banner-img-qieb2zlf9hu1phi4a79fzijwvtyangepsq4kdk95ms

Paul Rhys

Paul Rhys

Paul Rhys (Wikipedia)

Paul Rhys Who was born in 1963 is a Welsh television, film and theatre actor.

Rhys was born in NeathGlamorgan, and studied at RADA, leaving with the Bancroft Gold Medal in 1985. After graduating, he obtained his first major screen role, in Absolute Beginners (1986). Since then he has seldom been off the stage and screen. His first US exposure was when American film director Robert Altman cast Rhys, who was then still a student, as Theo van Gogh in Vincent and Theo opposite Tim Roth as Vincent.

Paul was born to Catholic parents. His mother, Kathryn Ivory, was Irish-Welsh and his father, Richard Charles Rhys, was Welsh. The family moved to the village of Pencoed when Paul was ten. A committed punk during his youth, Rhys was in several bands before leaving for London to study at RADA.

Paul’s first acting job was playing Liverpudlian judo expert Ralph in John Godber‘s hit play Bouncers, before he even went to RADA. In the first summer vacation from RADA, he was spotted by Philip Prowse and was invited to perform in Oscar Wilde‘s A Woman of No Importance at the Glasgow Citizens Theatre, playing the illegitimate son, Gerald. He then returned to RADA for two terms before leaving again, this time to play Dean Swift in Julian Temple‘s Absolute Beginners. Rhys completed his education at RADA by winning the William Pole prize and the Bancroft Gold Medal on graduation.

His first film role was in Franklin J. Schaffner‘s Lionheart. After a brief spell at the Royal Shakespeare Company he played opposite Colin Firth in Richard Eyre‘s award-winning film Tumbledown. Soon after this, he appeared in Vincent & Theo, directed by the legendary American film director Robert Altman, as Vincent van Gogh‘s younger brother Theo van Gogh. Continuing the theme of famous brothers, Paul then played Sydney Chaplin opposite Robert Downey, Jr.‘s Charlie Chaplin in Richard Attenborough‘s Chaplin. He went on to play Massis in Alan Bennett‘s 102 Boulevard Hausmann, after which he played opposite Peter O’Toole in Rebecca’s Daughters. A series of films then followed including From HellFood of LoveLove Lies Bleeding and Hellraiser: Deader.

Running parallel to Rhys’s film work has been a diverse and notable television career, working in leading roles with directors such as Mike HodgesStephen Frears, Sir Richard EyrePhilip MartinChristopher MorahanTom VaughanEdward Hall, Harry Bradbeer in productions including TumbledownA Dance to the Music of TimeThe HeroesGhostsGallowglassThe HealerAnna KareninaThe DealBeethoven, and more recently the television series BorgiaLutherSpooks and Being Human (in which he played the vampire Ivan).[2]

In 1995, he portrayed Simon Templar (aka “The Saint”) for a series of three radio plays for BBC Radio 4.

In 2014, he appeared as the lead, traitor Aldrich Ames, in The Assets miniseries.

In 2015, he portrayed Vlad, the Prince of Wallachia aka Dracula in the first and third season of the television series “Da Vinci’s Demons”

Rhys has a reputation for committing so fully to stage roles that on two occasions it has caused him to be taken to hospital, once with pneumonia and the other with mental exhaustion.

In 2000 he performed in the title role of Hamlet at the Young Vic and later in Tokyo and Osaka. He received several awards for this performance. He also played Angelo in Measure for Measure for which he won the Critics’ Circle Theatre Award; Houseman in The Invention of Love; and Edgar in King Lear, for which he was nominated for an Olivier Award. These three plays were all staged at the Royal National Theatre. He appeared as Edmund in Long Day’s Journey into Night and Leo in Design for Living at The Donmar Warehouse, performing opposite Rachel Weisz and Clive Owen in the latter. He also briefly played the title role in Howard Brenton‘s play Paul at the National Theatre,

Real-life characters played by Rhys have included Vlad TepesLudwig van Beethoven, Peter Mandelson, Paul McCartneyThomas De QuinceyA. E. HousmanFrédéric Chopin, and Marcus Tullius Cicero.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *