John Cater

He was diagnosed with hereditary haemochromatosis, which led his body to absorb too much dietary iron, but it caused him few problems for most of his life.For the next several years, Cater acted in repertory theatre and summer stock in Aberdeen, Cork, Edinburgh, Guildford, and Nottingham.In 1961, he joined Peter Hall newly-formed Royal Shakespeare Company first London RSC at the Aldwych Theatre.; Dad's Army; The Naked Civil Servant; I, Claudius; Alcock and Gander; The Duchess of Duke Street; Thriller (1975), The Sweeney; Inspector Morse; Bergerac; One Foot in the Grave; Lovejoy; Jeeves and Wooster; Midsomer Murders and Doctors.[5] Late in life, Cater's haemochromatosis led to severe arthritis, which significantly inhibited his acting career.
John Cater (academic)HendonLondonhereditary haemochromatosisShebbear CollegeRoyal Army Educational CorpsDundee Repertory TheatreHerbert Wiserepertory theatresummer stockAberdeenEdinburghPeter HallRoyal Shakespeare CompanyAldwych TheatreWest EndThe Duchess of MalfiDanger ManZ-CarsThe AvengersThe BaronDoctor WhoFollyfootSoftly, SoftlyDepartment SUp Pompeii!Dad's ArmyThe Naked Civil ServantI, ClaudiusAlcock and GanderThe Duchess of Duke StreetThrillerThe SweeneyInspector MorseBergeracOne Foot in the GraveLovejoyJeeves and WoosterMidsomer MurdersDoctorsThe Abominable Dr. PhibesDr. Phibes Rises AgainCaptain Kronos – Vampire Hunterliver cancerDecline and Fall... of a BirdwatcherRising DampLittle Lord FauntleroyAlien AutopsyThe War MachinesTake a Pair of Private EyesThe Living DeadThe Two and a Half FeathersSeven of OneMadame BovaryTiberius Claudius NarcissusThe GlumsThe Other 'ArfAnyone for Denis?Jack of DiamondsTheatre NightThe Devil's DiscipleStill Crazy Like a FoxThe Woman in BlackPrisoner of HonorMaigretGoodnight Mister TomChucklevisionBad GirlsWayback Machine