Death in Paradise: A Double Bogey


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About this Broadcast

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A Double Bogey
Season 11, Episode 2

The arrival of a long-lost brother to a family-run golf club culminates in a body being retrieved from the course. A prime suspect with an alibi leaves the team of detectives with an impenetrable conundrum. Caribbean detective drama, with Ralf Little, Josephine Jobert and Don Warrington


HD subtitles 16x9 audio-description
Detective/Thriller Movie/Drama

Cast & Crew

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Ralf Little (Actor) .. DI Neville Parker
Josephine Jobert (Actor) .. DS Florence Cassell
Don Warrington (Actor) .. Commissioner Selwyn Patterson
Tahj Miles (Actor) .. Officer Marlon Pryce
Shantol Jackson (Actor) .. Sgt Naomi Thomas
Elizabeth Bourgine (Actor) .. Catherine Bordey
Faith Alabi (Actor) .. Desreta King
Jason Done (Actor) .. Connor Faircroft
Simon Lenagan (Actor) .. Bradley Faircroft
Oscar Morgan (Actor) .. Jake Faircroft
Tamzin Outhwaite (Actor) .. Holly Faircroft
James Hall (Writer)
Jennie Paddon (Director)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Ralf Little (Actor) .. DI Neville Parker
Josephine Jobert (Actor) .. DS Florence Cassell
Don Warrington (Actor) .. Commissioner Selwyn Patterson
Born: May 23, 1951 in Trinidad
Best Known For: Playing Philip Smith in ITV sitcom Rising Damp.
Early-life: Born Don Williams in Trinidad on May 23, 1951. He has an older brother. His father, Basil Kydd, died suddenly in Trinidad at the age of 48 in 1958 when Don was six. His mother, Shirley, decided to make a new life for herself in England while Don and his brother were looked after back in Trinidad by his grandmother. Shirley settled in Newcastle with a job at a metal factory and returned to Trinidad to collect her two sons. When Don was 12, his mother left for America to retrain as a nurse. Don and his brother were then looked after in England by his Auntie Lena. Don was 17 when he landed his first job as an assistant stage manager at Newcastle's Flora Robson Playhouse. He moved to London to train at the Drama Centre and then landed the role that made him famous.
Career: Warrington began playing Philip Smith in ITV sitcom Rising Damp in 1974 alongside Leonard Rossiter and Richard Beckinsale. The hugely popular series ran until 1978 and led to a spin-off film. Decades later, Warrington directed the first UK stage tour of Rising Damp in 2013. He has also starred in Triangle, Crown Court, CATS Eyes, To Play the King, Grange Hill, Manchild, Holby City and The Crouches. More recently, he has appeared in Doctor Who, New Street Law, Casualty, Waking the Dead, Lewis and Death in Paradise. He has also performed with the National Theatre, The Royal Shakespeare Company, and the Bristol Old Vic. He competed in the sixth series of Strictly Come Dancing with professional dancer Lilia Kopylova. They were eliminated in week five.
Quote: "My brother and I were the only black kids in our school. The way you survive in those circumstances is to become like the locals, so I became a Geordie who was good at football."
Trivia: Warrington was awarded an MBE in 2008.
Tahj Miles (Actor) .. Officer Marlon Pryce
Shantol Jackson (Actor) .. Sgt Naomi Thomas
Elizabeth Bourgine (Actor) .. Catherine Bordey
Faith Alabi (Actor) .. Desreta King
Jason Done (Actor) .. Connor Faircroft
Simon Lenagan (Actor) .. Bradley Faircroft
Oscar Morgan (Actor) .. Jake Faircroft
Tamzin Outhwaite (Actor) .. Holly Faircroft
Born: November 05, 1970 in Ilford, Essex
Best Known For: Playing Mel in EastEnders.
Early-life: Tamzin Outhwaite was born on November 5, 1970, in Ilford, Essex. Her mother is Italian. She discovered her love of performing at a young age and would put on plays with her two younger brothers. She became involved with local amateur dramatics in her teens and admits that her schoolwork suffered, although she always did well in drama. After taking her O-levels at 16, Outhwaite signed up for a three-year acting course at the London Studio Centre, where she was voted Most Outstanding All-Rounder.
Career: Outhwaite took small parts in various West End productions and also appeared on TV in The Bill and Men Behaving Badly. Her big break came in 1997, when dramatist Alan Ayckbourn spotted her in the chorus of a musical and offered her the lead role in his play Absent Friends. She then played the part of Melanie Healy in EastEnders for three years. Since leaving Walford, she has starred in the dramas Red Cap and Final Demand, and won rave reviews for her performance as a single mum in the improvised drama Out of Control. Other work includes an appearance in Fast Freddie, The Widow and Me, Doctor Who and Marple. She has also appeared on the stage in revivals of Boeing Boeing and Sweet Charity, and is the lead actress in New Tricks.
Quote: "Fame's scary sometimes. I'm just thankful I'd had eight years as a jobbing actress before it happened to me. I'd have worried about my sanity if I'd been 19 or 20."
Kevin Rundle (Writer)
James Hall (Writer)
Candida Julian-Jones (Producer)
Jennie Paddon (Director)

Before / After

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