William Hughes (born 1998)

William Hughes (12 May 1998 – 9 July 2018) was a Welsh boxer and child actor from Mumbles, Swansea.[3]

William Hughes
Hughes (left) landing a blow in February 2018
Statistics
Weight(s)
NationalityWelsh
Born(1998-05-12)12 May 1998
Swansea, Wales
Died9 July 2018(2018-07-09) (aged 20)
Corfu, Greece

Acting

As a child, Hughes appeared in several episodes of the television programme Doctor Who as the boyhood incarnation of the Doctor's greatest rival, the Master, a character he played simultaneously alongside John Simm, appearing in the episodes "The Sound of Drums" and "Last of the Time Lords" in 2007, as well as in the two-part special "The End of Time" in 2009-2010 through archive footage.[4] He then appeared in the spin-off Torchwood in 2008, as a different character called Alex Grainger in the serial "Sleeper".[4] From the Master's first appearance in 1971, Hughes was the youngest actor to portray the character.

Boxing

Hughes began boxing at age 9[5] in Bon-y-maen, at the ABC Boxing gym[3] and won three Welsh titles. He became the protege of Enzo Maccarinelli, the Welsh World Champion boxer, and won a British Championship at the GB Amateur Boxing Championships in 2011 for Wales, in the 42 kg class.[1] He continued with the sport, and in early 2017 he fought in a charity white-collar boxing exhibition match, raising money for cancer research, working with sports company Ultra White Collar Boxing.[6] From autumn 2017, he joined the Elite Athlete Programme at Queen Mary University of London,[5] also studying a degree in Finance there.[3] In 2018, he also fought with the club Repton.[7] With Queen Mary's, he won Gold at the 2017/18 British Universities and Colleges Sport championships.[8] He shares a name with the 1930s Welsh champion boxer William, or Billy, "Kid" Hughes.

Death

In July 2018, Hughes took a trip to the Greek island of Corfu to celebrate finishing his exams from his first year of studies at Queen Mary's. On 9 July - the last night of his holiday - Hughes was found unresponsive following an attempted suicide. He was transferred to hospital but could not be resuscitated. Following an inquest, which concluded the 20-year-old had taken his own life, his body was flown back to the UK.[9][10]

His former school in Swansea, Bishop Vaughan Catholic School, released a statement sending their thoughts and prayers to his family and saying that he was "an exceptionally talented sportsman" during his time there. His coach and friend, Enzo Maccarinelli, posted a tweet and released statements calling his "little protege" "a tremendously talented kid" with "dreams of competing as a professional [boxer]" and "everything going for him", and saying that he was "heartbroken"[11][12]

Among other tributes shared by fans and supporters was a quote from the 2007 Doctor Who episode "The Lazarus Experiment", where the Doctor discusses immortality and concludes that "Some people live more in twenty years than others do in eighty. It's not the time that matters, it's the person".[13]

gollark: We'll be deploying the airborne catgirlization retrovirus shortly.
gollark: None are safe, as they say.
gollark: The plague is *around* still, it just doesn't do much because sanitation is better.
gollark: But something something anthropic principle and populations were much more isolated until recently.
gollark: I did wonder a while ago why, if it was possible to have diseases which were both really lethal and contagious/airborne, humans were alive.

References

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