Maurice Colbourne (24 September 1939 – 4 August 1989) was a British stage and television actor who specialised in playing villains and hard men until 1985, when he took the key role of Tom Howard in the BBC Television serial, Howards' Way. Colbourne was born Roger Middleton but took his stage name after reading about the death of actor Maurice Colbourne who shared the same birthday as he did. Colbourne's biggest success in the 1970s was as the lead in the crime drama series Gangsters. In the 80s he starred in Johnny Jarvis and the acclaimed adaptation of John Wyndham's classic sci-fi novel, The Day of the Triffids. Staying with sci-fi, he had a recurring guest role in Doctor Who as the mercenary Lytton, playing opposite the fifth and sixth doctors (Peter Davison and Colin Baker) in adventures featuring the timelords deadliest foes; the Daleks and the Cybermen. But it was the leading role in Howards' Way that he will perhaps best be remembered for. He played Tom Howard until 1989, when he died suddenly aged 49 from a heart attack. The show ended a year later.
Rating Notman
The Littlest Horse Thieves
(Luke Armstrong)
Times For
(man)
Gangsters
(John Kline)
The Duellists
(Tall Second)
Venom
(Sampson)
Hawk the Slayer
(Axe Man 1)
Hitler's SS : Portrait In Evil
(SS Officer)
Bloodline
(Jon Swinton)
Doctor Who: Resurrection of the Daleks
(Lytton)
Doctor Who: Attack of the Cybermen
(Lytton)
Dead Man's Kit
(Lt. Cmdr. Kobahl)
Cry of the Banshee
(Villager)
Howards' Way
(Tom Howard)
Doctor Who
(Commander Lytton)
Shoestring
The Day of the Triffids
(Jack Coker)
Van der Valk
(Nick Scholtz)
Gangsters
Johnny Jarvis
(Jake)
Doctor Who
(Lytton)
Return of the Saint
(Jed Blacket)