee era storyline 'The Mutants' (8th April 1972) followed by a tiny role as a Roundhead soldier in episode of 'The Time Monster' (3rd June 1972).
His final appearance in Doctor Who was in the Tom Baker era adventure 'The Android Invasion'. Carter appears as Grierson in episode four (13th December 1975). Carter made his annual appearance in a “slap and tickle” sexploitation film as a police inspector in The Sexplorer AKA The Girl from Starship Venus (1975) a sci-fi comedy showing the exploits of a female alien in London’s Soho. For director Barry Letts, who had worked with Carter on 'The Android Invasion', he appeared as a street vendor in the first episode of The Prince and the Pauper (4th January 1976). Apart from his role in 'The Dummy' Carter also made two films during the year; The Adventures of a Taxi Driver (1976) and It Could Happen to You (1976) – an educational film about sexually transmitted diseases. Carter played a workman whilst a young actor called Bernard Hill (later to appear in Boys from the Blackstuff and the Lord of the Rings films) played a personification of syhphillis!
Post-Beasts Carter continued with roles in low budget British films – a police sergeant in Adventures of a Private Eye (1977), a thief in Adventures of a Plumber’s Mate (1978) and the role of Finger Patch in another opus by Lindsay Shonteff, Number One of the Secret Service (1977), a Bond spoof featuring Nicky Henson as the super spy Number One. On television he had a recurring supporting role as Harry Harry in the second season of Poldark which aired during 1977 and also found time to pop up in small roles in other series such as Petty Officer Grigg in 'Steel Hand From The Sea' (11th February 1978), an episode of wartime drama Enemy At The Door which also featured his 'The Dummy' co-star Bernard Horsfall in one of the main roles.
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