Michael Kilgarriff
- Date of Birth: 1937-06-16
- Place of Birth: Brighton, East Sussex, England, UK
Biography
Michael Kilgarriff (born 16 June 1937)is a British actor, author and pianist from Brighton. As an actor, he is well known for his rich voice and height. His film and television roles include The Dark ... Michael Kilgarriff (born 16 June 1937)is a British actor, author and pianist from Brighton. As an actor, he is well known for his rich voice and height. His film and television roles include The Dark Crystal (1982) as the General, and the Doctor Who serials The Tomb of the Cybermen (1967), Robot (1974–75) and Attack of the Cybermen (1985). At six feet five inches (1.96 m) tall, he is sought for certain roles, such as the Cyber Controller in Doctor Who, a role he played in 1967 and 1985. He appeared in the same series as an Ogron (1973) and as the eponymous K1 Robot in the story Robot (1974–75). He returned to play the K1 robot in the Big Finish Productions Bernice Summerfield audio adventure The Relics of Jegg-Sau. He did voice work for The Twelve Tasks of Asterix as Obelix, the Jim Henson movie The Dark Crystal (1982) as SkekUng, the Garthim master (Named "The General" in the movie), was film director Joe Steiner in the UFO episode "Conflict", and played the part of the Green King in the BBC Television serial The Moon Stallion (1978). In 1979, he provided voices for several characters in the cult television adventure series "Monkey" when it was dubbed into English. These were invariably gruff, often villainous characters, including warlords and demons.

The Dark Crystal
Adventure, Family, Fantasy • 1982 December

Tipping the Velvet
Drama • 2002 December

Doctor Who: Mawdryn Undead
Drama, Action, Adventure, Science Fiction, TV Movie • 1983 February

Doctor Who: Robot
Science Fiction, Adventure, Drama • 1975 January

Filth: The Mary Whitehouse Story
Drama, TV Movie • 2008 May

Doctor Who: Attack of the Cybermen
Drama, Action, Adventure, Science Fiction, TV Movie • 1985 January

Camelot
Adventure, Music, Romance • 1967 October

The Upchat Line
Comedy • 1977 September

Oscar's Orchestra
• 1995 September

We Joined the Navy
Comedy • 1963 May