Bio
Tom Baker is a British actor best known as the fourth incarnation of Dr. Who, and for his role as Narrator on the television comedy Little Britain.
Baker was born in Liverpool, England. Tom, along with his younger sister Lulu and younger brother John, was raised in a poor Irish Catholic community by his mother Mary Jane Baker, a housecleaner and barmaid, who was a devout Catholic, and his father John Stewart Baker, a Jewish sailor, who was rarely at home.
At age 15, Baker left school to become a monk with the Brothers of Ploermel on the island of Jersey. Six years later, he abandoned the monastic life and performed his National Service in the Royal Army Medical Corps., where he became interested in acting.
Baker then served on the Queen Mary for seven months as a sailor in the Merchant Navy before attending Rose Bruford College of Speech and Drama in Kent, England, on scholarship.
Baker acted in repertory theatres around Britain until the late 1960s when he joined up with the National Theatre, where he performed with such respected actors as Maggie Smith, Anthony Hopkins, and Laurence Olivier, who helped him get his first prominent film role as Rasputin in Nicholas and Alexandra (1971).
His performance in this film earned him two Golden Globe Award nominations, one for best actor in a supporting role and another for best new star of the year.
A couple of years earlier, Baker had made his theatrical film debut in The Winter's Tale (1968).
Despite appearances in a spate of films, including Pier Paolo Pasolini's Racconti di Canterbury, I (1972), The Mutations (1973), The Vault of Horror (1973), and The Golden Voyage of Sinbad (1974), Baker was working as a labourer at a building site when he landed the title role in the popular, long-running British television series Doctor Who (1963), a role that brought him international fame and popularity.
After his seven-year stint as Dr. Who (from 1974 to 1981), Baker returned to theatre and continued to make regular television and film appearances, playing Sherlock Holmes in The Hound of the Baskervilles (1982), Puddleglum in The Chronicles of Narnia story Silver Chair (1990), Hallvarth, Clan Leader of the Hunter Elves, in Dungeons & Dragons (2000) and Professor Hought in the ITV series Medics.
He appeared in 12 episodes of Monarch Of The Glen in 2004/5, which he followed up with his spell as Narrator in Little Britain.
Throughout his career, Baker's acting style has been to portray his characters with a larger-than-life air.