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David John Bradley (born 17 April 1942) [1] is an English actor. He is best known for his screen roles including Argus Filch in the Harry Potter film series, Walder Frey in the HBO fantasy series Game of Thrones, and Abraham Setrakian in the FX horror series The Strain.
David Bradley (born Bradley Simpson, October 2, 1953) is an American actor and martial artist, known for starring in numerous low-budget action movies beginning in the late 1980s. His best-known films are the American Ninja sequels, and the Cyborg Cop films.
David Bradley (English actor) (born 1942), English actor David Bradley (novelist) (born 1950), American author of The Chaneysville Incident Dai Bradley (born 1953), English actor, born David Bradley, credited as such in the film Kes
The extras feature a new documentary featuring Loach, Menges, producer Tony Garnett, and actor David Bradley, a 1993 episode of The South Bank Show with Ken Loach, Cathy Come Home (1966), an early television feature by Loach, with an afterword by film writer Graham Fuller, and an alternative, internationally released soundtrack, with postsync ...
The First Doctor Adventures is a Big Finish Productions audio play series based on the British television programme Doctor Who.It sees David Bradley and Stephen Noonan as the First Doctor, a role originated by William Hartnell from 1963 to 1966, as well as by Bradley on television in the episodes "The Doctor Falls", "Twice Upon a Time", and "The Power of the Doctor".
In 1999, an unknown actor named Bradley Cooper played Jake, a single and straight smoker in an episode Sex and the City; a classic Carrie Bradshaw guy-who-wasn’t-Big-of-the-week. The following ...
David is married to his wife Jessica Oyelowo, and has been since 1998—celebrating their 25th anniversary earlier this year. Jessica is a British actress, and the two met while in drama school ...
An Adventure in Space and Time is a 2013 British biographical television film, starring David Bradley, Brian Cox, Jessica Raine and Sacha Dhawan.Directed by Terry McDonough, and written by regular Doctor Who writer Mark Gatiss, it premiered on BBC Two on 21 November 2013, to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the science fiction television series.