
Biyografi
Phillip Hinton (1942-2021) was a noted actor and voice artist working in Australia (although English-born and South African-raised) who supplied the voice of Teurac in three episodes of Farscape. Around the age of 18, Hinton entered the acting profession (having had previous experience on the South African stage) and joined London's The Royal Shakespeare Company in 1963. In addition to his stage work, he performed on such British TV series as Z Cars. In 1975, Hinton moved to Australia, establishing himself as a radio actor and as part of the vocal stock company used by animation studio Air Programs International (and its successor, Burbank Films). Hinton lent his precise diction to animated adaptations of Mark Twain (Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn), Charles Dickens (A Tale of Two Cities, Great Expectations), Robert Louis Stevenson (Treasure Island and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde), and J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan, as well as Christmas specials like The Story of the First Christmas and The Little Drummer Boy. As an on-camera actor, Hinton has appeared in a variety of Australian movie and television projects, such as the comedy film Clowning Around, and US/Aussie TV co-productions, including the mini-series The Thorn Birds: The Missing Years, an episode of the 1980s Mission: Impossible revival, and TV movies such as The Three Stooges and Dynasty: The Making of a Guilty Pleasure (as ABCchairman Leonard Goldenson).
Filmler (33)

Great Expectations
1983

Irresistible Force
1993

Peter Pan
1988

A Christmas Carol
1982

Treasure Island
1987

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
1986

Wish You Were Here
2012

Sherlock Holmes and the Baskerville Curse
1983
0Don Quixote of La Mancha
1987

Heart of Fire
1997

The Thorn Birds: The Missing Years
1996

Desperate Journey: The Allison Wilcox Story
1993

A Tale of Two Cities
1984

The Last of the Mohicans
1987
0The Black Tulip
1988

No Room to Run
1977

The Black Arrow
1988

The Three Musketeers
1986
0Prince of the Nile: The Story of Moses
2001
Captives of Care
1981
ve 13 film daha...



