Contemporary Actors

Collection of Contemporary Actors

Michael Biehn

Michael Biehn.

Michael Biehn was born in 1956 in Alabama.   His credits include “Grease” in 1978, “The Terminator” in 1984, “The Abyss” in 1989 and K2″.

“Quinlan’s Movie Stars”:

Lean, clean-cut, resolute looking American actor with dark eyes and light tufty hair.   Biehn’s chiselled features looked to have cut him out of heroes when he started acting straight from university.   But in fact he’s played his share of wackos, his eveys conveying with some skill.   An expert in martial arts he continued to mix villains with action heroes starring in lesser films and playing some striking co-star roles in

IMDB entry:

Michael Biehn was born on July 31, 1956 in Anniston, Alabama, grew up in Lincoln, Nebraska, and at age 14 moved with his family to Lake Havasu, Arizona, where he won a drama scholarship to the University of Arizona. He left prematurely two years later to pursue an acting career in Hollywood. His first big role was as a psychotic fan stalkingLauren Bacall in The Fan (1981) and later appeared in The Lords of Discipline (1983). He hit the big-time when he was cast as Kyle Reese, the man sent back through time to stop Arnold Schwarzenegger in James Cameron‘s The Terminator (1984).

This established a good working relationship with Cameron, a relationship that should have catapulted Biehn to international stardom. He starred in Cameron’s subsequent films, Aliens (1986) and The Abyss (1989), the latter a standout performance as unstable Navy SEAL officer Lt. Hiram Coffey. In the 1990s he starred in films like Navy Seals (1990), K2 (1991) and was particularly memorable as Johnny Ringo in Tombstone (1993). Biehn is married and the father of four sons.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: André Hansson <andreh@hawkan.pp.se>

The above IMDB entry can also be accessed online here.

Geraldine Hughes
Geraldine Hughes
Geraldine Hughes

Geraldine Hughes was born in 1970 in Belfast.   She made her acting debut with “Children at the Crossroads” in 1984.   Her films include “Murder She Wrote:Celtic Riddle” with Angela Lansbury, “Rocky Balboa”  with Sylvester Stallone in 2006 and “Gran Torino” with Clint Eastwood.

IMDB entry:

Geraldine Hughes (born 1970) is a Northern Irish film, television and stage, actress. She was born in West Belfast and lived in the Divis flats for a time. She won a private scholarship and attended university in America. She is best known for her portrayal of “Little Marie” in 2006’s Rocky Balboa. Hughes also wrote and performed a one-woman show entitled Belfast Blues in New York City and appeared on television on ER and Profiler, among others. Recently, she played Clint Eastwood’s daughter-in-law in Gran Torino.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Devendra Meena

Geraldine Hughes
Geraldine Hughes
Hector Elizondo
Hector Elizondo
Hector Elizondo

Hector Elizondo was born in 1936 inNew York City.   He studied dance at the Ballet Arts Company in Carnegie Hall in 1962/1963 and began acting on the stage.   In 1974 he won critical acclaim for his performance in “The Taking Pelham, One, Two, Three”,   Other films include “Pretty Woman”, “Runaway Bride” and “The Princess Diaries”.

IMDB entry:

Hector Elizondo was born in New York and raised on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. Elizondo, the name is Basque and means “at the foot of the church”. His lifestyle in his pre-acting days was as diverse as the roles he plays today. He was a conga player with a Latin band, a classical guitarist and singer, a weightlifting coach, a ballet dancer and a manager of a bodybuilding gym. In his teens, he played basketball and baseball and was scouted by the New York Giants and Pittsburgh Pirates farm teams. After a knee injury ended his dance career, he switched to drama. Since then, he has frequently appeared on Broadway, most notably with George C. Scott in Arthur Penn‘s production of “Sly Fox” for which he received a Drama Desk nomination and for his role as “God” in “Steambath”, which won him an Obie Award. Other theatre credits include; “The Prisoner of Second Avenue”; “The Great White Hope”; “Dance of Death” with Robert Shaw and “The Rose Tattoo” opposite Cicely Tyson. Countless starring roles in television include: Foley Square(1985); American Playhouse: Medal of Honor Rag (1982); Casablanca (1983) (in which he recreated the Claude Rains role of police chief “Capt. Renault”); Freebie and the Bean(1974); Popi (1975) and as Sophia Loren‘s husband in the CBS special Courage (1986). Guest appearances include: Kojak (1973); Kojak: Ariana (1989); Columbo: A Case of Immunity (1975); Baretta (1975); All in the Family (1971); The Rockford Files (1974) andBret Maverick (1981). In addition, he also directed a.k.a. Pablo (1984), the first show to utilise seven cameras instead of the usual four. On the big screen, he has been seen in, among others, American Gigolo (1980); The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (1974);Cuba (1979); Valdez Is Coming (1971) and in four films directed by Garry MarshallYoung Doctors in Love (1982); The Flamingo Kid (1984); Nothing in Common (1986) andOverboard (1987). Elizondo starred with Dan Aykroyd and Michelle Pfeiffer in PBS’ Great Performances: Tales from the Hollywood Hills: Natica Jackson (1987) (based on a collection of John O’Hara stories) and made his debut as a stage director with a production of “Villa!” starring Julio Medina. In addition, he performed in the 50th anniversary production of “War of the Worlds” co-starring Jason Robards and the TV-movie Addicted to His Love (1988) with Barry Bostwick.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Anonymous

The above entry can also be accessed online here.

Daniel Craig
Daniel Craig
Daniel Craig

Danel Craig was born in 1968 in Chester in Cheshire.   He had been building up a solid reliable portfolio of work when he became the sixth actor tp olay James Bond in “Casino Royale” in 2006.   His early performances include the wonderful television drame “Our Friends from the North” in 1998.   He also gave a terrific performance in “The Mother” in 2003 with Anne Reid.   The next Bond film was “Quantum of Solace”.   Recent work includes “Defiance” and “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo”.

TCM overview:

Though he enjoyed a deal of anonymity early in his career, actor Daniel Craig was launched to international stardom in 2005 when he was named as Pierce Brosnan’s successor to play the role of James Bond. Following years of over-the-top action and reality stretching plotlines, Craig helped to bring the Bond franchise back to its grittier espionage roots with the critically hailed “Casino Royale” (2006). Prior to his portrayal of Bond, Craig appeared in films like “Lara Croft: Tomb Raider” (2001) and “Road to Perdition” (2002), before garnering attention as an unorthodox drug dealer in the British crime thriller “Layer Cake” (2004). From there, he earned more kudos for “Enduring Love” (2004) and struck fear as a single-minded Mossad assassin in “Munich” (2005). But it was “Casino Royale” that turned the rising star into an overnight sensation, though his second go-round as Bond, “Quantum of Solace” (2008), was not as well received. Meanwhile, Craig delivered strong performances outside the Bond universe in the World War II drama “Defiance” (2008) and the much-anticipated American adaptation of “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” (2011), while making celebrity news for his marriage to English actress Rachel Weisz in 2011. Regardless of his succession of the Bond role, Craig possessed the talent and presences that would have made him a star regardless.

Born on March 2, 1968 in Chester, England – also known as the Walled City – Craig grew up in nearby Liverpool, where his mother studied art at university and his stepfather, the painter Max Blond, plied his craft. At 16, he moved to London to train at the National Youth Theatre and later graduated from the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. In 1992, Craig made his film debut in the coming-of-age drama, “The Power of One,” wherein he played an Afrikaner soldier who beats and humiliates a white South African boxer (Stephen Dorff) trained by a black man (Morgan Freeman). Craig then appeared in “Genghis Cohn” (A&E, 1993), a satire about a Nazi SS officer (Robert Lindsay) confronted with the ghost of a Jewish comedian (Antony Sher) he killed in a concentration camp. After playing a commoner involved in a forbidden love with King Arthur’s daughter in the children’s fantasy, “A Kid in King Arthur’s Court” (1995), Craig gained fame in native England playing a hapless musician turned homeless person in the BBC’s “Our Friends in the North” (1996), an ambitious nine-part serial about the lives of four friends spanning thirty years.

In the PBS adaptation of Daniel Defoe’s “Moll Flanders” (1996), he played the enterprising bride’s one true love. He next appeared in the romantic thriller, “Obsession” (1997), wherein he was one of several characters whose divergent lives cross in Berlin. The period biopic, “Love is the Devil” (1998), offered him an opportunity to expand his range. Playing petty thief George Dyer, renowned painter Francis Bacon’s lover and artistic inspiration, Craig earned critical kudos in a film otherwise subjected to mixed reviews. A return to PBS in “The Ice House” (1998) found Craig playing an assistant investigator who doubts the Chief Inspector’s conclusion that a recently discovered corpse is the dead husband of a woman previously suspected in his disappearance. That same year, he appeared in “Elizabeth,” the widely acclaimed historical biopic starring an Oscar-snubbed Cate Blanchett as the Virgin Queen.

After landing major roles in smaller projects, including the World War I drama “The Trench” (1999) and the late 19th century drama “Love and Rage” (1999), Craig earned a British Independent Film Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of a schizophrenic man adjusting to the real world after his release from an institution in “Some Voices” (2000). He next appeared in a supporting role in the bland and uninspired romantic adventure, “I Dreamed of Africa” (2000), starring a well-meaning Kim Basinger. Craig then made the jump to larger Hollywood fare, appearing as old flame and fellow tomb raider Alex West in the live-action take on the popular video game, “Lara Croft: Tomb Raider” (2001), starring Angelina Jolie. In “Road to Perdition” (2002), he was the angry son of an Irish mobster (Paul Newman) who treats one of his hit men (Tom Hanks) like the son he never had. He next played poet Ted Hughes, husband to feminist icon Sylvia Plath (Gwyneth Paltrow), who committed suicide after he left their deteriorated marriage, in the uneven biopic, “Sylvia” (2003).

Craig caused a stir in the unsettling erotic drama, “The Mother” (2004), playing a man who beds a woman (Anne Reid) twice his age while sleeping with her daughter. The stark May-December romance earned rave reviews, but made little impression at the box office. After a stint as a university professor stalked by another man (Rhys Ifans) in the Hitchcockian “Enduring Love” (2004), he was an inmate at an institute for the criminally insane in the derivative thriller, “The Jacket” (2005). Meanwhile, the Bond rumors began to swirl amidst the release of “Layer Cake” (2005), a crime comedy from Matthew Vaughn, producer of “Snatch” (2001) and “Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels” (1999). Craig played a cocaine dealer seeking early retirement who is forced by a crime boss to find the missing daughter of an old pal (Michael Gambon). Meanwhile, Craig was cast by Steven Spielberg to co-star in “Munich” (2005), the true story about the massacre of Israeli athletes by Palestinian terrorists at the 1972 Olympics and the secret Mossad mission to exact revenge. Craig delivered a razor-edged performance as the one member of the team who whole-heartedly embraces the righteousness of their mission.

Just prior to the release of “Munich” and after months of speculation, Craig was officially revealed as the next James Bond in October 2005, becoming only the second British actor to play the role, though he held the distinction of being the first blond. Initially, Craig was greeted with concern – and in some corners, outright scorn – from critics, who felt his blond hair and relatively short stature at under six-feet tall, went against author Ian Fleming’s original vision of the character. Adding injury to insult, Craig reportedly lost two teeth while filming a fight scene, but it turned out that he had simply lost a crown. Nonetheless, the media hounds enjoyed their continued snipping at the actor’s heels. When “Casino Royal” (2006) was released, however, critics suddenly changed their tune, stating that the film was one of the best in years and that Craig rivaled Sean Connery with his complex and in-depth take on the Bond character. Meanwhile, Craig starred opposite Nicole Kidman in “The Invasion” (2007), voiced Lord Asriel in “The Golden Compass” (2007), and played a hedonistic British actor nearing the end of his career in “Flashbacks of a Fool” (2008).

Of course Craig returned to the James Bond role for the highly-anticipated “Quantum of Solace” (2008), but fans were roundly disappointed with Craig’s second go-round because of a weak storyline and over-reliance on a flash-cut editing. Still, the actor was generally praised for his depiction of Britain’s most famous spy. Craig went on to star in director Ed Zwick’s World War II drama, “Defiance” (2008), in which he played a simple farmer who, along with his brother (Liev Schreiber), turns a group of Jewish refugees into a crack team of freedom fighters against the Nazi regime. He next starred in the high-profile “Cowboys & Aliens” (2011), a sci-fi/Western hybrid set in 1873 in which he played an unwelcome stranger in the fear-gripped town of Absolution who wears a mysterious wristband that helps in the fight against an alien invasion. While plans for the 23rd Bond movie were put on hold due to the financial struggles of MGM, Craig earned considerable attention for his starring performance opposite a completely transformed Rooney Mara in the U.S. remake of “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” (2011). Craig played crusading journalist, Mikael Blomkvist, who investigates the 40-year-old disappearance of a woman from a wealthy family with an emotionally disturbed computer hacker (Mara). Once MGM put its house in order, Craig returned to play Bond in “Skyfall” (2012), in which 007 is presumed dead, only to be used by M (Judi Dench) to track down a notorious criminal (Javier Bardem) who has a crucial personal connection to both.

The above TCM overview can also be accessed online here.

Colin O’Donoghue
Colin O'Donoghue
Colin O’Donoghue

Colin ODonoghue was born in Drogheda, Co. Louth in 1980.   Colin ODonoghue starred for several seasons in RTE’s popular drama series “The Clinic” and also featured in the mini-series “The Tudors”.  

In 2010 he completed a major role in “The Rite” with Anthony Hopkins.   Colin ODonoghue  is now starring in the hit U.S. tv series “Once Upon A Time”.

IMDB entry:

O’Donoghue was born and raised in Drogheda, County Louth, in a Roman Catholic family. He initially attended Dundalk Grammar School, and then The Gaiety School of Acting in Dublin. At age 16, O’Donoghue went to Paris, France, for a month to learn the French language. Colin’s early career was mainly split between theatre and television work in Ireland and the UK. In 2003, Colin won the Irish Film and Television Award for “Best New Talent” for his role as Norman in “Home For Christmas.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: christina

Colin ODonoghue was born in Drogheda, Co. Louth in 1980.   Colin ODonoghue starred for several seasons in RTE’s popular drama series “The Clinic” and also featured in the mini-series “The Tudors”.  

In 2010 he completed a major role in “The Rite” with Anthony Hopkins.   Colin ODonoghue  is now starring in the hit U.S. tv series “Once Upon A Time”.

IMDB entry:

O’Donoghue was born and raised in Drogheda, County Louth, in a Roman Catholic family. He initially attended Dundalk Grammar School, and then The Gaiety School of Acting in Dublin.

At age 16, O’Donoghue went to Paris, France, for a month to learn the French language. Colin’s early career was mainly split between theatre and television work in Ireland and the UK.

In 2003, Colin won the Irish Film and Television Award for “Best New Talent” for his role as Norman in “Home For Christmas.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: christina

Ted McGinley
Ted McGinley

Ted McGinley was born in 1957 in Newport Beach, California.   He began his career as a male model and was featured on the cover of GQ magazine where he was spotted and offered work as  an actor in the TV series “Happy Days”.   He went on to work on “Dynasty” and such series as “Married …….With Children”.   His films include “Young Doctors in Love” in 1982, “Revenge of the Nerds” and “Face the Music”.

IMDB entry:

Theodore Martin ‘Ted’ McGinley was born on May 30, 1958 in Newport Beach, California. He is perhaps best known for his long-running roles in the television series Happy Days(1974), The Love Boat (1977), Dynasty (1981), Married with Children (1987) and The West Wing (1999). Formerly a male model, McGinley was spotted by a casting director after appearing in the GQ magazine, and was subsequently offered the role of Roger Phillips in Happy Days (1974). However, the veteran television star is no stranger to film either, having appeared in a string of features including Young Doctors in Love (1982),Revenge of the Nerds (1984), Wayne’s World 2 (1993), Major League: Back to the Minors(1998) and Pearl Harbor (2001).

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Matt Lee-Williams

The above IMDB entry can be accessed online here.

Genevieve O’Reilly
Genevieve O'Reilly
Genevieve O’Reilly

Genevieve O’Reilly was born in 1977 in Dublin.   She moved to Australia at the age of 20 and pursued a career in acting.   Whilst in Australia she acted in the two Matrix sequels.   In 2005 she came to London and her films since then have included “The Young Victoria” and “Forget Me Not”.   In 2016 she received rave reviews for her performance for TV’s “The Secret”.

Neil Jackson
Neil Jackson
Neil Jackson
Neil Jackson
Neil Jackson

Neil Jackson was born in Luton in 1976.   His acting debut came in “Heartbeat” in 2002.   His films include “Alexander”, “Breakfast on Pluto”, “Quantum of Solace” and “Push”.   He has recently been seen in the new series of “Upstairs, Downstairs” with Jean Marsh and Eileen Atkins.

Interview in “Female First”:

Neil Jackson will be name familiar with TV addicts, but now he’s decided to change tack and take on the world of music.

The Upstairs Downstairs actor releases his first collection of tracks ‘The Little Things’ this February and we talked to him about the album, his musical influences and his the acting career he’s nothing like leaving behind.

You’re debut single ‘Holding A Candle’ came out in December, what was it like when that released for you?

Exciting, nerve wracking, it’s funny because I’ve experienced it all before in my film career. You work on something, and it can be in the works for years when it’s finally released it feels like such a big release and a celebration. But because you work on something like this so closely for such a period of time, it’s just the next natural step from that really.

It was very cool to wake up on December 3rd and have people contacting you about it and seeing all the people being really excited about it.

So what made you make the switch in focus to music then?

I’ve been a musician for a long time; I’ve been writing songs and strumming on the guitar for about 13 years now. I always wrote songs and was in bands as a kid so music has always been on the backburner and something that I’ve wanted to turn my attention to.

Every time I wanted to put more attention to it over the years, a big acting job would come up and I’d be in Vancouver for six months shooting. The time finally felt right now though. It was New Year’s Eve 2011 and I was sat with some friends, playing my guitar and they all loved the songs so I just thought this is the year I need to do it.

So I got in touch with a friend of mine Nick Mailing, who produced the album and he loved them too, so we just started working on it straight away.

What can we expect from the album?

It’s a very personal, introspective album. Every single song on there is a personal moment that happened to me. It’s almost got an autobiographical feel to it. It’s about my life, my feelings and my emotions. I wanted it to be an acoustic album, so every single instrument is played live and acoustically.

The same with the gigs, we don’t have electric instruments on stage. For me, that enhances the personal feel of the album. I wanted it to feel like a very personal journey the listener goes on when they listen to the songs. I think we’ve achieved that, I’m really happy with the end results.

Who do you think as a musician you’ve been influenced by?

I love Damien Rice, he’s been very influential, especially with a couple of the slower songs that have string elements. I love the haunting way he uses those as an extra character, playing them off melody in a way that just adds depth to his songs.

I’ve always listened to a lot of American singer/songwriter types. I like to have the juxtaposition of the beachy Jack Johnson vibe and the more lamenting, haunting style of Damian Rice.

You’re going to back on our TV screens in Lightfields later this year, so what can you tell us about that?

We shot Lightfields in the summer and it’s a five part ghost story of ITV. It’s about a young girl dying on a farm in 1942 and through three generations, up until modern day, the ghost haunts the family as they continue to figure out the true reason behind the death.

So with you also being in Upstairs Downstairs, do you have a passion for period pieces?

I love the period stuff, especially the pre-world war stuff. We went back to around that time for Lightfields and I love that era, it’s got a real romance to it.

In terms of storytelling, the conundrum that comes in with having mobile phones, Facebook and Google, they’re real hurdles as they make things to convenient. Especially a period ghost story or a whodunit, you don’t have the convenience of DNA or all the information on hand.

It means that it’s much more character based so I do really enjoy those kinds of stories.

On Upstairs Downstairs you had to gt back in the boxing ring. As an ex-boxer, what was that like for you?

That was fun. They insist they didn’t write it with knowledge I was a boxer before, but somewhere it must have filtered through. It was great fun, the kid I ended up fighting with was up Team GB selection and it was really good to get back in the ring and flex those muscles.

I ended up training three times a week to get myself back into shape. That was before I read the script though and found out that my character actually has to not be very good at it.

So the hardest thing was trying to look as if I didn’t know how to throw a punch after spending several years doing the exact opposite.

You’ve done TV in both the UK and the US. What’s the big difference between the two?

Scale is the major thing. It’s starting to change now with things like Downton Abbey and Sherlock that are really making a worldwide splash, but America tends to make shows for the world to enjoy while Britain predominantly makes shows for British people to enjoy. If the rest of the world like them, then that’s a great. So that’s the scale thing again.

Over there they have a lot more money, they have a lot more scope and broader distribution. They’re just a lot bigger shows. Bigger doesn’t mean better, sometimes it can be a whole lot worse because the personal touch doesn’t get put to it.

You also had a film you’d written The Passage pick up prizes at film festivals, what was that like?

That was amazing. We were final selection at the Toronto Film Festival and then won the Audience Award at the Durango Film Festival down in California. So not only to think that the film got made, because it’s always a massive gamble, but to think that audiences responded so well is really humbling.

It was a great story to be a part of and something I wanted to get on screen for some time and quite gratifying to see it there. I’ve actually still got the poster with the Durango stamp on it on my wall. It’s good to see it there.

You’ve lived out in America for seven years now. Any thoughts of coming back to the UK full time?

I don’t know really. Actually, in 2012, I came back to the UK seven times throughout the year, so I was in the UK more than America. I was back in 2011 as well for Upstairs Downstairs, so it almost feels like I’m back here anyway.

My home and friends are over in America, but I never really lost connection with the UK and I come back here a lot. Who knows really, everything changes so quickly. I do love Britain and I can never imagine not wanting to come over here.

I do feel very British and it’s something I joke about with my girlfriend and my friends over there. If I’ve not been back for a while, it feels like I need to get my fix, or as much as I love the Americans, they don’t have the same sense of humour and energy as the Brits.

So, what’s the plan for you in 2013?

It’s gonna be quite a big year for me. I’m producing my first film. I’ve also got a script I’ve written called Eternal which is being produced this year that we’re getting finance for at the moment. I’m also going to start recording a second album in the summer, around about June or July I’ll be heading back into the studio.

Then I’ve kind of put everything on hold. I didn’t take an acting job for December and January so I can fully focus on the music. After the album’s out though, I’m going to start looking at scripts again.

Neil Jackson’s debut Album ‘The Little Things’ is out on the 4th Feb 2013 and is available to download here: www.neiljackson.me/store/

The above “FemaleFirst” interview can also be accessed online here.

Colin Firth
Colin Firth
Colin Firth

Colin Firth was born in  Hampshire in 1960.   He made his film debut in 1984 with “Another Country” with Rupert Everett, both of them repeating the roles they created on stage.   His other films include “A Month in the Country”, “The Secret Garden”, “Apartment Zero” and “The English Patient.   His career highlights include Mr Darcy in a television adaptation of “Pride and Prejudice” and the movies “A Single Man” and “The King’s Speech”.

“Britain has two very fine actors, both called Firth – Colin & Peter, who are not related.   If the country still had a film industry both might take their place at the heirs to Donat, Mason and Guinness.   Peter Firth has some impressive credits and was notably good in ‘Tess’ and ‘Letter From Brezhnev’, but he is now in his thirties.   Colin Firth has attracted more international attention and may find the parts he can play overseas.   At present, he seems to be, with Daniel Day Lewis, the best young actor the British have. – David Shipman in “The Great Movie Stars – The Independent Years”. (1991).

 

TCM Overview:

British actor Colin Firth achieved international renown in 1995 with his arguably definitive screen portrayal of Fitzwilliam Darcy in the BBC adaptation of Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice.” He began his career in West End dramas and on the big screen in period, often literary adaptations, before a number of successful romantic comedies including “Bridget Jones’ Diary” (2001) and broader historic dramas like “The Girl with the Pearl Earring” (2003) turned him into “the thinking woman’s heartthrob.” While the moniker stuck throughout his career, Firth continued to showcase untapped facets of his talent in independent films, family-friendly hits, and gutsy cable movies. With noted turns in “Love, Actually” (2003), “Nanny McPhee” (2006) and “Mamma Mia!” (2008), Firth displayed both serious acting chops and an easygoing screen presence that continually pleased audiences. But the actor took his career to a new level with “A Single Man” (2009) and “The King’s Speech” (2010). The roles were tour-de-force performances that earned Firth several award nominations and wins and elevated his career to new heights.

Colin Firth was born on Sept. 10, 1960, the son of academic lecturers who raised their young family in Nigeria for four years before settling in England. Firth seemed unlikely to follow in his family’s footsteps and by his early teens, had developed a keen interest in acting, partially inspired by British great Paul Scofield and his performance in “A Man for All Seasons” (1966). Firth began dramatic studies with the National Youth Theatre at 18 and went on to make a significant impression at The Drama Centre London. Fresh out of that program, Firth was surprised to find himself cast as the lead in a West End production of Julian Mitchell’s “Another Country,” replacing Daniel Day-Lewis in the role of upper class spy-in-the-making, Guy Bennett. Over the next decade, Firth enjoyed a steady if low-profile living as an actor, making his screen debut in the 1984 film version of “Another Country” and sticking close to his stage roots in George Bernard Shaw’s “The Doctor’s Dilemma” and “The Lonely Road,” a psychological family drama that earned Firth critical notice. Dipping his t in romantic lead territory, he co-starred opposite Greta Scacchi in a small screen remake of George Cukor’s “Camille” (CBS, 1984), and anchored the 1986 British miniseries “Lost Empires,” playing a touring entertainer in early 20th century England. He solidified his standing as an actor of substance and heady range with a return to the London stage in Eugene O’Neill’s “Desire Under the Elms.”

Firth showcased his darker side in “A Month in the Country (1987), where he essayed a haunted World War I veteran who romances a vicar’s wife, and “Apartment Zero” (1988), a rare contemporary role where he made an impression as a lonely and sheltered film lover whose life is changed when he takes in a mysterious American boarder. In 1989, he earned his first acting awards, including one from the Royal Television Society, for his portrayal of paralyzed soldier Robert Lawrence in the TV biopic, “Tumbledown.” Later in the year Milos Forman’s “Valmont” (1989) marked Firth’s entry into the American studio film world, and he was both appealing and appalling as the rich and too clever 18th century count in the adaptation of the classic French novel Les Liasons Dangereuses. Unfortunately, the film was overshadowed by the previous year’s lavish take on the same material, “Dangerous Liaisons” (1988).

Following appearances in a number of European-produced films that were little-seen across the pond, as well as London stage runs in a pair of comedies, Firth truly made his international breakthrough in 1995. The Dublin University-set romance “Circle of Friends” (1995) was moderately popular, but the BBC production of “Pride and Prejudice” (1995) was wildly popular in Britain and exported to the U.S. (A&E, 1996). Suddenly, Firth found himself dubbed a “heartthrob” for his take on the aloof, arrogant, but ultimately redeemable 18th century suitor Fitzwilliam Darcy in the adaptation of what was considered literary history’s first romantic comedy. He was recognized by the BAFTA and National Television awards with a Best Actor nomination. The following year, Firth offered a stoic turn as the cuckold husband of Kristin Scott Thomas’ in “The English Patient” (1996), the Oscar winner of Best Picture of the Year among other countless accolades.

Firth’s starring role in Nick Hornby’s football-themed story “Fever Pitch” (1997) was little seen in the States, but “Shakespeare in Love” (1998) was a certified blockbuster that swept the Oscars and BAFTAs. In the fictionalized fable of the Bard’s off-book romance, Firth cut a dashing figure in doublet and hose in the comic, slightly villainous role of the Earl of Wessex. He excelled as an eccentric inventor in the 1930s-set “My Life So Far” (1999) before taking on a bit of post-modern casting by playing Mark Darcy – a character inspired by his glowering interpretation of the Austen hero – in the film version of “Bridget Jones’s Diary” (2001). His performance in the hugely successful chick flick fueled Firth’s growing cult of female admirers, earned the actor a BAFTA nomination, and also shifted the tide towards more contemporary and romantic comedy roles. An Emmy-nominated performance as a Nazi secretary of state in HBO’s “Conspiracy” (2001) and a remake of “The Importance of Being Earnest” (2002) maintained Firth’s close ties with headier, more literary material, while a 2003 appearance as Amanda Bynes’ unknowing English father in the light-as-feather teen comedy “What a Girl Wants” (2003) and a role in the romantic ensemble “Love Actually” (2003) proved that the popular actor had mainstream crossover appeal. He returned to period dramas but cemented his romantic lead status with his portrayal of 17th Century artist Johannes Vermeer in “Girl With a Pearl Earring” (2003) – a tale that projected an intimate relationship between the famed painter and the young subject (Scarlett Johansson) of his most renowned work of art.

Firth reprised Mark Darcy for the sequel blockbuster “Bridget Jones and the Edge of Reason” (2004), which found his character in a series of ups and downs and misunderstandings with neurotic Jones, despite finally having become her official boyfriend. The solid mid-forties actor entered the family film fray in 2005 as a harried widower with seven unruly kids in the critically-lauded fable “Nanny McPhee.” In a pair of very different family tales, Firth starred as an author coming to terms with the troubled relationship with his dying father in the limited release “When Did You Last See Your Father?” (2007), and played a single father and ill-chosen love interest of Helen Hunt in “Then She Found Me” (2007). Firth carried on in the romantic comedy vein, co-starring alongside Uma Thurman in the critically reviled “The Accidental Husband” (2007) and in the big screen adaptation of the Abba-inspired stage musical “Mamma Mia” (2008), as one of Meryl Streep’s character’s former lovers and the possible father of her daughter.

In a rare appearance in a dark thriller, Firth also starred in “Genova” (2008), playing a widowed father who attempts to make a fresh start with his young daughters in Italy, only to find the past coming back to haunt him. Following a starring turn in the British remake “St. Trinian’s” (2009) and a co-starring role in the romantic comedy “Easy Virtue” (2009), Firth played Fred, the nephew and only living relative to Ebenezer Scrooge (Jim Carrey), in Disney’s take on the Charles Dickens classic, “A Christmas Carol” (2009). Firth turned to more challenging dramatic fare when he starred in “A Single Man” (2009), playing a gay British college professor in 1962 who struggles to find meaning in his life after the death of his long-time partner (Matthew Goode). Working for first-time feature director, fashion designer Tom Ford on “The Single Man,” Firth gave a conflicted, layered performance which garnered the actor several award nominations at year’s end, including nods from the Independent Spirit, Golden Globes, Screen Actors Guild and Academy for Best Actor. He next delivered another exemplary dramatic performance in “The King’s Speech” (2010), playing King George VI, who struggles to overcome a debilitating speech impediment during a time of national crisis. The king enlists the help of unorthodox speech therapist, Lionel Logue (Geoffrey Rush), a relationship that begins discordantly, only to grow into an unbreakable bond. “The King’s Speech” received widespread critical acclaim and found its way onto many year-end Top Ten lists. While the film had exceptional supporting performances from Rush and Helena Bonham Carter, it was Firth who earned the most adulation, including Academy Award, Golden Globe and SAG wins for Best Actor.

The above TCM overview can be accessed also online here.