Biography
A well-respected stage and TV actor who has also appeared in a number of films in his native England, Stephen Dillane is blessed with both exceptional talent and the kind of dark, wry good looks that allow him to move effortlessly through a variety of characterizations.
Raised in South London as the son of a surgeon, Dillane first became involved in theatre while in school. He studied history and politics at Exeter University and then did a stint as a journalist for the Croydon Advertiser. As he developed an intense and unswerving hatred for journalism very early on, Dillane was soon casting his thoughts toward an alternate career and, after a few years, decided to chuck journalism for acting. After studying his adopted profession at the Bristol Old Vic theatre school, he began finding work on the stage and was soon racking up positive notices. His theatrical credits grew throughout the 1990s, with critically acclaimed work in the 1994 Peter Hall production of
Hamlet, in which Dillane was cast as the eponymous Dane, and the London production of Angels in America.
Dillane first struck a responsive chord with British TV viewers in 1994, when he starred in
The Rector's Wife. He went on to do starring screen work in
Henry Jaglom's
Deja Vu (1997), in which he played a painter,
Firelight (1997), which cast him as a 19th-century aristocrat opposite
Sophie Marceau, and
Michael Winterbottom's
Welcome to Sarajevo (1997), which featured Dillane as a journalist. In 2000, the actor received a Tony Award for his portrayal of a brilliant but emotionally evasive playwright in
Tom Stoppard's The Real Thing, earning a new level of respect and recognition on both sides of the Atlantic.
Throughout the early part of the 2000's, Dillane appeared in an increasing number of high-profile films. In 2001 he was onscreen with the likes of
Robert Redford and
Brad Pitt in
Spy Game, and in 2002 he could be seen in
The Truth About Charlie,
Jonathan Demme's remake of
Charade, and the critically-acclaimed
The Hours. His next big-screen role would be as Merlin in
Antoine Fuqua's 2004 historical retelling of the story of
King Arthur. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide