Birthday
1922/01/03
Day of death
1994/03/29 (72 years old)
Gender
Male
Place of Birth
Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England, UK
Also know as
William Inglis Lindon Travers, Bill Linden-Travers
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia William Lindon-Travers (3 January 1922 – 29 March 1994) was an English actor, screenwriter, director and an animal rights activist, known professionally as Bill Travers. Description above from the Wikipedia article Bill Travers, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
(1966) Duel at Diablo
as Scotty McAllister
(1961) Gorgo
as Joe Ryan
(1957) The Smallest Show on Earth
as Matt Spenser
(1955) Geordie
as Geordie Mac Taggart
(1966) Born Free
as George Adamson
(1955) Footsteps in the Fog
as David Macdonald
(1951) The Browning Version
as Fletcher
(1959) The Bridal Path
as Ewan
(1956) Bhowani Junction
as Patrick Taylor
(1953) Mantrap
as Victor Tasman
(1971) Rum Runners
as Sanderson
(1954) Romeo and Juliet
as Benvolio
(1969) Ring of Bright Water
as Graham Merrill
(1953) Street of Shadows
as Nigel Langley - Barbara's date
(1957) The Barretts of Wimpole Street
as Robert Browning
(1957) The Seventh Sin
as Walter Carwin
(1952) The Planter's Wife
as Planter (uncredited)
(1952) Hindle Wakes
as Bob Slater
(1961) Two Living, One Dead
as Andersson
(1969) An Elephant Called Slowly
as Bill
(1961) Invasion Quartet
as ---
(1961) The Green Helmet
as Greg Rafferty
(2013) The 9th Wonder of the World: The Making of 'Gorgo'
as Joe Ryan (archive footage)
(1953) Counterspy
as Rex
(1969) The Lions Are Free
as ---
(1968) The Admirable Crichton
as Crichton
(1950) Trio
as Fellowes (segment Mr. Know-It-All)
(1953) The Square Ring
as Rowdie Rawlings
(1971) The Lion at World's End
as ---
(1958) Storm Over Jamaica
as Douglas Lockwood
(1950) The Wooden Horse
as Prisoner (uncredited)
(1973) The Belstone Fox
as Tod
(1952) The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men
as Posse Man
(1986) Lovejoy
as Duncan
(1951) Hallmark Hall of Fame
as Crichton
(1959) Rawhide
as Jeremiah O'Neal
(1963) Lorna Doone
as ---
(1984) The First Olympics: Athens 1896
as Harold Flack