Gabriel Woolf
Gabriel Woolf (born 2 October 1932) is an English actor, broadcaster, narrator, and writer renowned for his distinctive voice work in radio, television, and audio productions.[1] Best known to audiences worldwide for voicing the ancient Egyptian god Sutekh, a recurring villain in the BBC science fiction series Doctor Who, Woolf first portrayed the character in the 1975 serial Pyramids of Mars, where his menacing vocal performance—delivered through a mask and without on-screen appearance—left a lasting impact on viewers.[2] He reprised elements of this role in 2006 as the voice of the Beast in the episodes The Impossible Planet and The Satan Pit, a deliberate choice by showrunner Russell T Davies to evoke Sutekh's terror, and returned fully as Sutekh in the 2024 episodes The Legend of Ruby Sunday and Empire of Death, marking a 49-year span for the character.[2][3] Woolf's career began in the early 1950s after training at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, where he won a Gold Medal, leading to early film roles such as in Knights of the Round Table (1953) and television appearances in series like Look and Read (1967).[1][4] By the 1950s, he had joined the BBC Drama Repertory Company, becoming a staple in radio plays and later presenting educational programs on television.[2] Over decades, Woolf has narrated more than 40 major novels for radio—including several works by George Eliot, such as Middlemarch and Daniel Deronda—authored plays and documentaries, and performed in hundreds of broadcasts, earning acclaim for his expressive readings on programs like BBC Radio 4's Poetry Please.[5] In addition to acting, he collaborates with orchestras worldwide, narrating classical works such as Stravinsky's The Soldier's Tale, Saint-Saëns' Carnival of the Animals, and Prokofiev's Peter and the Wolf, while presenting literary and musical programs at festivals, theaters, and arts centers across the UK, North America, and beyond.[4]Early career
Film and television debut
Gabriel Woolf trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA), graduating in 1951 with the Bancroft Gold Medal.[6] He began his acting career that year.[1] His television debut was as Cuthman in the BBC teleplay The Boy with a Cart (1951), a religious drama depicting the life of the 8th-century English saint Cuthman of Steyning, who builds a church through faith and ingenuity. Adapted from Christopher Fry's 1939 play and directed by Alan Burke, the production aired on 15 August 1951 and showcased Woolf's early affinity for historical and inspirational narratives centered on Christian figures.[7] Woolf's film debut followed in Knights of the Round Table (1953), where he portrayed Sir Percival, the devoted knight questing for the Holy Grail. Produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in Technicolor and CinemaScope—the studio's first film in the widescreen format—the epic was directed by Richard Thorpe and adapted from Thomas Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur, blending Arthurian romance with themes of chivalry, betrayal, and redemption. Starring Robert Taylor as Lancelot and Mel Ferrer as King Arthur, the project introduced Woolf to large-scale historical filmmaking, emphasizing spectacle through its lavish sets and battle sequences filmed partly in England and Wales.[8][9] Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Woolf took on supporting television roles that honed his versatility in period and dramatic programming. Notable among these was his portrayal of the scheming Rashleigh Osbaldistone, the envious and duplicitous cousin, in the BBC miniseries Rob Roy (1961), a seven-part adaptation of Sir Walter Scott's 1817 novel about the Highland outlaw's clash with English authorities. Airing from 9 April to 21 May 1961 on BBC Television, the series featured Woolf in multiple episodes, contributing to its exploration of Scottish identity and rebellion. He also appeared as the patient Robert Emery in several 1961 episodes of the long-running hospital soap Emergency – Ward 10, a pioneering medical drama that aired on ITV and delved into ethical dilemmas in postwar British healthcare.[10]Stage and early radio roles
Gabriel Woolf's early stage career in the 1950s focused on classical theatre, where he honed his skills in ensemble performances at prestigious venues. Following his training, he joined the Old Vic Company for the 1956–57 season, appearing in a repertoire of Shakespearean plays that showcased his versatility in supporting roles. These included productions of Antony and Cleopatra, The Merchant of Venice, Much Ado About Nothing, Cymbeline, Titus Andronicus, and The Comedy of Errors, performed at the Old Vic Theatre in London.[11] His involvement in these works emphasized the company's tradition of rigorous, text-driven interpretations of Elizabethan drama, contributing to his development as a precise and expressive performer.[11] In the early 1960s, Woolf continued with the Old Vic on international tours, including a 1960–61 production of George Bernard Shaw's Saint Joan during a visit to Warsaw, where he took on a supporting role amid the ensemble cast led by the titular performer.[11] These stage experiences, rooted in live improvisation and audience interaction, provided a foundation for Woolf's nuanced delivery of complex characters, particularly in historical and dramatic contexts. By the mid-1960s, his theatre work had established him within London's classical acting circles, bridging traditional repertory with emerging performance techniques. Woolf transitioned to radio in the early 1950s, joining the BBC Drama Repertory Company, a rotating ensemble for radio plays and adaptations, which became a training ground for his distinctive baritone voice and ability to convey emotion through sound alone. This period in the 1950s and 1960s saw him in diverse formats, from serialized dramas to standalone plays, building his reputation for reliable, atmospheric audio performances. For instance, in 1958, he led The Storyteller on the BBC Light Programme, a series of narrative episodes that highlighted his storytelling prowess in episodic, folk-tale-inspired formats.[12] Notable among his early radio credits were dramatic adaptations of literary works on the BBC Home Service. In June 1959, Woolf appeared in a production centered on the life and trial of Socrates, voicing a supporting character in a dialogue-heavy script that explored philosophical themes through ensemble readings.[13] Similarly, in May 1959, he featured in a suspenseful play involving intrigue and authority figures, contributing to the narrative through varied character interpretations.[14] These roles, often in serials or one-off broadcasts, emphasized radio's intimate medium, allowing Woolf to refine vocal modulation and pacing without visual cues. A pivotal early radio role for Woolf was as Inspector Charles Parker in BBC adaptations of Dorothy L. Sayers' Lord Peter Wimsey mysteries, beginning in the 1970s but rooted in his established repertory style from prior decades. He voiced the steadfast Scotland Yard detective across multiple serials, including Whose Body?, Clouds of Witness, and Unnatural Death, totaling over 40 episodes in full-cast productions starring Ian Carmichael as Wimsey.[15] These adaptations followed a classic detective narrative style, blending witty banter, clue-gathering suspense, and period authenticity in 6–8 episode arcs per novel, with Woolf's measured, authoritative delivery underscoring Parker's loyalty and procedural insight.[16] Woolf's stage and radio work in the 1950s and 1960s served as essential training for voice acting, emphasizing breath control, tonal variation, and narrative drive developed through live theatre's immediacy and radio's auditory focus. This foundation not only built his audio reputation but also overlapped briefly with early television, enhancing his overall performative range.[17]Doctor Who involvement
On-screen appearances
Gabriel Woolf made his on-screen debut in the Doctor Who universe portraying the ancient Osirian god Sutekh in the 1975 serial Pyramids of Mars. In the story, Sutekh, imprisoned for millennia within a pyramid on Earth by his fellow Osirians to prevent his genocidal ambitions, possesses archaeologist Marcus Scarman upon his return from an Egyptian dig in 1911, using him as a servant to orchestrate the destruction of a protective jewel in a Martian pyramid and thereby free himself to conquer the universe.[18] Woolf physically embodied the character during a two-day studio shoot, clad in a heavy, restrictive costume featuring a jackal-headed mask that severely limited his visibility and caused discomfort from the heat, necessitating improvisations like stuffing newspaper into the mask to peer through.[19] His performance, relying heavily on vocal menace delivered through the mask, was widely acclaimed for conveying Sutekh's chilling intelligence and malevolence, with reviewers noting Woolf's "sibilant" delivery as a standout element that made the villain one of Doctor Who's most effective antagonists; the serial itself ranked third in a major fan poll two decades later.[20] Behind the scenes, Woolf experienced limited rapport with co-star Tom Baker, who played the Fourth Doctor, describing Baker as standoffish, though Woolf later took particular satisfaction in scenes where Sutekh tortures the Doctor on-screen.[19] Woolf returned to Doctor Who in 2006, providing the voice for the Beast in the two-part story The Impossible Planet/The Satan Pit. The Beast, an immense, chained entity at the core of the planet Krop Tor orbiting a black hole, claims to be the archetype of all devils across history—Satan, Lucifer, and more—predating the universe itself, and exerts influence through telepathic possession of expedition members and Ood servants, amplifying the episodes' themes of cosmic isolation, psychological dread, and infernal horror.[21] Woolf's performance was adapted for on-screen presence by recording his deep, rumbling vocals separately to overlay scenes of possession, such as when the Beast speaks through the body of Toby Zed with lines like "I am the Rage and the Bile, the Voracity and the Filth," and a shadowy, horned silhouette emerges from the pit, enhancing the creature's tangible threat without requiring physical portrayal.[21] This vocal work, directed to sync with visual effects depicting the Beast's red, corpse-like form, drew praise for its malicious intensity, with critics highlighting how it evoked primal fear in the story's claustrophobic, hellish atmosphere.[17] Nearly 50 years after his initial appearance, Woolf reprised the role of Sutekh in the 2024 episodes The Legend of Ruby Sunday and Empire of Death, marking the character's explosive return to live-action television. He also returned as Sutekh in the Tales of the TARDIS special Pyramids of Mars, revisiting the original story with new framing sequences.[22] Revealed as the shadowy "One Who Waits" who survived his 1975 defeat by latching onto the TARDIS like a parasite, Sutekh evolves into a god-like force capable of spreading death across realities, retroactively influencing Doctor Who lore and amplifying the stakes for the Fifteenth Doctor's battles against Pantheon gods.[22] Production updates included Woolf recording his lines in isolation to preserve the character's mystique, with modern CGI rendering Sutekh as a towering, dog-headed entity draped over the TARDIS, contrasting the 1975 practical effects while retaining core dialogue for continuity.[22] The gap allowed fans to sustain Sutekh's legacy through conventions, making the revival feel "inevitable," as Woolf noted, though he had no direct on-set interactions with Ncuti Gatwa's Fifteenth Doctor or David Tennant's Tenth Doctor from the 2006 episodes, both of which involved separate voice sessions.[22]Audio and voice work
Gabriel Woolf's voice work in Doctor Who audio productions has primarily centered on reprising and expanding his iconic portrayal of the Osirian god Sutekh, leveraging his resonant, menacing timbre to deepen the character's god-like menace in post-television narratives. Beginning in the mid-2000s, Woolf contributed to Big Finish Productions' range, where his vocal performance as Sutekh in key stories emphasized the entity's destructive ambitions across time and space. These roles marked a significant revival, allowing the character—originally confined to a 1975 television serial—to influence broader Who-adjacent mythologies through full-cast audio dramas.[23] In Big Finish's Arrangements for War (2004), Woolf voiced Justice Rossiter, a principled governor navigating a tense interstellar diplomatic crisis alongside the Sixth Doctor and companion Evelyn Smythe. Rossiter's arc involves forging an alliance against warmongering factions, highlighting Woolf's ability to convey moral complexity and quiet authority in a non-antagonistic role, distinct from his villainous associations. The story's focus on political intrigue and personal bonds provided Woolf with opportunities for nuanced interactions, underscoring themes of justice amid galactic conflict.[24] Woolf's most prominent audio contributions came through voicing Sutekh in Big Finish's Doctor Who: The New Adventures of Bernice Summerfield series, particularly The Triumph of Sutekh (2015), a four-part anthology spanning ancient Egypt, Mars, and modern Earth. Here, Sutekh schemes for rebirth via stolen artifacts and prophetic visions, aiming to unleash death upon humanity; Woolf's delivery amplifies the god's sibilant arrogance and cosmic rage, expanding the Osiran pantheon's lore by intertwining it with Bernice Summerfield's archaeological exploits and the Seventh Doctor's interventions. This production revitalized Sutekh as a recurring threat, bridging his ancient origins with contemporary Who spin-offs.[25] The character's audio mythology further evolved in Big Finish's Fourth Doctor Adventures, with Woolf reprising Sutekh in Kill the Doctor! and The Age of Sutekh (both 2018). In these tales, Sutekh manipulates temporal anomalies and ancient rituals to target the Fourth Doctor, Leela, and K9, portraying him as an eternal destroyer whose influence permeates Osirian history and interstellar wars. Woolf's vocal nuances—evoking both divine fury and calculated malice—enriched Sutekh's portrayal, establishing him as a high-impact antagonist whose schemes test the Doctor's ingenuity across eras.[26][27] Woolf also lent his voice to Sutekh in Magic Bullet Productions' The True History of Faction Paradox series (2005–2009), where the god features prominently in the "War in Heaven" narrative, a multigenerational conflict involving time-manipulating cults. In Coming to Dust (2005), Sutekh awakens on a war-ravaged Mars to confront Faction Paradox operatives Justine and Lopez, using his powers to sow discord among the series' fragmented timelines. His arc progresses in The Ship of a Billion Years (2006), depicting Sutekh as a prisoner aboard a colossal vessel, plotting to exploit the war's chaos for universal annihilation while clashing with divine and mortal foes. Culminating in The Judgment of Sutekh (2009), the character faces trial amid escalating celestial battles, solidifying his role as a pivotal force driving the Faction's existential struggles against higher powers. These stories portray Sutekh's evolution from isolated tyrant to integral war architect, with Woolf's performance capturing the god's insidious charisma.[28] Earlier in his audio career, Woolf bridged Doctor Who literature to spoken formats by reading Target novelisations for the Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) in the late 1970s and early 1980s. His 1981 recording of State of Decay adapted Terrance Dicks' vampire-infested tale, while prior efforts included unabridged narrations of The Three Doctors, Carnival of Monsters, and Doctor Who and the Loch Ness Monster, transforming print stories into immersive auditory experiences that preserved the original serials' atmospheric tension for accessibility.)Later career
Literary readings and narrations
In the 1990s and 2000s, Gabriel Woolf narrated abridged versions of Arthur Ransome's Swallows and Amazons series for BBC Radio 4's Story Time programme, adapting the twelve children's adventure novels into serialized episodes that aired over multiple weeks.[29] These readings, often structured as 6-hour standalone recordings per book, preserved the essence of Ransome's narratives through Woolf's empathetic delivery, seamlessly shifting voices to distinguish characters like the spirited Nancy Blackett and imaginative Titty Walker.[29] The abridgements, praised for their skillful condensation and sensitivity to the original texts, were later released on CD and became popular for family listening, earning approval from the Arthur Ransome Society, of which Woolf served as president.[30] Beyond Ransome's works, Woolf lent his voice to several classic literary audiobooks, including unabridged narrations of George Eliot's Middlemarch (1871–1872) and Daniel Deronda (1876), as well as Fyodor Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov (1880).[31] His radio-format readings, such as Dorothy L. Sayers's The Man Born to Be King (1941–1942) for BBC Radio 4, featured dramatic interpretations that highlighted the theological and historical dialogues in the script.[32] These projects often involved collaborations with publishers like RNIB and Audible, focusing on Victorian and Russian literature to bring complex social themes to audio audiences.[31] Woolf also participated in professional literary readings alongside Dame Judi Dench, notably in the 1981 production Queen Bess to Old Rowley: Four Entertainments, which presented readings, songs, and lute music exploring the public and private lives of Tudor and Stuart figures through historical letters and texts.[33] This event, co-starring Dench and her husband Michael Williams, emphasized performative storytelling drawn from primary literary sources, blending narration with musical interludes to evoke Elizabethan and Jacobean eras.[34] Drawing from his early career in stage and radio acting, Woolf's narration style evolved into a specialized form of audio literature, characterized by nuanced character differentiation and rhythmic pacing that mirrored dramatic performance while prioritizing textual fidelity.[29] This approach, honed through decades of voice work, allowed him to infuse classics with emotional depth, making dense prose accessible without altering authorial intent.[19]Affiliations and honors
Gabriel Woolf served as President of The Arthur Ransome Society, a organization dedicated to celebrating the life and works of author Arthur Ransome, particularly his Swallows and Amazons series of children's adventure novels.[35] He held the position at least from 2012, contributing to the society's efforts by leveraging his renowned narrations of Ransome's books to promote their enduring appeal among new generations of readers.[36][30] As president, Woolf supported events and initiatives that highlighted Ransome's literary legacy, including commemorations and educational outreach, though specific responsibilities such as chairing meetings or representing the society publicly are not detailed in available records. Woolf also holds the role of Vice President of the Joyful Company of Singers, a London-based amateur choir founded in 1992 that specializes in a cappella and accompanied choral works, ranging from Renaissance polyphony to contemporary compositions.[37] In this supportive capacity, he provides guidance drawn from his extensive experience in voice acting and classical music performance, aiding the group's artistic direction and public engagements.[37] In recognition of his contributions to voice work and literature, Woolf has received audience awards for his radio performances, often cited for his distinctive "golden voice" in dramatic readings.[19] These honors underscore his long-standing impact on audio literature, including abridged narrations that have popularized works like the Swallows and Amazons series.[30] From the 2000s onward, Woolf engaged in literary collaborations, such as touring with crime novelist Colin Dexter to deliver accompanying readings at author talks and events.[19]Personal life
Marriages and family
Woolf was first married to Zara Green, with whom he had two children; the union ended in divorce sometime before the 1980s, though specific birth years for the children are not publicly documented in available records. In 1984, Woolf married the renowned opera singer Dame Felicity Lott, a union that has endured into the present day.[1] The couple welcomed a daughter, Emily, later that same year.[38] Woolf and Lott's shared passion for the performing arts has influenced their family life, blending his experience in acting and narration with her operatic pursuits to create a household centered on creative expression.[39] As of 2025, the couple continues to maintain a close family bond, with Emily now in her early forties; Woolf has occasionally referenced the supportive role of his family in interviews, though details on grandchildren or further extended family remain private.[40]Residence and interests
As of 2012, Woolf resided in Seaford, East Sussex, England. The couple also owns a small flat in the Marais district of Paris, France.[39] Woolf maintains a strong interest in opera and music, regularly attending performances and participating as a narrator in musical events, such as words-and-music programs featuring works by composers like Schumann and narrations for pieces including The Soldier’s Tale, Carnival of the Animals, and Peter and the Wolf with orchestras.[5][41][42] He has also collaborated on joint programs exploring themes like love and marriage through song and narration.[43] Beyond music, Woolf's hobbies center on literature, particularly Victorian works and poetry, which he has engaged with throughout his life by producing audio recordings of authors such as Keats, Shelley, Dickens, and George Eliot, often sold through literary societies.[5][19] He enjoys public readings at literary festivals, book clubs, libraries, and theatres across Britain and has extended these activities to international venues in 12 North American states.[5][40] In his later years, at age 93, Woolf remains active and healthy enough to continue professional engagements, including voice work for major projects as recently as 2024, alongside his literary and musical pursuits.[44][40]Filmography
Films
Gabriel Woolf's feature film appearances were sparse, totaling three credited roles across his career, primarily in the early to mid-20th century, reflecting his greater emphasis on television and radio work.[1] His screen debut occurred in 1951 with an uncredited role as Big Brooke, a schoolboy bully, in the British drama Tom Brown's Schooldays, directed by Gordon Parry. In 1953, Woolf portrayed the noble knight Sir Percival in the MGM epic Knights of the Round Table, directed by Richard Thorpe, a Technicolor adaptation of the Arthurian legend starring Robert Taylor and Ava Gardner.[9] His final feature film credit came over a decade later in 1964, playing an uncredited "Man" in the satirical comedy Nothing But the Best, directed by Clive Donner and featuring Millicent Martin and Alan Bates.Television
Gabriel Woolf's television career spans from 1951 to 2024, encompassing more than 20 credits primarily in British productions, including educational series, historical dramas, and science fiction guest roles.[1] His appearances often featured in BBC broadcasts, with recurring involvement in voice and narration work alongside on-screen performances.[1] Below is a chronological selection of his key television credits:| Year | Title | Role | Notes/Episodes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1951 | The Man Born to Be King | Apostle John | BBC adaptation of Dorothy L. Sayers' plays.[45] |
| 1961 | Rob Roy | Rashleigh Osbaldistone | BBC TV series, 4 episodes.[10] |
| 1967–1969 | Market in Honey Lane | Gervase Lorrimer | ITV soap opera, 8 episodes.[46] |
| 1971 | Look and Read | Peep-Peep's Father | BBC educational series, serial "The Boy from Space".[47] |
| 1968 | Merry-Go-Round | Various | BBC educational series for children, episode "Trains at Night".[48] |
| 1970 | Words and Pictures | Presenter | BBC Schools series, 16 episodes.[49] |
| 1973 | Total Eclipse | Jean Aicard | BBC TV movie.[50] |
| 1975 | Doctor Who: Pyramids of Mars | Sutekh | BBC serial, 4 episodes (Season 13).[22] |
| 1977 | Open Door | Narrator | BBC community access series, 1 episode.[51] |
| 2006 | Doctor Who: The Impossible Planet / The Satan Pit | The Beast (voice) | BBC serial, 2 episodes (Series 2).[52] |
| 2012–2013 | Wizards vs. Aliens | The Stones (voice) | CBBC series, multiple episodes including "Endless Night". |
| 2024 | Doctor Who: The Legend of Ruby Sunday / Empire of Death | Sutekh | BBC serial, 2 episodes (Series 14).[22] |
Audio dramas
Gabriel Woolf began contributing to audio dramas in the mid-20th century as a member of the BBC Drama Repertory Company, but his voice work gained particular prominence from 1981 onward, with credits spanning radio plays, literary adaptations, and full-cast productions. Over his career, he has amassed dozens of audio credits, showcasing his distinctive baritone in roles ranging from classical narrations to villainous characters in science fiction series.[17] Woolf's non-Doctor Who audio work includes narrations and dramatic readings for the BBC and other producers. In the 1990s and 2000s, he abridged and narrated all twelve books in Arthur Ransome's Swallows and Amazons series, produced by Greystones Press, capturing the sailing adventures of the Walker and Blackett children for young listeners.[53] He also starred in BBC Radio 4 adaptations, such as Dorothy L. Sayers' The Man Born to Be King (broadcast in the 1980s), a cycle of plays on the life of Jesus Christ where he portrayed key figures alongside a full cast.[54] Additional BBC radio credits encompass dramatisations of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's works, including Faust and The Sorrows of Young Werther, released in a 2023 collection but originally broadcast earlier.[55] Woolf performed in Shakespeare adaptations for BBC Radio, notably as Romeo in a production of Romeo and Juliet.[56] In the Doctor Who audio universe, Woolf reprised his iconic role as the god-like villain Sutekh across multiple series, beginning with Magic Bullet Productions' Faction Paradox line in 2004. He voiced Sutekh in "Coming to Dust" and "The Ship of a Billion Years," integrating the character into the series' time-travel lore.[57] Earlier that year, he appeared as Sutekh in the BBV audio "Oh Mummy!" tied to the Bernice Summerfield range. His Big Finish Doctor Who credits started in 2005 with the role of Governor (later Principal Triumvir) Rossiter in the Sixth Doctor stories "Arrangements for War" and "Thicker Than Water."[58] Woolf returned to Sutekh for Big Finish's Bernice Summerfield audios in 2015, voicing the character in the anthology The Triumph of Sutekh (including "The Eye of Horus" and "The Tears of Isis") and the webcast-turned-audio Transmission from Mars. This was followed by further appearances in 2016's "The Pyramid of Sutekh," part of the same series. In 2008, outside the Doctor Who franchise, he portrayed the historical figure Matthew Hopkins (Witchfinder General) and Inspector Natterjack in Big Finish's comedic supernatural series The Scarifyers: For King and Country.[59] Sutekh's audio resurgence continued through 2018 with Big Finish's Fourth Doctor specials "Kill the Doctor!" and "The Age of Sutekh," where Woolf's performance opposite Tom Baker as the Doctor highlighted the character's malevolent charisma.[27][26] These roles, spanning 2004 to 2018 and beyond, underscore Woolf's enduring association with the character across 15 years of audio productions, including the 2023 webcast "Sutekh the Heretic."[60]| Year | Title | Role | Production Company |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1990s–2000s | Swallows and Amazons series | Narrator | Greystones Press |
| 2004 | Oh Mummy! | Sutekh | BBV Audio |
| 2004 | Coming to Dust (Faction Paradox) | Sutekh | Magic Bullet Productions |
| 2004 | The Ship of a Billion Years (Faction Paradox) | Sutekh | Magic Bullet Productions |
| 2005 | Arrangements for War (Doctor Who) | Governor Rossiter | Big Finish Productions |
| 2005 | Thicker Than Water (Doctor Who) | Principal Triumvir Rossiter | Big Finish Productions |
| 2008 | The Scarifyers: For King and Country | Matthew Hopkins / Inspector Natterjack | Big Finish Productions |
| 2015 | The Triumph of Sutekh (Bernice Summerfield) | Sutekh | Big Finish Productions |
| 2015 | Transmission from Mars (Bernice Summerfield) | Sutekh | Big Finish Productions |
| 2016 | The Pyramid of Sutekh (Bernice Summerfield) | Sutekh | Big Finish Productions |
| 2018 | Kill the Doctor! (Doctor Who) | Sutekh | Big Finish Productions |
| 2018 | The Age of Sutekh (Doctor Who) | Sutekh | Big Finish Productions |
| 2023 | Sutekh the Heretic | Sutekh | Cutaway Comics |