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Ciaran Hinds

Ciaran Hinds
Ciaran Hinds

Ciaran Hinds (Wikipedia)

Ciaran Hinds was born in 1953 and is an Irish actor. A versatile character actor, he has featured in films such as Road to PerditionMunichThere Will Be BloodHarry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2Tinker Tailor Soldier SpyFrozenSilenceRed Sparrow, and Justice League, in which he portrayed the main antagonist Steppenwolf.

His television roles include Gaius Julius Caesar in the series Rome, DCI James Langton in Above Suspicion, and Mance Rayder in Game of Thrones. As a stage actor Hinds has enjoyed spells with the Royal Shakespeare Company, the Royal National Theatre in London, and six seasons with Glasgow Citizens’ Theatre, and he has continued to work on stage throughout his career.

Hinds was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Brought up as a Catholic in North Belfast, he was one of five children and the only son of his doctor father and schoolteacher and amateur actress mother.

He was an Irish dancer in his youth and was educated at Holy Family Primary School and St. Malachy’s College. After leaving St. Malachy’s, he enrolled as a law student at Queen’s University, Belfast, but was soon persuaded to pursue acting and abandoned his studies at Queen’s to enroll at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art,finishing in 1975.

Hinds began his professional acting career at the Glasgow Citizens’ Theatre in a production of Cinderella (1976). He remained a frequent performer at the Citizens’ Theatre during the late 1970s and through the mid-1980s. During this same period, Hinds also performed on stage in Ireland with the Abbey Theatre, the Field Day Theatre Company, the Druid Theatre, the Lyric Players’ Theatre and at the Project Arts Centre. In 1987, he was cast by Peter Brook in The Mahabharata, a six-hour theatre piece that toured the world, and he also featured in its 1989 film version. Hinds almost missed the casting call in Paris due to difficulties renewing his Irish passport.[13] In the early 1990s, he was a member of the Royal Shakespeare Company.

He appeared in the title role of the RSC’s production of Richard III in 1993, directed by Sam Mendes, who turned to Hinds as a last minute replacement for an injured Simon Russell Beale. Hinds gained his most popular recognition as a stage actor for his performance as Larry in the London and Broadway productions of Patrick Marber‘s Tony Award-nominated play Closer. In 1999, Hinds was awarded both the Theatre World Award for Best Debut in New York and the Outer Critics Circle Award for Special Achievement (Best Ensemble Cast Performance) for his work in Closer. He was on stage in 2001 in The Yalta Game by Brian Friel at Dublin’s Gate Theatre. He appeared on Broadway in The Seafarer by Conor McPherson, which ran at the Booth Theatre from December 2007 through March 2008. In February 2009 he took the leading role of General Sergei Kotov in Burnt by the Sun by Peter Flannery at London’s National Theatre. Hinds returned to the stage later in 2009 with a role in Conor McPherson’s play The Birds, which opened at Dublin’s Gate Theatre in September 2009.

Hinds made his feature film debut in John Boorman‘s Excalibur in 1981. He played Captain Frederick Wentworth in Jane Austen‘s Persuasion in 1995, Jonathan Reiss in Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life and John Traynor in Veronica Guerin, both in 2003, and Firmin in the film version of Andrew Lloyd Webber‘s The Phantom of the Opera in 2004. Hinds also played Carl, a professional assisting a group of assassins, in Steven Spielberg‘s political thriller, Munich in 2005. In 2006, he appeared in Michael Mann‘s film adaptation of the 80’s television show, Miami Vice, and as Herod the Great in The Nativity Story. In the 2006 film Amazing Grace, Hinds portrayed Sir Banastre Tarleton, one of the chief opponents of abolition of the slave trade in Parliament. He starred in Margot at the Wedding, alongside Nicole KidmanJack Black and Jennifer Jason Leigh, in a comedy-drama about family secrets and relationships. He also appeared in 2007’s There Will Be Blood, directed by Paul Thomas Anderson.

On television, Hinds portrayed Gaius Julius Caesar in the first season of BBC/HBO’s series, Rome in 2006. He has also been featured in a number of made-for-television films, including the role of Michael Henchard in Thomas Hardy‘s The Mayor of Casterbridge in 2004, for which he received the Irish Film and Television Award for Best Actor in a Dramatic Series. Additional television performances include Edward Parker-Jones in the crime drama series Prime Suspect 3 (1993), Abel Mason in Dame Catherine Cookson‘s The Man Who Cried(1993), Jim Browner in The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes episode “The Cardboard Box” (1994), Fyodor Glazunov in the science fiction miniseries Cold Lazarus (1996), Edward Rochester in Charlotte Brontë‘s Jane Eyre (1997), the Knight Templar Brian de Bois-Guilbert in Sir Walter Scott‘s Ivanhoe (1997) and a portrayal of the French existentialist Albert Camus in Broken Morning (2003).

Hinds was featured in two notable television docudramas: Granada Television‘s docudrama Who Bombed Birmingham? (1990) in which Hinds portrayed Richard McIlkenny, a Belfastman falsely imprisoned for an IRA bombing; and HBO‘s docudrama Hostages (1993), where he portrayed Irish writer and former hostage Brian Keenan. Hinds starred opposite Kelly Reilly in Above Suspicion, a TV adaptation of Lynda La Plante‘s detective story, which was broadcast in the United Kingdom in January 2009; he returned for the sequels The Red Dahlia (2010), Deadly Intent (2011) and Silent Scream (2012). Hinds has performed in audiobook and radio productions as well. He performed as Valmont in the BBC Radio production of Les Liaisons Dangereuses, and also narrated the Penguin Audiobook Ivanhoe. He also performed in Antony and Cleopatra and The Winter’s Tale as part of The Complete Arkangel Shakespeare, an audio production of Shakespeare’s plays which won the 2004 Audie Award for Best Audio Drama. He read the short story “A Painful Case” for the Caedmon Audio version of James Joyce‘s Dubliners.

Hinds played the role of Albus Dumbledore‘s brother Aberforth in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2, the final film in the Harry Potter series. Also in 2011, he appeared as David Peretz in the 1997 sections of The Debt alongside Helen Mirren and Tom Wilkinson. Hinds played Roy Bland in the 2011 adaptation of the John le Carré’s Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy.

In September 2011, Hinds returned to the Abbey Theatre in Dublin to star as Captain Jack Boyle in a revival of Seán O’Casey‘s Juno and the Paycock, alongside Sinéad Cusack as Juno. The production transferred to the National Theatre of Great Britain in November 2011 for a three-month run. He played “Jim” in the film The Shore (2011), written and directed by Terry GeorgeThe Shore won the Best Short Film, Live Action category at the 84th Annual Academy Awards (The Oscars) in 2012.

In 2013, he was cast as the wildling leader Mance Rayder in Season 3 of the HBO television series Game of Thrones. He reprised this role in Season 4, and reprised it once more in Season 5. On Broadway at The Richard Rodgers Theater in New York, he was Big Daddy to Scarlett Johansson in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, which opened on 17 January 2013, and had previews on 18 December 2012.

In the summer of 2013, he performed at the Donmar Warehouse in London in the premiere production of The Night Alive, a play by Conor McPherson, which transferred in November 2013, with Hinds in the lead role, to the Atlantic Theater Company in New York.

In 2015, he was in Hamlet alongside Benedict Cumberbatch at the London Barbican, playing King Claudius.

In 2016, he appeared as Deputy Governor Danforth in the Broadway production of Arthur Miller‘s play The Crucible alongside Saoirse Ronan and Ben Whishaw.

Hinds lives in Paris with Hélène Patarot. They met in 1987 while in the cast of Peter Brook’s production of The Mahabharata and have a daughter, Aoife, born in 1991.

Ciaran Hinds was born in Belfast in 1953.   He was  the son of a doctor.   He began his acting career with the Glasgow Citizens Theatre abd also back in Ireland he acted with Field Day Theatre Company and with the Druid Theatre in Galway.   He made his feature film debut in 1981 in “Excalibur” a saga of the Arthurian legend directed by the great John Boorman.   This film also featured Gabriel Byrne and Liam Neeson.   He currently plays DCI Langton in BBC’s “Above Suspicion” and “The Red Dahlia” both written by Lynda La Plante.   Interview with Ciaran Hinds on his performance in John Banville’s “The Sea” on the RTE website.

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