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Bill Nighy

 
Actor: Bill Nighy
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: 2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Comedy
  • Career Highlights: Still Crazy, The Constant Gardener, Valkyrie
  • First Major Screen Credit: Hitler's SS: Portrait in Evil (1985)

Biography

BAFTA-winning veteran actor Bill Nighy gained international recognition in 2003 thanks to his role as a Keith Richards-esque former rock star in the hit romantic comedy Love Actually. Nighy had remained a relatively obscure figure even in his native England until a memorable turn as a controversial politician in series three of the acclaimed television comedy drama Auf Wiedersehen, Pet found him finally thrust into the spotlight in 2002. A Caterham, Surrey native, Nighy excelled in English language and literature early on; however, even though his journalistic instincts were strong, his lack of education prevented him from a career in the media. Work as a bike messenger for Field Magazine helped the aspiring writer keep his toes in the business, and a suggestion by his girlfriend that Nighy try his hand at acting eventually prompted him to enroll in the Guildford School of Dance and Drama. As the gears began to turn and his career as an actor started to gain momentum, Nighy was encouraged to stick with the craft after landing a series of small roles.

Though British television provided Nighy with most of his early exposure, supporting roles in such features as Curse of the Pink Panther (1983) and The Phantom of the Opera (1989) found the actor honing his skills and laying the groundwork for future feature success. Though Nighy stuck almost exclusively to the small screen in the early '90s, his supporting role in the 1993 Robin Williams film Being Human seemed to mark the beginning of a new stage in his career, focusing mainly on features. A part in the 1997 film Fairy Tale: A True Story found Nighy climbing the credits, and the following year he joined an impressive cast including Timothy Spall, Stephen Rea, and Billy Connolly in the rock comedy Still Crazy. It was his role in Still Crazy that gained Nighy his widest recognition to date -- earning the up-and-coming actor the Peter Sellers Evening Standard Award for Best Comedy Performance. Nighy's role as a conflicted husband who embarks on a heated extramarital affair in 2001's Lawless Heart continued his impressive career trajectory, and later that same year he would land a role in The Full Monty director Peter Cattaneo's jailbreak comedy Lucky Break.

A role in the long-running U.K. television series Auf Wiedersehen, Pet finally found Nighy earning some deserved recognition in 2002, and after a winning performance as the patriarch of an eccentric family in I Capture the Castle (2003), he continued to earned even more accolades for his performance in Love Actually. His part as an ancient vampire in the gothic action horror hit Underworld found Nighy's recognition factor rising for mainstream audiences on the other side of the pond, and before jetting into the future with The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy in 2005, the increasingly busy actor would appear in three feature films in 2004, including the horror comedy Shaun of the Dead, Doogal, and Enduring Love. By the time Nighy received an Emmy nomination for his role as a loved-starved civil servant falling for an enigmatic younger woman in the 2005 made-for-television romantic comedy-drama The Girl in the Café, television fans in both the U.S. and the U.K. knew well of Nighy's impressive range as an actor.

Yet another small-screen role in that same year's Gideon's Daughter allowed Nighy a chance to play a serious role once again. Playing a burned-out PR agent who is forced to reevaluate his life when his adult daughter threatens to cease all contact with him, Nighy gave a performance that moved critics and audiences alike, later earning him a Golden Globe for Best Actor in a Mini-Series or TV Movie. Soon the actor was venturing into lands of fantasy once again, however, reprising his role as Viktor in Underworld: Evolution, and taking to the high seas as the legendary squid-faced sailor Davy Jones (captain of the Flying Dutchman) in director Gore Verbinski's big-budget summer extravaganza Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest. That film, of course, became a predictable sensation (it grossed over one billion dollars worldwide) and (more than any of Nighy's prior efforts) launched the British actor into the public spotlight for audiences of all ages, who were understandably impressed with the presence he was able to exude onscreen despite the layers of makeup and CG it took to make him into a squid-man.

Nighy stayed the course of big-budget fantasy, with a turn as Alan Blunt in that same year's Alex Rider: Operation Stormbreaker, then signed on for another turn as Davy Jones in 2007's Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End, co-starring this time with the inspiration for some of his previous characters, Keith Richards.

Nighy has maintained a life partnership with veteran British stage and screen actress Diana Quick since 1981. Though the two don't subscribe to the legal institution of marriage (much like long-standing Hollywood couple Tim Robbins and Susan Sarandon), Nighy has been known to refer to Quick as his wife simply to avoid confusion. The couple's daughter, Mary Nighy, was born in 1984 and is also an actress. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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Bill Nighy

Bill Nighy in 2009
Born William Francis Nighy
12 December 1949 (1949-12-12) (age 59)
Caterham, Surrey, England, UK
Occupation Actor/Comedian
Years active 1975–present

William Francis "Bill" Nighy (pronounced /ˈnaɪ/;[1] born 12 December 1949) is an English actor and comedian. He started working in theatre and television, before his first cinema role in 1981, and is perhaps best known to international film audiences for his roles in Love Actually, Shaun of the Dead, Notes on a Scandal, Underworld, Auf Wiedersehen, Pet, Valkyrie, Pirates of the Caribbean, Hot Fuzz, Stormbreaker and lending his voices to animated films Flushed Away and The Magic Roundabout. He is also known for being the narrator on Meerkat Manor. He will also play the role of Rufus Scrimgeour, the Minister for Magic in the upcoming films Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.

Contents

Early life

Nighy was born in Caterham, Surrey. His mother, Catherine Josephine (née Whittaker), was a psychiatric nurse who was raised in Glasgow, and his father, Alfred Martin Nighy, managed a car garage and worked as a mechanic.[2][3][4][5] He has two older siblings, Martin and Anna. Nighy attended The John Fisher School, Purley. He trained at the Guildford School of Acting, formerly known as The Guildford School of Dance and Drama.

Career

After two seasons at the Everyman Theatre, Liverpool, Nighy made his London stage debut at the National Theatre in an epic staging of Ken Campbell and Chris Langham's Illuminatus!, which opened the new Cottesloe Theatre on 4 March 1977, and went on to appear in two David Hare premieres, also at the National.

He has starred in many radio and television dramas, notably the BBC serial The Men's Room (1991). He claimed that the serial, an Ann Oakley novel adapted by Laura Lamson, was the job which launched his career.[6] More recently he has featured in the thriller State of Play (2003) and costume drama He Knew He Was Right (2004). He played Samwise Gamgee in the 1981 BBC Radio dramatization of The Lord of the Rings (where he was credited as William Nighy), and appeared in the 1980s BBC Radio versions of Yes Minister episodes. He starred alongside Stephen Moore and Lesley Sharp in the acclaimed short radio drama Kerton's Story first aired in 1996. He had a starring role in the 2002 return of Auf Wiedersehen, Pet, portraying crooked politician Jeffrey Grainger. He has also made a guest appearance in the BBC Radio 4 series Baldi.

Two of Nighy's most acclaimed stage performances were in National Theatre productions. Taking the role of Bernard Nightingale, an unscrupulous university don, in Tom Stoppard's Arcadia (1993), he engaged in witty exchanges with Felicity Kendal, playing the role of Hannah Jarvis, an author; and he played a consultant psychiatrist in Joe Penhall's Blue/Orange (2000), for which he won an Olivier Award nomination for Best Actor, and which transferred to the West End at the Duchess Theatre the following year.

Bill Nighy outside the Music Box Theatre on Broadway following a performance of The Vertical Hour.

Nighy received some recognition by American audiences for his acclaimed portrayal of overaged rock star Ray Simms in the 1998 film Still Crazy. In 2003, Nighy played the role of the Vampire Elder Viktor in the American production Underworld and returned in the same role for the sequel Underworld: Evolution in 2006 and again the same role in the prequel Underworld: Rise of the Lycans. In February 2004, he was awarded the BAFTA Film Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role as shameless, washed-up rocker Billy Mack in Love Actually (a role foreshadowed by his Still Crazy character) and followed this up at the BAFTA Television Awards in April with the Best Actor award for State of Play. He also appeared in the comedy Shaun of the Dead.

In early 2004, The Sunday Times reported that Nighy's was on the short-list for role of the Doctor in the 2005 revival of the BBC television series Doctor Who.[7](Christopher Eccleston ultimately filled the role.)

In 2005, he appeared as Slartibartfast in the film adaptation of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, and also in the one-off BBC One comedy-drama The Girl in the Café. In February 2006, he appeared in scriptwriter Stephen Poliakoff's one-off drama, Gideon's Daughter. Nighy played the lead character, Gideon, a successful events organiser who begins to lose touch with the world around him. This performance won him a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Mini-series or TV Movie in January 2007. Also in 2006, Nighy made his Broadway debut at the Music Box Theatre alongside Julianne Moore in The Vertical Hour, directed by Sam Mendes.

Nighy appeared in Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, where he played the principal villain, Davy Jones. He reprised the role in the 2007 sequel, Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End. He also provides the narration for the 2007 BBC series Meerkat Manor. Recently, he played the role of Richard Hart in Notes on a Scandal, for which he was nominated for a London Film Critics Circle award. He has twice played burned-out rock stars: Ray Simms in Still Crazy and Billy Mack in Love Actually. Nighy also appeared as General Friedrich Olbricht, one of the principal conspirators, in the 2008 film Valkyrie. He had played an SS officer in the 1985 Hitler's SS: Portrait in Evil, which examined, inter alia, the struggle between the SA and the Nazi Party leadership (supported by the SS). In Underworld: Rise of the Lycans, Nighy reprised the role of Viktor. Nighy is also set to star in a film Wild Target[8] alongside Emily Blunt. It will be filmed on Isle of Man and London.

In July 2009, he announced he will play Rufus Scrimgeour in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.[9] Ironically, Nighy had already worked with director David Yates three times and with the majority of Harry Potter cast in previous movies being English, Nighy, when asked about the role in Half-Blood Prince after shooting on the film was completed, joked, "I think I am the only remaining English actor not to work in Harry Potter."[10] When finally cast as Minister for Magic Rufus Scrimgeour in Deathly Hallows, Nighy said, "I am no longer the only English actor not to be in Harry Potter and I am very pleased."[11]

It has also been announced that Nighy will star in the biographical films about the life of Elliot Spoerer, The Rise and Fall of the Real RocknRolla, playing Spoerer's grandfather, Jimmy Makin. The film is currently in pre-production and no date has been set for release.[citation needed]

Personal life

Nighy shared a 27-year-relationship with British actress Diana Quick,[12] with whom he has a daughter, actress and writer Mary Nighy. Bill Nighy currently lives in London and still spends a great deal of time with Diana.

He is a supporter of Crystal Palace Football Club and is the Patron of the CPFRIS (Crystal Palace F.C. Fast Results & Information Service) Disabled Children's Club.[13] He is also a patron of the Ann Craft Trust.[14]

He has Dupuytren's contracture, a condition which causes the ring and perhaps other fingers of each hand to be permanently bent inwards towards the palm.

Work

Theatre

Radio

Filmography

Upcoming

References

  1. ^ Johanna Schneller (17 September 2009). "If it's candy, not caviar, the mag's in trouble". The Globe and Mail (Globe Review): pp. R1, R4 at R4. http://v1.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20090917.AFESTIVALGOER17ART1824/TPStory/TPEntertainment/. "[P]eople still don't know how to pronounce my name. ... It rhymes with sigh." 
  2. ^ The BILL NIGHY Experience
  3. ^ Bill Nighy biography
  4. ^ Bill Nighy: the thinking woman's bagel The Independent, 19 February 2006
  5. ^ Family Detective Telegraph Family History
  6. ^ Schiff, Amanda (2 December 2008). "Laura Lamson Obituary". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/dec/02/obituary-laura-lamson. Retrieved 2008-12-03. 
  7. ^ BBC - Doctor Who (David Tennant and Billie Piper)- News
  8. ^ Bill Nighy Is A Wild Target | Empire
  9. ^ Bill Nighy to star in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
  10. ^ http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2009/01/07/bill-nighy-still-waiting-for-david-yates-harry-potter-casting-call/
  11. ^ "Bill Nighy to star in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows". BBC. 2009-07-06. http://news.bbc.co.uk/cbbcnews/hi/newsid_8130000/newsid_8137100/8137104.stm. Retrieved 2009-07-06. 
  12. ^ Split between Nighy and Quick
  13. ^ Crystal Palace F.C. Disabled Childrens Club accessed 2 Jun 2007
  14. ^ Ann Craft Trust homepage
  15. ^ Duncan Macmillan (14 September 2009). "I Wish to Apologise for My Part in the Apocalypse". BBC. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00cj8db. Retrieved 14 September 2009. 
  16. ^ Simon Brett, dramatised by Jeremy Front (8 – 29 September 2009 (1 episode weekly)). "A Charles Paris Mystery: Dead Side of the Mic". BBC. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00ft5bj. Retrieved 16 September 2009. 

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