Scott Fredericks
Scott Fredericks was an Irish actor best known for his roles on British television.
Early life
Fredericks was born in Strandhill, County Sligo to Edward Wehrly, a jewellery businessman of German descent, and Ann.He left Sligo when he won a scholarship to train at RADA in London, and later adopted the name Scott Fredericks.
Career
Scott Fredericks began his acting career with stage roles at the Chesterfield Repertory. He later worked with director Peter Brook and appeared in West End theatre productions of Antony and Cleopatra and in Becket.After appearing in the television soap opera Crossroads, Scott Fredericks went on to appear in a number of British television programmes in the 1960s, 70s and 1980s, including Z-Cars, Sutherland's Law, Dixon of Dock Green, Blake's 7, and Triangle. He made two appearances in the Doctor Who, in the serials Day of the Daleks and Image of the Fendahl. He also appeared in a 1981 episode of the ITV television police drama, Cribb playing Prince Henry of Battenberg.
Fredericks also appeared in such feature films as Dad's Army, See No Evil and Cal. Whilst working in cinema productions, he once played a game of billiards with Fred Astaire. More recently, he appeared as a regular character in the Irish soap Fair City, as well as spending his time as a radio producer and director in his native Ireland.
Fredericks's stage career included leading roles in the Gate Theatre, Dublin, a long run of Peg o’ My Heart by J. Hartley Manners, and in stage adaptations of Cal and Caught in a Free State with the newly created Irish Theatre Company. For his solo stage show Yeats Remembers Fredericks was awarded the J.J. Finnegan Evening Herald Award in 1980.