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Thomas Anthony "Tom" Hollander (born 25 August 1967) is an English actor who has appeared in productions such as Enigma, Gosford Park, Cambridge Spies, Pride and Prejudice and Pirates of the Caribbean.
[edit] Biography[edit] Early lifeTom Hollander was born in Bristol and raised in Oxford, Oxfordshire and attended the Dragon School and then Abingdon School. As a youngster, he was a member of the National Youth Theatre and the National Youth Music Theatre[3](then known as The Children's Music Theatre). In 1981, at fourteen years of age, he was awarded the lead role in a BBC dramatization of Leon Garfield's John Diamond.[4] He read English at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He was a member of the Footlights and the president of the Marlowe Society. Fellow student Sam Mendes directed him in several plays while they were at Cambridge, including a critically acclaimed production of Cyrano de Bergerac.[5] After finishing university and failing to secure a place at a drama school, he found work in theatre nevertheless. [edit] CareerHollander won the 1992 Ian Charleson Award for his performance in The Way of the World at the Lyric Hammersmith Theatre.[6] He had been nominated the previous year,[7] and was again nominated for his performances in The Government Inspector in 1997.[8] Hollander's film and television appearances include Absolutely Fabulous, Martha, Meet Frank, Daniel and Laurence, Wives and Daughters, Harry, Cambridge Spies, Gosford Park, The Lost Prince and Pride and Prejudice for which he received The Evening Standard Film Awards Comedy Award, and London Critics Circle Best Supporting Actor. He has worked repeatedly with Michael Gambon and Bill Nighy and is a good friend of James Purefoy. Although highly respected as a character actor and the recipient of several awards, many of his films will still play on his height (5' 5" / 165 cm). Hollander has created several memorable comedic characters that draw more on his physical energy and intensity than his height, such as the "brilliantly foul-mouthed" Leon in BBC Two's Freezing, described in The Times as a "braying swirl of ego and mania".[9] Like other experienced actors in Britain, Hollander has lent his vocal talents to a number of roles for BBC radio including Mosca in 2004's Volpone for Radio 3, and Frank Churchill in Jane Austen's Emma for Radio 4. He has voiced a young Joseph Merrick, the "Elephant Man"; a disembodied head named Enzio in an urban gothic comedy and recently, Leon Theremin, the Russian inventor famous for the electronic instrument that bears his name. He provided the vocal texture for Anthony Burgess' A Clockwork Orange recently with a "smooth, almost lyrical, crisp voice" that accomplished the task of rendering the extensive and unique slang of the book instantly understandable to readers.[10] Hollander provided a curious blend of sophistication and petty cruelty as Lord Cutler Beckett, the "heavy" in parts II and III of the Pirates of the Caribbean trilogy. From the popular films, he returned to the stage with the premiere of Joe Penhall's play Landscape with Weapon at the The Royal National Theatre. The play tracks the disintegration of an ordinary man realizing the consequences of his life's work, and his performance was hailed as "the best performance of a 'real' character ever to grace the National Theatre stage."[citation needed] He also appeared in the TNT miniseries The Company as Harold Adrian Russell Kim Philby, having previously played Guy Burgess in the BBC's Cambridge Spies. In 2008 he made a notable cameo appearance as King George III in the HBO mini-series John Adams, and ended the year as a memorable Col. Heinz Brandt in Valkyrie. In 2009, Hollander played a symphonic cellist in Joe Wright's The Soloist. It was his second outing for Wright, who cast him to great effect as the fevered suitor Mr. Collins in 2005's Pride and Prejudice. Hollander appeared in the lead role in Armando Iannucci's In the Loop as Secretary of State for International Development Simon Foster MP, which opened 17 April 2009; and later in the TV series The Thick Of It made by the same team. He also appeared as John Ruskin in BBC2's Desperate Romantics Hollander lives in Notting Hill, London. [edit] Selected filmography
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Categories: 1967 births | Living people | Alumni of Selwyn College, Cambridge | English film actors | English stage actors | English television actors | English musical theatre actors | Royal National Theatre Company members | Old Dragons | Old Abingdonians | People from Bristol | People from Oxford | |||||||||||
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