
A distinguished stage actor, Ernest Clark was best known to British television viewers for his role as the crusty "Sir Geoffrey Loftus" in the long running "Doctor" comedy series during the 1970s.
Born in Maida Vale, Clark was the son of a master builder and was educated at Marylebone Grammar School. His first job was as a reporter on a local newspaper and he was also a keen amateur actor.
He made his first professional appearance at the Festival Theatre, Cambridge in 1937 and, throughout the 1930s and 40s, was rarely off the West End stage. In New York in 1950, he garnered rave reviews for his appearance in T.S. Eliot's "The Cocktail Party".
A prolific screen character actor, he was usually cast in cold, tight-lipped roles in British war films.
He was vice-president of Equity, the British actor's union, from 1964-69 and president from 1970-73. An articulate, outspoken and often witty commentator for the acting profession, he always argued on the side of regulated entry into what he described as "an overcrowded industry".
Clark's first two marriages were dissolved. His third wife was 'Julia Lockwood', the daughter of the British film star Margaret Lockwood.
- IMDb Mini Biography By: Patrick Newley

Gandhi
1982 · as Lord Hunter

Sink the Bismarck!
1960 · as Captain Ellis - 'Suffolk'

Obsession
1949

The Dam Busters
1955 · as Air Vice-Marshal The Hon. Ralph Cochrane G.B.E., K.C.B., A.F.C.

Arabesque
1966 · as Beauchamp

It!
1967 · as Harold Grove

The Executioner
1970 · as Roper

1984
1956 · as Outer Party Announcer

The Pope Must Die
1991 · as Abbot

Memed My Hawk
1984 · as Hatche's Father

Eye of the Devil
1966 · as French Police Inspector (uncredited)

Billy Liar
1963 · as Prison Governor

Time Without Pity
1957 · as Under Secretary

Beau Brummell
1954 · as Dr. Warren

A Tale of Two Cities
1958 · as Stryver

Doctor in the House
1954 · as Dr. Parrish

Salt & Pepper
1968 · as Col. Balsom

Reach for the Sky
1956 · as Wing Commander Beiseigel