Kevin Whately

TV Actor

Kevin Whately was born in Hexham, England, United Kingdom on February 6th, 1951 and is the TV Actor. At the age of 73, Kevin Whately biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
February 6, 1951
Nationality
United Kingdom
Place of Birth
Hexham, England, United Kingdom
Age
73 years old
Zodiac Sign
Aquarius
Networth
$10 Million
Profession
Actor, Stage Actor, Television Actor
Kevin Whately Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 73 years old, Kevin Whately physical status not available right now. We will update Kevin Whately's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

Height
Not Available
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
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Measurements
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Kevin Whately Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Not Available
Kevin Whately Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Madelaine Newton ​(m. 1984)​
Children
2
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Kevin Whately Life

Kevin Whately (born 6 February 1951) is an English actor.

Whately is best known for his role as Robert "Robbie" Lewis in the crime drama Inspector Morse from 1987-2005, Pet's role as Neville "Nev" Hope and his role as Jack Kerruish in the British television drama Peak Practice, although he has appeared in several other roles.

Early life

Whately is from Humshaugh, Northumberland's Hexham. Mary (née Pickering) was a teacher and his father, Richard, was a Commander in the Royal Navy. Doris Phillips, his maternal grandmother, was a professional concert pianist and his great-grandfather, Richard Whately, was Anglican Archbishop of Dublin. Whately is a descendant of Thomas Whately of Nonsuch Park, a leading London merchant, English politician and writer who later moved to Virginia, where he became a long-serving supporter of the Parliamentarian cause.

Whately was educated at Barnard Castle School and went on to study accounting and finance at Newcastle Polytechnic, graduating in 1969. He then trained at the Central School of Speech and Drama, graduating in 1975 after partially supporting himself by working at The National Theatre at The Old Vic. Whately, an amateur actor at the People's Theatre in Newcastle upon Tyne during the 1970s, before going professional, was an amateur actor. Frank, his brother, is a lecturer at Kingston University in London.

Personal life

Whately lives in Woburn Sands, Milton Keynes, with his partner, actress Madelaine Newton, who appeared in the 1970s BBC drama When the Boat Comes In. In the Inspector Morse episode Masonic Mysteries (1990; series 4, episode 4) Madelaine appeared as Morse's love interest.

He likes rock music and plays the guitar; he has cited Pink Floyd and Dire Straits as two bands he has loved. He is a fan of Newcastle United on the football field but claims he prefers rugby league, and as a cricketer told Inspector Morse writer Colin Dexter that he would have played cricket for England. Sergeant Lewis had to go undercover in a cricket team to look into drug smuggling, according to Dexter's storyline.

Whately, one of 200 public figures responding to a letter sent to The Guardian in August 2014, expressed their hope that Scotland will vote to remain a member of the United Kingdom in September's independence referendum.

Source

Kevin Whately Career

Career

Before turning to professional acting, Whately began his working life as a folk singer, and still plays the guitar, performing for charity concerts. Along with other Auf Wiedersehen, Pet stars, he makes an appearance at the biennial benefit concert Sunday for Sammy in Newcastle. Before becoming an actor, he started training as an accountant.

His acting career includes several stage plays, among them an adaptation of Twelve Angry Men, and film appearances in The Return of the Soldier, The English Patient, Paranoid and Purely Belter.

Whately's television appearances include episodes of Shoestring, Geordie Racer, Angels, Juliet Bravo, Strangers, Coronation Street, Auf Wiedersehen Pet, Alas Smith and Jones, Look and Read, You Must Be The Husband, B&B, Peak Practice, Skallagrigg, The Broker's Man, Murder in Mind, Inspector Morse, 2003 Comic Relief Auf Wiedersehen Pet, Lewis, New Tricks, Who Gets the Dog?, The Children and Silent Cry. Whately provided one of the voices for the English-language version of the 1999 claymation Children's television series Hilltop Hospital. He has also done voiceovers for a WaterAid advertisement.

In 1985, Whately appeared in a 3-part Miss Marple adaptation ("A Murder Is Announced") for the BBC. His part, Detective Sergeant Fletcher, opposite John Castle as Inspector Craddock, was very similar to what became the career-defining role he took two years later, when he was cast as Detective Sergeant Lewis, the down-to-earth complement to the eponymous Inspector Morse played by John Thaw. Whately starred opposite Thaw in 32 episodes over 13 years in the hugely successful series that established him as a household name in the UK.

He reprised the role in the spin-off series Lewis, in which Lewis returns to Oxford as a full Inspector. With his new partner, the Cambridge-educated Detective Sergeant James Hathaway (Laurence Fox), Inspector Lewis solves murder mysteries while trying to rebuild his life after his wife's sudden death in a hit-and-run accident and to gain recognition from his initially sceptical new boss.

Richard Marson's book celebrating fifty years of Blue Peter comments that Whately auditioned as a presenter for the show in 1980 but lost out to Peter Duncan.

In 2010 Whately played the lead in the television film Joe Maddison's War about strained family and social relations in wartime. Directed by Patrick Collerton, it presented a view of World War II through the eyes of shipyard worker and World War I veteran Joe Maddison (Kevin Whately) who serves in the Home Guard during the Blitz.

Upon the conclusion of filming the seventh series of Lewis, at the end of 2012, both Whately and Laurence Fox announced that they would take a break of at least a year before appearing in any more episodes. ITV indicated a continuing commitment to the series and that they wished to produce additional episodes of the programme. On 4 November 2012, Whately performed in a radio drama on BBC3 called The Torchbearers, which chronicles the circumstances of several UK citizens whose lives are changed through contact with the Olympic Torch. In 2013, the Live Theatre of Newcastle upon Tyne produced a series of performances of the unique, acclaimed one-person play, White Rabbit, Red Rabbit, which is enacted as a cold reading with no sets or costumes by a different performer each night. Whately was the actor for the sold-out performance of 10 March 2013. Following the end of the ninth and final series of Lewis, Whately announced his retirement from acting. He had played the character Lewis over a span of 28 years.

Whately was the patron of the Central School of Speech and Drama Full House Theatre Company for 2011.

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The best 100 TV shows ever created have been rediscovered (and no surprise)... But does YOUR favorite appear on the list?

www.dailymail.co.uk, November 3, 2023
The Daily Mail's Weekend magazine has reached yet another magnificent milestone - this month we turn 30! We asked you to share our top ten TV shows so we could compile our definitive list of the 100 Greatest TV Shows voted for by you.

JOHN MAIR writes a touching farewell to Morse's grumpy, boozy, and bleak

www.dailymail.co.uk, February 14, 2023
JOHN MAIR: I may not have been surprised. The city of dreaming spires, Jericho, was the scene of the very first murder investigated by TV's Inspector Morse, and ever since that first episode was broadcast back in 1987, the boundary between reality and fiction has blurred. My house was once home to Florence Jeffreys, an unfortunate woman beaten to death by her son-in-law in 1993, shortly after her husband and daughter were murdered in another part of Oxford.