Rupert Graves
Rupert Graves | |
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Graves at the Made in Dagenham film premiere in September 2010
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Born | Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, England, UK |
30 June 1963
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1978–present |
Spouse(s) | Susie Lewis (m. 2001) |
Children | 5 |
Website | www |
Rupert Graves (born 30 June 1963) is an English film, television, and theatre actor. He is known for his roles in A Room with a View, Maurice, The Madness of King George and The Forsyte Saga. Since 2010 he has starred as DI Lestrade in the BBC television series Sherlock.
Contents
Early life
Graves was born in Weston-super-Mare in Somerset, England,[1] to Mary Lousilla (née Roberts) Graves, a travel coordinator, and Richard Harding Graves, a music teacher and musician.[2]
Education
Graves was educated at Wyvern Community School,[3] a state comprehensive school in his home town of Weston-super-Mare, which he left at the age of fifteen. The school has since closed and re-opened as the Hans Price Academy.
Career
Graves's first job after leaving school was as a circus clown. He has appeared in over twenty-five films and over thirty-five television productions; he has also appeared on stage.
Graves first came to prominence in costume-drama adaptations of E. M. Forster's novels A Room with a View (1985) and Maurice (1987), before going on to appear in films including A Handful of Dust (1988), the Oscar nominated The Madness of King George (1994), Different for Girls (1996), and Intimate Relations (1996).
Graves's role in Intimate Relations won him the Best Actor award at the 1996 Montreal World Film Festival.[4] He was also acclaimed for his portrayal of Young Jolyon Forsyte in the television miniseries The Forsyte Saga (2002).[5]
Personal life
In 1987 in his hometown of Weston-super-Mare, Graves met Yvonne, a stained glass artist (later a trained gardener), in a café. They lived together in Stoke Newington, and he helped her raise her two daughters, who were 10 and 14 years old when the relationship began. Graves and Yvonne were together for 13 years.[6]
In September 2000, shortly after Graves's relationship with Yvonne ended, he met Australian-born production coordinator Suzanne Lewis at the opening-night party for The Caretaker, a play he was appearing in at the time with Michael Gambon. They married, and have five children together: Joseph, Ella, Noah, Isaac, and Zoe.[7]
Filmography
Film
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1985 | A Room with a View | Freddie Honeychurch | |
1987 | Maurice | Alec Scudder | |
1988 | A Handful of Dust | John Beaver | |
1990 | The Plot to Kill Hitler | Axel von dem Busche | |
1990 | The Children | Gerald Ormerod | |
1991 | Where Angels Fear to Tread | Philip Herriton | |
1992 | Damage | Martyn Fleming | |
1992 | The Sheltering Desert | Hermann Korn | |
1994 | The Madness of King George | Robert Fulke Greville | |
1996 | Different for Girls | Paul Prentice | |
1996 | The Innocent Sleep | Alan Terry | |
1996 | Intimate Relations | Harold Guppy | Montreal World Film Festival - Best Actor |
1997 | Bent | Officer on train | |
1997 | Mrs Dalloway | Septimus Warren Smith | |
1998 | The Soldier's Leap | Christian | Short film |
1998 | Sweet Revenge | Oliver Knightly | |
1999 | All My Loved Ones | Nicholas Winton | Original title: Vsichni moji blízcí |
1999 | Dreaming of Joseph Lees | Joseph Lees | |
2000 | Room to Rent | Mark | |
2002 | Extreme Ops | Jeffrey | |
2005 | Rag Tale | Eddy Taylor | |
2006 | V for Vendetta | Dominic | |
2007 | Death at a Funeral | Robert | |
2007 | Intervention | Mark | |
2007 | The Waiting Room | George | |
2010 | Made in Dagenham | Peter Hopkins | |
2012 | Fast Girls | David Temple | |
2015 | Bone in the Throat | Rupert | based on Anthony Bourdain's novel |
Television
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1978 | Return of the Saint | Prefect | Episode: "Yesterday's Hero" | |
1979 | The Famous Five | Yan | 2 episodes | |
1981 | Vice Versa | Tipping | 6 episodes | |
1982 | All for Love | Episode: "Mona" | ||
1983 | St. Ursula's in Danger | Teddy | ||
1983 | Good and Bad at Games | Guthrie | ||
1984 | Puccini | Tonio | ||
1987 | Fortunes of War | Simon Boulderstone | 3 episodes | |
1991 | A Private Affair | Milton | ||
1992 | Inspector Morse | Billy | Episode: "Happy Families" | |
1993 | Screen One | Neil | Episode: "Royal Celebration" | |
1994 | Doomsday Gun | Jones | ||
1994 | Open Fire | David Martin | ||
1995 | Harry | Dominic Collier | Series 2, Episode 6 | |
1996 | 1914-1918 | 3 episodes | ||
1996 | The Tenant of Wildfell Hall | Arthur Huntingdon | 3 episodes | |
1999 | The Blonde Bombshell | Dennis Hamilton | ||
1999 | Cleopatra | Octavian | ||
2000 | Take a Girl Like You | Patrick Standish | TV movie | |
2002 | The Forsyte Saga | Young Jolyon Forsyte | ||
2003 | The Forsyte Saga: To Let | Young Jolyon Forsyte | 4 episodes | |
2003 | Charles II: The Power & the Passion | George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham | 4 episodes | |
2004 | Pride | Linus | Voice only | |
2005 | Spooks | William Sampson | Series 4, Episode 2 | |
2005 | A Waste of Shame | William Shakespeare | ||
2006 | Son of the Dragon | The Lord of the North | ||
2007 | To Be First | Dr. Christiaan Barnard | ||
2007 | Clapham Junction | Robin Cape | ||
2007 | The Dinner Party | Roger | ||
2008 | Ashes to Ashes | Danny Moore | Series 1, Episode 2 | |
2008 | Waking the Dead | Colonel John Garrett | 2 episodes | |
2008 | Midnight Man | Daniel Cosgrave | 3 episodes | |
2008 | God on Trial | Mordechai | ||
2008 | Marple: A Pocket Full of Rye | Lance Fortescue | ||
2009 | The Good Times Are Killing Me | Lexy | ||
2009–2011 | Garrow's Law | Sir Arthur Hill | 12 episodes | |
2010 | Wallander | Alfred Harderberg | Episode: "The Man Who Smiled" | |
2010 | Lewis | Alec Pickman | Episode: "Falling Darkness" | |
2010 | Law & Order: UK | John Smith | Episode: "Defence" | |
2010 | Single Father | Stuart | 3 episodes | |
2010 | New Tricks | Adrian Levene | Episode: "Fashion Victim" | |
2010–present | Sherlock | D.I. Lestrade | 8 episodes | |
2011 | Case Sensitive | Mark Bretherick | 2 episodes | |
2011 | Scott & Bailey | Nick Savage | 5 episodes | |
2011 | Death in Paradise[8] | James Lavender | Series 1 episode 1 | |
2012 | Putin, Russia & The West | Narrator | 4 episodes | |
2012 | Terror at Sea: The Sinking of the Concordia | Narrator | ||
2012 | The Hunt for bin Laden | Narrator | ||
2012 | Doctor Who[9] | Riddell | Series 7, Episode 2: "Dinosaurs on a Spaceship"[10] | |
2012 | Secret State | Felix Durrell | 4 Episodes | |
2013 | The White Queen | Lord Stanley | 6 episodes | |
2014 | Turks & Caicos | Stirling Rogers | ||
2014 | Salting the Battlefield | Stirling Rogers | ||
2014 | The Crimson Field | Maj. Edward Crecy | Episode 2 | |
2014 | Last Tango in Halifax | Gary | Series 3 | |
2015 | Valentine's Kiss | Nicholas Whiteley | ||
2015 | Sacrifice | Duncan Guthrie | ||
2015 | Native | Cane | ||
2016 | The Family | John Warren |
Theatre work
In addition to his screen work, Graves has also won acclaim for his stage acting, including roles on the American stage in Broadway-theatre productions in New York City, New York, of the plays Closer (2000) and The Elephant Man (2002).
Graves's notable London theatre credits includes his performance as Presley Stray in the original production of Philip Ridley's The Pitchfork Disney (1991) at the Bush Theatre, west London, which won him Best Actor at the 1991 Charrington London Fringe Awards; Martin Sherman's A Madhouse in Goa (1989) opposite Vanessa Redgrave; and as Eddie in the Peter Hall Company's production of David Rabe's Hurlyburly (1997-8) at the Old Vic and Queen's Theatre, for which he was nominated for the 1998 Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actor.
[11] and primary archive sources.
References
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External links
- Official website
- Rupert Graves at the Internet Movie Database
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- Pages with reference errors
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- 1963 births
- English male film actors
- English male stage actors
- English male television actors
- English male voice actors
- Living people
- People from Weston-super-Mare
- 21st-century English male actors
- Actors from Somerset
- 20th-century English male actors