Peter McNamara

Acting

Peter McNamara

Overview

Known for
Acting
Gender
Other

Peter McNamara

Known For

Break Clause
1h 24m
DOLBY
Movie 2019

Break Clause

A trio of con-artists rip off some gangsters and lie...

Pissed on the Job
50min
DOLBY
Movie 2004

Pissed on the Job

Experimental dramadoc about high-functioning alcoholics and problem drinking in the...

The Gathering
1h 32m
DOLBY
Movie 2003

The Gathering

Itinerant traveler Cassie Grant comes out of a car accident...

Tube Tales
1h 24m
DOLBY
Movie 1999

Tube Tales

Nine short stories based on the true experiences of London...

Shooting Fish
1h 49m
DOLBY
Movie 1997

Shooting Fish

Two con artists hire an unwitting medical-school student as a...

Funny Bones
2h 8m
DOLBY
Movie 1995

Funny Bones

Tommy Fawkes wants to be a successful comedian. After his...

StreamPrime Logo
1 Episode
DOLBY
TV Show 1993

Oasis

Oasis was a short lived CITV drama series which was...

Fool's Gold: The Story Of The Brink's Mat Robbery
1h 33m
DOLBY
Movie 1992

Fool's Gold: The Story Of The Brink's Mat Robbery

A dramatized speculation of what happened in November 1983 when...

Smack and Thistle
1h 30m
DOLBY
Movie 1991

Smack and Thistle

With a drug-addled lifestyle and a prison sentence firmly behind...

Arrivederci Millwall
50min
DOLBY
Movie 1990

Arrivederci Millwall

A group of Millwall supporting hooligans travels to Spain for...

Biography

Peter McNamara, born in London and attended the National Youth Theatre and trained at LAMDA. Possibly best known as Ralph Passmore, the nemesis of Tucker Jenkin's in Tucker's Luck (1983), the spin off series of Phil Redmond's Grange Hill (1978). Peter was known for his fantastic singing voice in many theatre musical productions including South Pacific. He started out his long list of jobs as a supporting artist, working on such films as Quadrophenia (1979), The Shining (1980), Chariots of Fire (1981) and Star Wars (1977), before being cast in Grange Hill (1978). He worked frequently with Christopher Menaul who cast him as a Chelsea skinhead Rory in The Treatment (1984) and previously Tucker's Luck (1983). He became a well respected character actor in a career that eventually spanned four decades, he was often called upon to play the menacing hard-man and when Denzel Washington came to London to work on For Queen & Country (1988), Peter was asked to show him around and guide him on the Cockney accent. In 1990, Peter starred as Kenno in the controversial football hooligan film, Arrivederci Millwall (1990), one of the first films to tackle that subject. He went onto play Jimmy Cadogan in the children's TV series; Oasis (1993) in 1993 and a spot on 99-1 (1994) which reunited him with Arrivederci Millwall (1990) director Charles McDougall. Despite his hard-man roles Peter often played in a lot of comedy TV shows including Desmond's (1989) and Harry Enfield and Chums (1994). In 1995, he appeared in Funny Bones (1995) with Lee Evans, Jerry Lewis, Oliver Platt and Oliver Reed. Then in 1996 he was seen in the series No Bananas (1996) as DS Howard. He was in both the film and TV series of London's Burning (1988) and played recurring roles in numerous other British TV shows including Thief Takers (1995), The Bill (1984), Trial & Retribution (1997), Silent Witness (1996) and Casualty (1986). In 2002, he appeared as Frederick Michael Argyle in The Gathering (2002) where he acted alongside Christina Ricci, Ioan Gruffudd and Stephen Dillane. In 2004, he appeared in an extraordinary experimental drama documentary called Pissed on the Job (2004), Peter played a heavy drinker who was also a teacher, the film which can be seen online is a great example of his work, his subtle performance is extremely realistic in this damning piece about the dangers of alcohol. He showed up as a vampire drug dealer in the film Dead Cert (2010) in 2010 and had been working on some low budget films in the latter years of his career that sadly never got released due to budget and various technical issues. His last credit Dinklebrain (2012) was not the last film he made, rumour has it that he was very much actively making some independent short films, which hopefully will emerge in the near future. Sadly, Peter McNamara died in May 2018 at the age of 57 and he was cremated at Enfield Crematorium on 14th June 2018, a week after what would have been his 58th birthday. - IMDb Mini Biography By: Shona M