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Jasper Britton

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Jasper Britton
Britton as Petruchio
Born (1962-12-11) 11 December 1962 (age 61)
London, England, UK
OccupationActor
Years active1989–present
Parent(s)Tony Britton
Eva Skytte Birkefeldt
RelativesFern Britton
(half-sister)

Jasper Britton (born 11 December 1962) is an English actor.

Early life and education

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Britton was born in Chelsea in London, and educated at Belmont Preparatory School, Sussex House School[1] and Mill Hill School, north London. Britton is the only son of the actor Tony Britton and his second wife, the Danish sculptor Eva Castle Britton (née Skytte Birkefeldt). His half-sisters are the television presenter Fern Britton and scriptwriter Cherry Britton.

Career

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Stage

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Britton worked for six years as an assistant stage manager and sound operator until 1989 when, while working for Jonathan Miller at the Old Vic, he forced his way into Miller's office and refused to leave until Miller agreed to let him audition for King Lear. His King of France to Eric Porter's Lear was the beginning of a prolific stage career. Early plays included The Visit with Théâtre de Complicité at the Royal National Theatre, The Cherry Orchard, Macbeth and A Flea in her Ear at Nottingham Playhouse. A season at the Royal Shakespeare Company included A Jovial Crew for Max Stafford-Clark, Tamburlaine for Terry Hands and The Beggar's Opera and Antony and Cleopatra for John Caird. There followed the Dauphin in St Joan at the Strand Theatre and an award-winning [which?] performance as Rupert in Rope at Salisbury Playhouse.

Upon replacing Eddie Izzard in the title role in Brian Cox's 1995 Richard III, he garnered excellent reviews. He next played the groom role in Blood Wedding at the Young Vic, the first in a series of romantic leads, followed by Rupert Goold's adaptation of End of the Affair, Jonathan Church's Romeo and Juliet and Bill Bryden's Three Sisters.

Britton was part of Trevor Nunn's ensemble company at the National Theatre in 1999, playing Thersites in Troilus and Cressida, Ryumin in Maxim Gorky's Summerfolk, and Smooth in Money. Two seasons at the Shakespeare's Globe for Mark Rylance followed, first playing Palamon in The Two Noble Kinsmen, and Caliban in The Tempest. A year later he returned as Macbeth. After Simon Gray's Japes for Peter Hall at the Haymarket Theatre and Alan Ayckbourn's Bedroom Farce at the Aldwych Theatre came Britton's performance as Petruchio in The Taming of the Shrew and The Tamer Tamed for Gregory Doran at the Royal Shakespeare Company and the Kennedy Centre in Washington, D.C. respectively, which transferred to the Queen's Theatre in London.

In 2008, he played John Gielgud in Nicholas de Jongh's first play Plague Over England, Nansen in Tony Harrison's Fram and Creon opposite Ralph Fiennes in Oedipus the King, the latter both at the National Theatre. In 2009, he played Elyot in Private Lives opposite Claire Price at Hampstead Theatre, directed by Lucy Bailey. Most recently he played one third of Simon Gray's persona in The Last Cigarette at Chichester Festival Theatre and the Trafalgar Studios, with Felicity Kendal and Nicholas Le Prevost; and Jack Lawson in Mamet's Race at the Hampstead Theatre.[citation needed]

He played the title role Barabas in The Jew of Malta production at the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford-upon-Avon in 2015. He replaced Nigel Lindsay as Henry Bolingbroke when the RSC's 2013 production of Richard II was shown at the Barbican Centre as part of the King and Country Cycle, as well as reprising his role as the title character in Henry IV Parts I and II.

In 2017, he played Dr Rance in the Leicester Curve production of What the Butler Saw. In 2018, he played Johnny 'Rooster' Byron in the first revival of Jez Butterworth's Jerusalem at the Watermill Theatre, Newbury.

Film

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Britton played the Court Laureate in Terrence Malick's The New World alongside Colin Farrell, Jonathan Pryce and Christian Bale. He donned bells and hankies to play Will Frosser, the foreman of the Millsham Morris Side in the film Morris: A Life with Bells On.[2]

Television

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Britton's television credits include two series of My Dad's the Prime Minister, and Brief Encounters: Semi-Detached for the BBC, as well as Highlander: The Series. In 2006, he appeared in two TV films: as pirate William Howard in Blackbeard with Mark Umbers and Stacy Keach, and alongside Oliver Dimsdale and Heathcote Williams as Henry II in Nostradamus.[3]

Filmography

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Film

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Year Title Role Notes
2005 The New World Laureate
2009 Morris: A Life with Bells On Will Frosser
2011 Anonymous Pope
2012 Blood Daniel Heston
2014 Royal Shakespeare Company: Henry IV Part I Henry IV
Royal Shakespeare Company: Henry IV Part II
Night Will Fall Narrator Documentary
German Concentration Camps Factual Survey
2015 Rise of the Footsoldier Part II Norton
2017 What the Butler Saw. Dr. Rance Direct-to-video
2019 Here Comes Hell The Host

Television

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Year Title Role Notes
1987 Ever Decreasing Circles Football Supporter Episode: "Relaxation"
1995 The Bill Vernon Episode: "Bad Pictures"
Casualty Graham Webster Episode: "Castles in the Air"
1996 Mike and Angelo William Shakespeare Episode: "My Pal Puck"
1997 Breakout Lenny Johnson Television film
Highlander: The Series Willie Kingsley Episode: "Diplomatic Immunity"
2000 Big Kids Ming 3 episodes
2002 The Cry Mark Billington 4 episodes
Heartbeat Stanley Hodges Episode: "A Many Splendoured Thing"
2003 Murder in Mind George Blakeney Episode: "Echoes"
2003–2004 My Dad's the Prime Minister Duncan Packer 13 episodes
2005 Midsomer Murders Anselm Plummer Episode: "Sauce for the Goose"
Carrie & Barry Policeman Episode: "Banned Barry"
2006 The Royal Paul Guthrie Episode: "Thinking Too Hard"
Brief Encounters Richard Episode: "Semi-Detached"
Nostradamus Henry II of France Television film
Blackbeard William Howard 3 episodes
2010 Garrow's Law Captain Colingwood Episode #2.1
2023 Hijack Terry 7 episodes

References

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  1. ^ "About the School". Sussex House. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
  2. ^ "The Jasper Britton collection". birmingham.ac.uk. University of Birmingham. Retrieved 17 June 2024.
  3. ^ "Jasper Britton". royalcourttheatre.com. Royal Court Theatre. Retrieved 17 June 2024.
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