Birthday: August 20, 1947 in Dartford, Kent, England, UK
Birth Name: Peter John Denyer
Height: 173 cm
Peter Denyer was born on 20th August 1947 in Dartford, Kent, England. His first professional acting role at the age of 19, credited him as "3rd Workman" in "The Stirrings in Sheffield on Saturday Night" at The Playhouse in Sheffield in 1966. He is best remembered as the dim-witted but likeable "Dennis Dunstable" in the...
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Peter Denyer was born on 20th August 1947 in Dartford, Kent, England. His first professional acting role at the age of 19, credited him as "3rd Workman" in "The Stirrings in Sheffield on Saturday Night" at The Playhouse in Sheffield in 1966. He is best remembered as the dim-witted but likeable "Dennis Dunstable" in the popular London Weekend Television comedy series Please Sir! (1968). The series was based around a ficticious South London comprehensive Fenn Street school and the antics of the unruly school kids of 5C, their teachers and parents. The series was first transmitted on 11th November 1968 and ran for four series consisting of 53 episodes; the series was also made into a comic strip for the 70s children's magazine "Look In". Please Sir! (1968) ended in 1972, but there was a spin-off series called The Fenn Street Gang (1971) following the kids of 5C as they left school and looked for work. It ran for two series but never found the same popularity and was axed in 1973.Like many of the younger actors in the series, Peter went onto further television success appearing in series such as Dixon of Dock Green (1955), Agony (1979), Dear John (1986), Emmerdale Farm (1972), The Bill (1984) and On the Up (1990). He slowly moved away from acting and into writing, directing and producing pantomimes. His showbiz pals include Barbara Windsor, Anita Dobson, Kate O'Mara, Toyah Willcox, Frank Finlay and Robert Powell. Peter remains a bachelor and has been resident in Gloucestershire for nearly 30 years. Show less «
I looked stupider than anyone else at the auditions - referring to him getting the part of "Dennis D...Show more »
I looked stupider than anyone else at the auditions - referring to him getting the part of "Dennis Dunstable" on Please Sir! (1968). Show less «