Dudley Foster was an English actor who regularly appeared in television roles. Foster was born in Brighouse, West Riding of Yorkshire. His family had established links with the theatre and a brother and sister also appeared on the stage. They were the children of Frank Geden Foster, a civil engineer, who was to die exactly a week before his son. Educated at Pocklington School, Dudley Foster after service as a navigator in the RAF studied chemistry at the University of Leeds. In 1948 he joined the recently-formed Bradford Civic PlayhouseTheatre School and after turning professional spent several successful years with northern repertory companies. From the later 1950s into the 1960s, he was a member of Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop based at London's Theatre Royal Stratford East. In her autobiography Joan's Book Littlewood recalled that Foster had a wealthy father who financed some of the troupe's productions. On television he appeared in such series as Danger Man, The Saint, The Avengers, "Something Nasty in The Nursery" and "Wish You Were Here", Randall and Hopkirk as villain George Foster, The Persuaders!, CatweazleSteptoe and Son and Doctor Who, often in villainous roles. In Z-Cars in the early 1960s he played a police detective, Inspector Dunn. He was also in Bat Out of Hell, a BBC serial by Francis Durbridge, playing a formidable Police Inspector, and starred with John Bird in the officecomedy seriesIf It Moves File It by Troy Kennedy Martin. He occasionally appeared in films. He appeared in the films The Little Ones as Superintendent Carter alongside Derek Newark and in A Study in Terror as Home SecretaryHenry Matthews. He also participated in a 30-minute documentary titled Two in a Tiger. This film follows his training as he learns to fly a De Havilland Tiger Moth. In 1970 he provided the voice-over for an edition of the BBCdocumentary seriesChronicle: "The Great Iron Ship", about the salvage and return from the Falkland Islands of the Isambard Kingdom Brunel ship SS Great Britain. His penultimate role was in the film version of the BBC sitcom That's Your Funeral and his final appearance was in the 18th-century-set comedy-drama Mistress Pamela which was not released until 1973. Dudley Foster's early death was the result of suicide by hanging. He left a widow, the actress Eileen Kennally ; they had married in 1952 and had two sons.