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Jesper Christensen
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Jesper Christensen (Danish pronunciation: [ˈjespɐ ˈkʰʁestn̩sn̩, - ˈkʰʁæs-]; born 16 May 1948) is a Danish actor.[1] A veteran of European cinema, he has made the transition to English language projects, including The Interpreter and Revelations. He has also appeared as the mysterious villain Mr. White in the James Bond films Casino Royale, Quantum of Solace, and Spectre.[2][3]
Key Information
In his home country, Christensen has won four Bodil Awards, three for Best Actor: Did Somebody Laugh? (1978), The Bench (2000), and Manslaughter (2005), and one for Best Supporting Actor: Barbara (1997).
In 2006, Jesper Christensen declined the offer to receive the Knight's Cross of the Order of the Dannebrog. He said that he thought the entire idea of monarchy is a crime against the members of the royal family, and it does not fit with modern ideas.[4]
Filmography
[edit]Film
[edit]| Year | Title | Role(s) | Director(s) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1976 | Strømer | Young Officer | Anders Refn | |
| 1977 | Mind Your Back, Professor | Journalist | Jens Okking | |
| Havoc | Steffensen | Ole Roos | ||
| 1978 | Wanna See My Beautiful Navel? | Fashion Photographer | Søren Kragh-Jacobsen | |
| Who Kills Who? | Christian | Li Vilstrup | ||
| Winterborn | Anders | Astrid Henning-Jensen | ||
| Did Somebody Laugh? | Unemployed Man | Henning Carlsen | ||
| 1979 | The Revolt of the Thralls | TBA | Jannik Hastrup | Voice |
| Charly & Steffen | Eigil | Henning Kristiansen | ||
| 1980 | It's a World Full of Children | Morten | Aase Schmidt | |
| Children of the Thralls | TBA | Jannik Hastrup | Voice | |
| Sorry We're Here | Aage | Hans Kristensen | ||
| 1981 | Have You Seen Alice? | Bjarne | Brita Wielopolska | |
| 1983 | The Traitors | The Boy | Ole Roos | |
| 1987 | Hip Hip Hurrah! | Viggo Johansen | Kjell Grede | |
| 1988 | Emma's Shadow | Poul | Søren Kragh-Jacobsen | |
| 1990 | Today's Donna | Michael Nordgreen | Stefan Henszelman | |
| Good Evening, Mr. Wallenberg | Officer at Watteau | Kjell Grede | ||
| 1992 | Sofie | Hans Højby | Liv Ullmann | |
| 1993 | The Russian Singer | Castensen | Morten Arnfred | |
| 1994 | Carl, My Childhood Symphony | Schreiber | Erik Clausen | |
| 1995 | Summer | Flemming | Kristian Petri | |
| White Lies | Kristian | Mats Arehn | ||
| 1996 | Girly Girls | Hans-Jørgen | Vibeke Gad | |
| Hamsun | Otto Dietrich | Jan Troell | ||
| The Ballad of the Viking King, Holger the Dane | Hemming I / Loki | Laila Hodell | ||
| The White Lioness | Konovalenko | Pelle Berglund | ||
| 1997 | Credo | Brother 1 | Susanne Bier | |
| Barbara | Judge | Nils Malmros | ||
| 1998 | Albert | Shoemaker | Jørn Faurschou | |
| 1999 | In China They Eat Dogs | Bartender | Lasse Spang Olsen | |
| Sophie's World | Søren Kierkegaard | Erik Gustavson | ||
| 2000 | Anna | Johansen | Erik Wedersøe | |
| Italian for Beginners | Olympia's Father | Lone Scherfig | ||
| The Bench | Kaj | Per Fly | ||
| 2001 | One-Hand Clapping | H.C. Krøyer | Gert Fredholm | |
| The Greatest Thing | Theatre Manager | Thomas Robsahm | ||
| Count Axel | Col. Lejpstrup | Søren Fauli | ||
| 2002 | Minor Mishaps | Søren Kreiberg | Annette K. Olesen | |
| Okay | Læge | Jesper W. Nielsen | ||
| Treasure Planet | Scroop | Ron Clements & John Musker | Voice; Danish dub | |
| 2003 | Inheritance | Holger Andersen | Per Fly | |
| Baby | Eddy | Linda Wendel | ||
| Nasty Brats | JB | Giacomo Campeotto | ||
| Make Believe | Piips | Kjell Grede | ||
| 2005 | The Interpreter | Nils Lud | Sydney Pollack | |
| Manslaughter | Carsten | Per Fly | ||
| 2006 | Shaking Dream Land | George | Martina Nagel | |
| Pure Hearts | Bag Man | Kenneth Kainz | ||
| Casino Royale | Mr. White | Martin Campbell | ||
| 2008 | One Shot | Lennart | Linda Wendel | |
| Everlasting Moments | Sebastian Pedersen | Jan Troell | ||
| Flame & Citron | Wilhelm Faurschou Hviid | Ole Christian Madsen | ||
| Quantum of Solace | Mr. White | Marc Forster | ||
| 2009 | Original | Bruno | Alexander Brøndsted & Antonio Tublén | |
| The Young Victoria | Baron Stockmar | Jean-Marc Vallée | ||
| Storm | Anthony Weber | Hans-Christian Schmid | ||
| This Is Love | Koller | Matthias Glasner | ||
| 2010 | The Debt | Dr. Bernhardt / Dieter Vogel | John Madden | |
| A Family | Rickard Rheinwald | Pernille Fischer Christensen | ||
| 2011 | Melancholia | Little Father | Lars von Trier | |
| Julie | Master | Linda Wendel | ||
| 2012 | The Last Sentence | Torgny Segerstedt | Jan Troell | |
| 2013 | Sisters | Uncle Rolle | Anne Wild | |
| NYMPH()MANIAC | Jerôme's Uncle | Lars von Trier | ||
| Sex, Drugs & Taxation | Judge Bergsøe | Christoffer Boe | ||
| 2015 | Me and Kaminski | Manuel Kaminski | Wolfgang Becker | |
| Spectre | Mr. White | Sam Mendes | ||
| 2016 | The King's Choice | Haakon VII | Erik Poppe | |
| 2017 | Robin | Pierre | Antonio Tublén | |
| 2018 | Before the Frost | Jens | Michael Noer | |
| 2020 | Into the Darkness | Karl Skov | Anders Refn | |
| Oh, To Be a Butterfly | Ernst | Søren Kragh-Jacobsen | ||
| 2022 | Out of the Darkness | Karl Skov | Anders Refn | |
| More Than Ever | Emily Atef | |||
| 2023 | Munch | Dr. Daniel Jacobson | Henrik Martin Dahlsbakken | |
| 2025 | Sentimental Value | Michael | Joachim Trier |
References
[edit]- ^ Nagy, Nanna (28 December 2023). "Jesper Christensen havde et misbrug i sine teenageår, som har betydet noget for, hvordan han er skuespiller i dag". TV 2 (in Danish). Archived from the original on 5 January 2024. Retrieved 19 June 2024.
- ^ "Jesper Christensen". The Danish Film Institute. Archived from the original on 4 August 2023. Retrieved 19 June 2024.
- ^ "Five actors who hated being in James Bond movies". faroutmagazine.co.uk. 17 August 2024.
- ^ "Jesper Christensen: Nej tak til ridderkors". Politiken (in Danish). 5 December 2006. Archived from the original on 21 September 2016. Retrieved 19 June 2024.
External links
[edit]Jesper Christensen
View on GrokipediaEarly life and education
Childhood and family background
Jesper Christensen was born on 16 May 1948 in central Copenhagen, Denmark.[1] He has maintained residence in Copenhagen continuously since his birth.[1] Public records and biographical sources provide no further details regarding his parents, siblings, or specific aspects of his upbringing prior to his entry into acting.[1]Training in acting
Christensen began his acting career without formal enrollment in a state-sponsored theater academy, instead pursuing practical experience through amateur and student productions. His earliest documented stage debut occurred in 1968 at Studenterscenen, a Copenhagen-based student theater collective, where he appeared in the play Træningslejren.[6] This initial involvement marked the start of his self-directed immersion in performance, reflecting an autodidactic approach that characterized his early development.[7] In 1971, Christensen joined Fiolteatret, an experimental Copenhagen theater known for innovative and politically engaged productions, initially as an elev—a trainee or apprentice role that provided on-the-job mentorship under established directors and actors.[8] There, he transitioned from pupil to full ensemble member, honing skills through rigorous rehearsals and live performances in challenging ensemble works, which he later credited as foundational to his technique.[7] Unlike many contemporaries who attended Statens Teaterskole (Denmark's national theater school), Christensen opted against formal academic training, a choice he has defended in interviews by arguing that prolonged institutional education risks stifling instinctive artistry, advocating instead for concise, practical apprenticeships of no more than one to two years.[9][10] This hands-on methodology at Fiolteatret, emphasizing improvisation, physicality, and textual interpretation amid Denmark's vibrant 1970s alternative theater scene, equipped him for lead roles in classical and modern repertoire. By the mid-1970s, his proficiency had earned him recognition within Danish theater circles, underscoring the efficacy of experiential learning over structured pedagogy in his case.[8] Christensen's trajectory as a self-taught performer highlights a rarer path in professional acting, reliant on innate talent, peer collaboration, and relentless stage exposure rather than certified coursework.[7]Theater career
Debut and key stage roles
Christensen began his professional theater career in the late 1960s, dedicating the next 25 years to leading roles at Denmark's premier theaters.[11][2] His early work focused on classical repertoire, showcasing his versatility in interpreting complex characters from European dramatic traditions, including plays by Molière, Shakespeare, Chekhov, and Goethe.[1] This period established his reputation for portraying introspective, tormented figures, often receiving accolades for the depth and intensity of his performances.[2] Among his key stage roles, Christensen portrayed Alceste in Molière's Le Misanthrope, embodying the protagonist's misanthropic idealism.[1] He delivered a solo interpretation of Shakespeare's Richard III, highlighting the king's manipulative ambition through one-man staging. In Goethe's Faust, he took on the titular role, exploring themes of ambition and damnation. Additionally, as Astrov in Chekhov's Uncle Vanya, he captured the doctor's disillusionment and unfulfilled passions. These performances underscored his command of psychological nuance in canonical works.[1]Major productions and innovations
Christensen spent 25 years performing leading roles at Denmark's premier theaters, including the Royal Danish Theatre, earning acclaim for interpretations of classical works by Molière, Shakespeare, Goethe, Chekhov, and Schiller.[2][12] His portrayal of Alceste in Molière's The Misanthrope at the Royal Theatre in Copenhagen in 1973 highlighted his command of satirical comedy and moral introspection, contributing to the production's success.[13][2] A standout achievement was his solo performance as Richard in Shakespeare's Richard III, an ambitious one-man adaptation that condensed the historical tragedy into a monologue-driven narrative, showcasing Christensen's physical and vocal prowess in portraying the deformed king's machinations without ensemble support.[12] This innovative approach to the play emphasized psychological depth over traditional staging, aligning with experimental trends in Danish theater during the period.[2] Other major productions included his embodiment of Faust in Goethe's Faust, exploring themes of ambition and damnation, and Astrov in Chekhov's [Uncle Vanya](/page/Uncle Vanya), where he captured the doctor's existential ennui and unrequited passions.[12] These roles garnered multiple accolades from Danish critics and institutions, affirming his status as a versatile stage lead before transitioning to film in 1998.[2]Film and television career
Danish cinema and early films
Christensen made his feature film debut in Danish cinema with the 1976 crime drama Strømer, directed by Anders Refn, portraying a young police officer in a story critiquing institutional corruption within the Copenhagen police force.[6] This minor role came during his primary focus on theatre, reflecting the sporadic nature of his early screen appearances.[12] In 1978, he earned acclaim for his leading performance in the comedy Hør, var der ikke en som lo?, directed by Henrik Stangerup, which satirized Danish middle-class life and secured him the Bodil Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role—the first of multiple Danish film honors.[14] That year also saw roles in Vinterbørn, a drama about post-war displacement, and In My Life, further establishing his versatility in domestic productions.[15] By 1979, he received the Danish Film Critics Award for his contributions, highlighting growing recognition despite theatre commitments.[5] The 1980s marked collaborations with innovative directors, including voice acting as the father wolf in the animated Samson og Sally (1984) and a supporting role in Henning Carlsen's Hip Hip Hurrah! (1987), depicting the Skagen Painters' bohemian circle.[15] Christensen's work with Lars von Trier began in 1984 with The Element of Crime, where he played a grizzled policeman in the dystopian thriller, followed by appearances in Epidemic (1987) and Europa (1991), contributing to von Trier's Europa trilogy's atmospheric tension through understated authority figures.[1] These roles, often enigmatic and morally ambiguous, aligned with Danish New Wave tendencies toward psychological depth over commercial appeal. Into the 1990s, Christensen featured in von Trier's hospital series The Kingdom (1994), as a bureaucratic doctor amid supernatural horror, and supported Emily Watson in the Danish-British Breaking the Waves (1996), portraying a community elder enforcing rigid Calvinist norms.[16] His performance in Portland (1996), a road movie exploring family dysfunction, earned another Danish Film Critics Award nomination, underscoring his shift toward more frequent film engagements while maintaining a commitment to character-driven narratives rooted in Danish social realism.[5]Transition to international projects
Christensen's entry into international cinema occurred in 2005, following a career rooted in Danish theater and film, when he secured roles in English-language productions. In Sydney Pollack's The Interpreter, a thriller set at the United Nations starring Nicole Kidman and Sean Penn, Christensen portrayed Nils Lud, the chief of security for a fictional African head of state accused of genocide.[17] This marked one of his earliest substantial appearances in a major Hollywood feature, filmed primarily in New York and showcasing his ability to convey understated menace in a multilingual context.[1] Concurrently, Christensen appeared as Torvald Eklind, a wealthy financier funding apocalyptic research, in the NBC miniseries Revelations, which aired in May 2005 and starred Bill Pullman and Natascha McElhone.[18] The four-episode production, inspired by biblical prophecy themes, represented his foray into American television, blending his European dramatic style with high-stakes narrative demands.[14] These roles signaled a deliberate shift from predominantly Scandinavian projects, leveraging his established reputation—bolstered by Danish Bodil Awards for films like The Bench (2000)—to attract casting in broader Western markets.[3] The transition reflected broader opportunities for European actors in the mid-2000s, amid Hollywood's increasing inclusion of international talent for authenticity in global storylines, though Christensen maintained a selective approach, prioritizing character depth over volume.[19] Prior to these, his film work remained largely confined to Danish-language features and limited European co-productions, with no major English-speaking credits identified before 2005.[2]Bond series and subsequent roles
Christensen portrayed the enigmatic criminal operative Mr. White in three films of the Daniel Craig James Bond series, marking his most prominent international roles. In Casino Royale (2006), directed by Martin Campbell, he appears in the film's closing scene, executing Steven Obanno for failing to recover funds lost by Le Chiffre and declaring to James Bond that the organization will find him regardless of his actions.[20] His performance established Mr. White as a ruthless enforcer within the shadowy Quantum syndicate.[21] He reprised the role in Quantum of Solace (2008), directed by Marc Forster, where Mr. White is depicted as a high-level coordinator overseeing global operations, including funding Dominic Greene's resource-exploitation schemes in Bolivia; the film opens with Bond arriving at White's lakeside home, leading to a confrontation that underscores White's strategic importance. In Spectre (2015), directed by Sam Mendes, Christensen's character returns in a more vulnerable state at his Austrian retreat, revealing details about the SPECTRE network's infiltration of global institutions before ingesting ricin to evade further interrogation, ensuring the safety of his daughter Madeleine Swann. This arc positioned Mr. White as a pivotal figure linking the Craig-era plots, influencing Bond's personal stakes across the franchise.[22] Following Spectre, Christensen continued to secure supporting and leading roles in European historical dramas. In The King's Choice (2016), a Norwegian-Belgian-Swedish production directed by Nils Gaup, he played King Haakon VII, portraying the monarch's moral stand against Nazi occupation during the 1940 German invasion of Norway, a performance noted for its gravitas in depicting real-time decision-making under invasion. He took the role of police chief Karl Skov in the Danish World War II thriller Out of the Darkness (2022), directed by Anders Refn, which dramatizes the 1943 rescue of Denmark's Jewish population amid escalating deportations. In 2023, Christensen appeared as Dr. Daniel Jacobson in the Norwegian biographical series Munch, a six-episode depiction of artist Edvard Munch's life, focusing on the psychiatrist's influence during Munch's institutionalization periods. These roles reflect his affinity for period pieces exploring ethical dilemmas and historical contingencies in Scandinavian contexts.[1]Recognition and legacy
Awards and nominations
Christensen has won five Bodil Awards, Denmark's oldest and most prestigious film honors, presented annually by the Danish Film Critics Association for outstanding performances in Danish cinema. These include the Bodil for Best Actor in a Leading Role for Hør, var der ikke en som lo? (1979), Bænken (2001), Drabet (2006), and Før frosten (2020), as well as Best Actor in a Supporting Role for Barbara (1998).[23][24][25]| Year | Award | Category | Film/TV |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1979 | Bodil Award | Best Actor (Leading Role) | Hør, var der ikke en som lo? |
| 1998 | Bodil Award | Best Actor (Supporting Role) | Barbara |
| 2001 | Bodil Award | Best Actor (Leading Role) | Bænken |
| 2006 | Bodil Award | Best Actor (Leading Role) | Drabet |
| 2020 | Bodil Award | Best Actor (Leading Role) | Før frosten |
