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Charlie Rowe
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Charlie John Rowe (born 23 April 1996)[1][2] is an English actor. His film roles include Young Tommy in Never Let Me Go, James in The Boat That Rocked, Billy Costa in The Golden Compass, Peter in the SyFy/Sky Movies Peter Pan prequel Neverland, and played Leo Roth on the Fox medical comedy-drama series Red Band Society.
Key Information
Life and career
[edit]Rowe was born on 23 April 1996 in Islington, London, and grew up with a sister in Crouch End. He attended St Michael's Primary School, Highgate. His mother, Sara, is a drama teacher, and his father, Chris Rowe, is an actor and writer.[2]
He got his start in the 2007 fantasy adventure film The Golden Compass and continued to make films throughout his young years, like SyFy's Neverland. His aunt is the English actress Claire Price, known from the drama television series Rebus.[2]
In 2015, Rowe was among the front runners for the role of Spider-Man in Captain America: Civil War alongside Asa Butterfield, Charlie Plummer and Tom Holland; Holland landed the role.
From 2017–2018 Rowe starred in the American TV series Salvation (Season 1 and 2) as Liam Cole, a scientist attempting to divert an asteroid from hitting and destroying life on Earth.
Filmography
[edit]Film
[edit]| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 | The Golden Compass | Billy Costa | |
| 2009 | The Boat That Rocked | James | |
| 2010 | Never Let Me Go | Young Tommy | |
| 2010 | The Nutcracker in 3D | The Prince / Nicholas Charles | |
| 2010 | Disco | Greg | Short film[3] |
| 2013 | Walking with Dinosaurs | Ricky | |
| 2019 | Rocketman | Ray Williams | |
| 2020 | The Forgotten C | Jaime | Short film |
| 2022 | Gigi & Nate | Nate Gibson | |
| 2025 | Jay Kelly | Young Jay Kelly |
Television
[edit]| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | Jackanory | Joe Jefferson | Episode: "Muddle Earth" |
| 2006 | Robin Hood | Young Robin Hood | Episode: "Bad Blood" |
| 2011 | Neverland | Peter | Miniseries; 2 episodes |
| 2014 | The Secrets | Alec | Miniseries; episode: "The Visitor" |
| 2014–2015 | Red Band Society | Leo Roth | Main cast; 13 episodes |
| 2017–2018 | Salvation | Liam Cole | Main cast; 26 episodes |
| 2018 | Vanity Fair | George Osborne | Miniseries; 5 episodes |
| 2022 | Angelyne | Freddy Messina | Miniseries; 4 episodes |
| 2023 | Slow Horses | Ben Dunn | 5 episodes |
| 2024 | Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light | Gregory Cromwell[4] |
References
[edit]- ^ CBS: "Salvation Cast – Charlie Rowe". CBS.
- ^ a b c Evening Standard: "Youngest ever Old Vic lead role for actor Charlie Rowe, 16, and A-level exams too". 12 March 2013.
- ^ "Los Angeles New Wave International Film Festival – Spring 2011 Festival Winners: Short Film Best Male Supporting Actor". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
- ^ "Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light Casting News". Masterpiece. Retrieved 8 January 2024.
External links
[edit]- Charlie Rowe at IMDb
Charlie Rowe
View on GrokipediaEarly life and education
Family and upbringing
Charlie Rowe was born on 23 April 1996 in Islington, London, England.[9][10] He grew up in a creative household in Crouch End, North London, alongside his younger sister, Matilda Rowe, who is a musician and has occasionally collaborated with him on musical projects.[11][10][2] His mother, Sara Rowe, worked as a drama teacher, while his father, Chris Rowe, pursued careers as an actor, writer, and presenter, immersing the family in the performing arts from an early age.[10][2][11] Rowe is the nephew of actress Claire Price and the grandson of actress Andree Evans and actor Anthony Everard Rowe.[3] This environment profoundly shaped Rowe's childhood, with his parents encouraging exposure to theater productions and music through family activities and after-school classes in acting, singing, and dancing.[11] Rowe has described growing up surrounded by the arts, noting that his family's involvement—including his mother's teaching and his father's performances—instilled an early passion for performing.[11]Education
Rowe received his primary education at a school in North London, where his family's artistic influences began shaping his interests in performance and music.[6] He continued his secondary education at a school in Haringey, studying Theatre Studies, English Literature, Music, and Photography for his A-levels; he even sat some exams while performing in his debut lead role at the Old Vic in 2013.[12] Throughout his schooling, Rowe engaged in extracurricular activities that honed his creative skills, including participation in school plays starting from age nine and musical pursuits such as learning the saxophone—inspired by the character Lisa Simpson from The Simpsons—followed by guitar.[13][14]Career
Early work
Rowe began his acting career at the age of eight with a commercial for the Subbuteo tabletop soccer game, in which he and other children portrayed team managers negotiating transfers.[6] This early foray into advertising marked his initial exposure to professional sets, though he described it as a lighthearted job that left him with a lasting memento of the toy.[6] His theatrical debut followed in 2005 at age nine, playing a boy with a single line in the West End Christmas production of The Snowman at the Peacock Theatre.[14] This role transitioned him from non-speaking advertisements to live performance, building foundational experience on stage during the holiday season. In 2007, Rowe secured his film debut as Billy Costa, a kidnapped gyptian boy, in the fantasy adaptation The Golden Compass, directed by Chris Weitz and based on Philip Pullman's novel.[15] At just 11 years old, he shared scenes with prominent cast members including Nicole Kidman as Mrs. Coulter and Daniel Craig as Lord Asriel, contributing to the ensemble amid the production's expansive visual effects and international filming locations.[14] These early opportunities highlighted his emerging presence in major projects while still navigating childhood. Throughout this period, Rowe encountered challenges in balancing his burgeoning career with formal education, often requiring intensive effort to catch up on schoolwork after shoots and dealing with occasional interruptions to his schooling for filming commitments.[14] This phase solidified his shift from amateur enthusiasm to professional commitments, laying the groundwork for sustained involvement in the industry.2010s
Rowe's transition into more prominent roles in the 2010s was marked by his performance as the young Tommy Daldry in the dystopian drama Never Let Me Go (2010), where he shared the screen with Carey Mulligan and Andrew Garfield in a film lauded for its expertly acted ensemble and emotional subtlety.[16] Earlier that year, he had appeared as James, the son of a strict headmaster, in the comedy The Boat That Rocked (2009, wide release 2010), contributing to an ensemble cast that included Bill Nighy and Philip Seymour Hoffman in Richard Curtis's pirate radio satire. These early film credits built on his prior work and positioned him for lead opportunities, reflecting a steady accumulation of experience in British productions. In 2011, Rowe secured his first major leading role as Peter Pan in the Syfy/Sky miniseries Neverland, a prequel exploring the character's origins alongside Rhys Ifans as a young Captain Hook, which showcased his ability to anchor a fantasy adventure.[17] This television milestone elevated his profile, leading to increased visibility in the industry. By mid-decade, Rowe's career gained significant momentum with his portrayal of Leo Roth, a charismatic cancer survivor and leader of a group of teen patients, in the Fox series Red Band Society (2014–2015), marking his breakout performance in American television.[6] To take on the role, the London-born actor relocated to Los Angeles, immersing himself in the U.S. market and drawing media attention for his nuanced depiction of resilience amid illness.[6] Rowe's shift toward American network television continued with his role as Liam Cole, an MIT graduate student who uncovers an impending asteroid threat, in the CBS sci-fi drama Salvation (2017–2018), where he played a key figure in a high-stakes conspiracy alongside Santiago Cabrera.[18] The series highlighted his growing presence in genre storytelling on major U.S. platforms. Closing the decade, Rowe demonstrated versatility in period pieces as the entitled George Osborne in the ITV/Amazon miniseries Vanity Fair (2018), an adaptation of William Makepeace Thackeray's novel, where his portrayal of the charming yet shallow suitor earned notice for capturing the character's social ambition.[19] Throughout the 2010s, these roles facilitated stronger agent representation and broader opportunities across the Atlantic, solidifying his reputation as a rising talent capable of spanning film, fantasy, and drama.[6]2020s
In the early 2020s, Charlie Rowe solidified his presence in high-profile television and film projects, showcasing his range in ensemble casts. He starred as Nate Gibson, a young quadriplegic man who bonds with a service capuchin monkey, in the drama film Gigi & Nate (2022).[20] That year, he also portrayed Freddy Messina, keyboardist and photographer for the aspiring star Angelyne, in the Peacock miniseries Angelyne (2022). Although his role in the 2019 musical biopic Rocketman—portraying Ray Williams, the A&R executive who discovered Elton John—technically preceded the decade, Rowe has reflected on the preparation as a pivotal experience that honed his ability to embody real-life figures through immersive research and collaboration. In interviews, he described drawing on archival footage and consultations with music industry veterans to capture Williams' discerning yet supportive demeanor, while his on-set dynamic with lead Taron Egerton emphasized mutual encouragement during the film's demanding musical sequences, fostering a sense of camaraderie amid the production's fantastical elements.[8] Rowe's television work gained further momentum with his recurring role in the Apple TV+ spy thriller Slow Horses, where he portrayed Ben Dunn, a sharp operative entangled in the agency's underbelly intrigues, in season 3 (2023). The series, adapted from Mick Herron's novels, highlights Rowe's adeptness at tense, character-driven drama within a ensemble led by Gary Oldman, earning widespread critical praise for its witty subversion of espionage tropes and sharp ensemble performances, with seasons maintaining approval ratings above 95% on review aggregators.[7] In 2024, Rowe took on a prominent role in the historical drama Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light, the sequel series to the 2015 adaptation of Hilary Mantel's novels, playing Gregory Cromwell, the ambitious son of the central figure Thomas Cromwell. Airing on PBS Masterpiece and BBC from late 2024 into 2025, the production emphasized meticulous historical fidelity through on-location filming at authentic Tudor-era sites and consultation with historians to depict the volatile court of Henry VIII. Rowe collaborated closely with Mark Rylance, who reprised his Olivier Award-winning portrayal of Thomas Cromwell, describing the experience as intellectually rigorous and emotionally layered, with Rylance's understated intensity influencing his approach to Gregory's evolving loyalty and pragmatism amid political peril.[8][21] Looking ahead, Rowe appears in Noah Baumbach's Jay Kelly (2025), a reflective drama distributed by Netflix, where he plays the younger version of the titular character, a celebrated but introspective film actor navigating fame's toll during a European odyssey with his manager. As of November 2025, the film had premiered at the Venice Film Festival in August, receiving positive early reviews for its poignant exploration of midlife reinvention, before its limited theatrical release on November 14 and streaming debut on December 5; Rowe's performance captures the character's early idealism contrasting with George Clooney's weary present-day counterpart.[22][23] He is also set to play Miki in the biographical thriller The Yellow Tie (2025), directed by Serge Ioan Celebidachi and starring John Malkovich.[24] Beyond acting, Rowe pursued music in 2024 with the release of his folk-rock EP Grapefruit, a self-produced collection blending introspective lyrics with acoustic arrangements that drew on his longstanding instrumental background. Having taken up the saxophone at age nine—inspired by Lisa Simpson—he incorporated subtle woodwind elements into tracks, marking a personal outlet for creativity amid his acting schedule. The EP featured a collaboration with his sister, Matilda Rowe, on the poignant "Autumn Song," co-written and performed as a live acoustic piece that evoked seasonal melancholy and familial bonds.[7][13][21] Reflecting on his career trajectory in a 2025 interview, Rowe discussed the surreal persistence of acting's demands, noting how two decades in the industry—from child roles to mature leads—have prompted a grounded appreciation for its impermanence and the need for diverse pursuits like music to maintain balance. He emphasized processing fame's disorientation through disciplined routines and selective projects, viewing the 2020s as a phase of intentional growth rather than rapid ascent.[21]Filmography
Film
Charlie Rowe's feature film debut was in the fantasy adventure The Golden Compass (2007), directed by Chris Weitz, where he played Billy Costa, a gyptian boy; the film had a budget of $180 million and was nominated for two Academy Awards for Best Visual Effects and Best Art Direction. In The Boat That Rocked (2009), also known as Pirate Radio in the United States, directed by Richard Curtis, Rowe portrayed James, the son of a character played by Philip Seymour Hoffman; the comedy grossed $36.6 million worldwide.[25] Rowe appeared in two films in 2010: first as the young Tommy D. in the dystopian drama Never Let Me Go, directed by Mark Romanek and based on Kazuo Ishiguro's novel, which received a 71% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes; and second as The Prince in the musical fantasy The Nutcracker in 3D, directed by Andrei Konchalovsky, with a production budget of $54 million that underperformed at the box office. In 2013, Rowe provided the voice of the teenage ornithomimus Ricky in the animated family film Walking with Dinosaurs, directed by Barry Cook and Neil Nightingale, which had a $65 million budget and featured documentary-style narration by Benedict Cumberbatch. Rowe played Ray Williams, a music executive, in the Elton John biopic Rocketman (2019), directed by Dexter Fletcher and starring Taron Egerton in the lead role; the musical drama won an Academy Award for Best Original Song and grossed $195.8 million on a $40 million budget.[26] In the inspirational drama Gigi & Nate (2022), directed by Nick Hamm and inspired by a true story, Rowe portrayed Simon, the older brother of the protagonist played by Ben Platt. Rowe appeared as young Jay Kelly in the comedy Jay Kelly (2025), directed by Noah Baumbach and starring George Clooney as Jay Kelly alongside Adam Sandler; the film was released in select theaters on November 14, 2025.[27] Rowe played Miki, the son of conductor Sergiu Celibidache, in the biographical drama The Yellow Tie (2025), directed by Serge Ioan Celibidachi and starring John Malkovich.[24]Television
Rowe's television career began in 2006 with a guest role as Joe in a single episode of the BBC children's storytelling series Jackanory, marking his screen debut at age 10.[2] He followed this with another guest spot in 2009, portraying a young Robin Hood in the episode "Bad Blood" of the BBC adventure series Robin Hood.[28] His breakthrough in television came in 2011 with the lead role of Peter in the two-part Syfy/Sky Movies miniseries Neverland, a prequel to Peter Pan where he played the titular character as a street thief transported to Neverland.[29] Rowe continued with guest appearances before securing his first series regular role in 2014 as Alec in the standalone episode "The Visitor" of the BBC One anthology miniseries The Secrets, directed by Dominic Savage.[30] That same year, he starred as Leo Roth, a charismatic leukemia patient and series lead, in the Fox medical drama Red Band Society, appearing in all 13 episodes across its single season as a main cast member.[31] From 2017 to 2018, Rowe played Liam Cole, a brilliant MIT student central to averting an asteroid collision, as a series regular in all 26 episodes of the CBS sci-fi thriller Salvation.[32] In 2018, he portrayed the charming but immature George Osborne in the ITV/Amazon Prime adaptation of Vanity Fair, a main role spanning all seven episodes of the period drama miniseries.[33] Rowe returned to miniseries format in 2022 as Freddy Messina, the young music promoter and love interest, in all five episodes of the Peacock biographical drama Angelyne.[34] He joined the Apple TV+ espionage series Slow Horses in 2023 as the recurring character Ben Dunn, a tech-savvy operative, appearing in five episodes of season three.[5] Most recently, in 2024, Rowe depicted Gregory Cromwell, the son of the protagonist, as a main cast member in all six episodes of the BBC/PBS historical drama Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light, the sequel to the 2015 series.[35]| Year | Title | Role | Network/Streamer | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | Jackanory | Joe | BBC One | Guest; 1 episode (children's series) |
| 2009 | Robin Hood | Young Robin | BBC One | Guest; 1 episode ("Bad Blood") |
| 2011 | Neverland | Peter | Syfy/Sky Movies | Lead; miniseries, 2 episodes |
| 2014 | The Secrets | Alec | BBC One | Guest; 1 episode ("The Visitor", anthology miniseries) |
| 2014–2015 | Red Band Society | Leo Roth | Fox | Series regular; main cast, 13 episodes |
| 2017–2018 | Salvation | Liam Cole | CBS | Series regular; main cast, 26 episodes |
| 2018 | Vanity Fair | George Osborne | ITV/Amazon Prime | Series regular; main cast, 7 episodes (miniseries) |
| 2022 | Angelyne | Freddy Messina | Peacock | Series regular; main cast, 5 episodes (miniseries) |
| 2023 | Slow Horses (season 3) | Ben Dunn | Apple TV+ | Recurring; 5 episodes |
| 2024 | Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light | Gregory Cromwell | BBC/PBS | Series regular; main cast, 6 episodes (miniseries) |
