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Julian Wadham
Julian Wadham
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Julian Neil Rohan Wadham (born 7 August 1958) is an English actor of stage, film and television.

Key Information

Early life

[edit]

The third son of Rohan Nicholas Wadham DFC and Juliana Wadham (née Macdonald Walker), Wadham was educated at Ampleforth College and the Central School of Speech and Drama.[1][2]

Career

[edit]

Wadham's theatre work includes playing Barclay (soon after leaving the Central School) in the original West End production of Julian Mitchell's Another Country at the Queens Theatre with Kenneth Branagh and fellow Old Amplefordian Rupert Everett. In 2014, he played Vaughan Cunningham, a visitor to the school, in the Trafalgar Studio revival of the play.[3]

For the English Stage Company at the Royal Court he was directed by Max Stafford-Clark in Falkland Sound, as Lieutenant David Tinker RN (with Paul Jesson, Lesley Manville and Marion Bailey), as Captain Plume in George Farquhar's The Recruiting Officer, as Lt. Ralph Clark in Timberlake Wertenbaker's Our Country's Good, and as Jake in Caryl Churchill's Serious Money (with Lesley Manville, Alfred Molina, Gary Oldman and Meera Syal).[citation needed]

For director Jeremy Herrin he appeared with Lindsay Duncan, Matt Smith and Felicity Jones as Hugh in Polly Stenham's That Face, both at the Royal Court and at the Duke of York's Theatre. Herrin also directed him in the National Theatre production of James Graham's This House, as Humphrey Atkins, in both Cottesloe and Olivier theatres, and in the West End revival of Another Country, in which he played Vaughan Cunningham.[4]

His other National Theatre work includes roles in the following productions directed by Sir Nicholas Hytner: The Madness of King George (in which he played Prime Minister William Pitt opposite Nigel Hawthorne's King George); Don Pedro in Much Ado About Nothing (with Simon Russell Beale and Zoë Wanamaker); Polixenes in The Winter's Tale; Tartuffe (with Martin Clunes and Margaret Tyzack); The Changeling (with Miranda Richardson, directed by Richard Eyre); and Mountain Language (directed by Harold Pinter).

Other theatre roles include: Antonio in The Tempest at the Haymarket (directed by Sir Trevor Nunn with Ralph Fiennes); Duke Theseus in A Midsummer Night's Dream at the Rose Theatre (with Dame Judi Dench and directed by Sir Peter Hall); Marshall Dorfling in The Prince of Homburg at the Donmar Warehouse; Raymond Brock in Plenty (with Cate Blanchett) for the Almeida at the Albery; Elyot in Private Lives (Theatre Royal Bath). He also appeared in The Good Samaritan in Hampstead; A Letter of Resignation at the Comedy (with Edward Fox); and When We Are Married at the Whitehall.

He has appeared in numerous television productions, including The Casual Vacancy, Silk, Midsomer Murders, Lewis, Middlemarch, Father Brown, The Trial of Lord Lucan (as Lord Lucan), Rosemary and Thyme, and Dalziel and Pascoe.

In December 2014, he finished filming Miramax's The 9th Life of Louis Drax, scripted by Max Minghella. As of December 2015, he was continuing to recreate the role of John Steed in Big Finish's audio series The Avengers – The Lost Episodes.[5]

Works

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Film

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Television

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Audio

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Theatre

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  • Another Country, Queens Theatre
  • When We Are Married, Whitehall Theatre
  • Falkland Sound, Royal Court
  • Serious Money, Royal Court
  • Our Country's Good, Royal Court
  • The Recruiting Officer, Royal Court
  • Carrington, Royal National Theatre
  • Mountain Language, Royal National Theatre
  • The Changeling, Royal National Theatre
  • Once in a While the Odd Thing Happens, Royal National Theatre
  • The Madness of George III, Royal National Theatre
  • Plenty, Almeida at the Albery
  • The Good Samaritan, Hampstead Theatre
  • The Winter's Tale, Royal National Theatre
  • Tartuffe, Royal National Theatre
  • Private Lives, Theatre Royal Bath
  • That Face, Royal Court
  • Much Ado About Nothing, Royal National Theatre
  • A Midsummer Night's Dream, Rose Theatre, Kingston
  • The Prince of Homburg, Donmar Warehouse
  • The Tempest, Theatre Royal Haymarket
  • This House, Royal National Theatre
  • Another Country, Theatre Royal Bath/Chichester Festival Theatre/Trafalgar Studio

Awards and nominations

[edit]
Year Award Category Nominated work Result
1997 3rd Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture (shared with the cast) Nominated

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Julian Wadham is an English actor of stage, film, and television, born on 7 August 1958 in Ware, Hertfordshire. Wadham was educated at Ampleforth College Junior School, a Roman Catholic boarding school in Yorkshire, and later graduated from the Central School of Speech and Drama in London in 1980. Early in his career, he gained recognition for television roles in the Royal Television Society Award-winning miniseries Blind Justice (1988) and Goodbye Cruel World (1992), as well as portraying Sir James Chettam in the BBC adaptation of Middlemarch (1994). His breakthrough in film came with supporting roles in acclaimed productions such as (1994) and (1996), where he played Madox, an Australian expert. Wadham has since appeared in notable films including War Horse (2011) as a British captain, (2006), (2018) as Ollendorff, (2023) as Cambacérès, and (2024) as Andy. On television, he has portrayed historical and dramatic figures in series like (2011) as General Sir Herbert Strutt, Outlander (2017) as Lord George Murray, (2024) as Andrew Mansfield, and (2023) as David Stancliffe, the . His stage work includes performances in The Lightest Element as Professor Henry Russell, in multiple roles, and Another Country as Vaughan Cunningham. Throughout his career, Wadham has been represented by The Artists Partnership and continues to work in both contemporary and period pieces, contributing to a diverse body of work spanning over four decades.

Early life

Family background

Julian Neil Rohan Wadham was born on 7 August 1958 in , . He was the third son of Rohan Nicholas Wadham, a pilot during who was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for his service, and Juliana Wadham (née Macdonald Walker), an author who published works including The Case of Cornelia Connelly (1957). Rohan Wadham, born in 1923 and later working as a city professional, embodied values from his Edwardian-influenced upbringing and wartime experiences, which contributed to a structured and disciplined early home environment for Julian; his mother supported the family through her writing career. Wadham had two older brothers and a sister named Cornelia Dorothy Katharine Wadham, who later married into nobility as the wife of . The family's heritage and intellectual pursuits provided a backdrop that emphasized discipline, humor, and cultural engagement during his formative years.

Education

Julian Wadham attended , a prestigious Roman Catholic in , , run by Benedictine monks. During his time there, he developed an early interest in acting through participation in school productions, including a notable role as Queen Elizabeth I alongside classmate . These experiences at , where he and Everett were regarded as leading figures in the school's dramatic activities, laid the foundation for his future career in the . Following his schooling at , Wadham pursued formal training in drama at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama in , graduating in 1980. This institution provided him with comprehensive professional preparation in acting techniques, voice, and stagecraft, equipping him for entry into the theatre world.

Personal life

Marriage and divorce

Julian Wadham married Shirley Cassedy in 1990. The couple's lasted 14 years, culminating in their in 2004.

Children

Julian Wadham is the father of four sons, all born during his to Shirley Cassedy. His eldest son, William Francis Wadham, was born in 1991; followed by Thomas Wyndham Wadham in 1992; Oliver Julian Wadham in 1994; and the youngest, Samuel Nicholas Wadham, in 1997.

Career

Theatre

Julian Wadham's stage career spans over four decades, beginning in the early 1980s with affiliations to prestigious institutions such as the Royal Court Theatre and the Royal National Theatre, where he has performed in numerous premieres and revivals of both classic and contemporary works. His early roles established him as a versatile capable of portraying authority figures with nuance, and he has continued to appear in high-profile Shakespearean productions and new plays into the 2020s. Wadham made his professional debut in Julian Mitchell's Another Country at the Greenwich Theatre in November 1981, before joining the West End transfer as Barclay at the Queen's Theatre, directed by Stuart Burge, with press night on 2 March 1982. This production, which explored themes of class, sexuality, and betrayal in a English public school, marked a breakthrough for the young actor and launched several careers, including those of co-stars and . Following this, Wadham appeared in new works at the Royal Court, including the world premiere of Caryl Churchill's Serious Money in 1987, directed by Max Stafford-Clark, and Our Country's Good in 1988. At the Royal National Theatre, Wadham portrayed in Alan Bennett's in 1991, directed by , a role that highlighted his ability to embody historical figures with sharp intellect and restraint during the play's exploration of the monarch's mental decline. He returned to Shakespeare with the role of Duke Theseus in Peter Hall's production of at the Rose Theatre Kingston in 2010, opposite as Titania, emphasizing the play's themes of governance and enchantment in an Elizabethan setting. In 2011, he played Antonio, the scheming usurper, in Trevor Nunn's traditional staging of at the Theatre Royal Haymarket, alongside as , focusing on familial betrayal and redemption. Wadham reprised his connection to Another Country in Jeremy Herrin's 2014 revival at the Trafalgar Studios, taking on the role of the adult Vaughan Cunningham, a pacifist mentor figure, which brought a mature perspective to the original's youthful drama. His later theatre work includes multiple roles—Headmaster, Boustead, Sparks, Second Judge, and Doctor—in Richard Eyre's 2023 production of John Mortimer's A Voyage Round My Father at the Theatre Royal Bath, a semi-autobiographical piece about family dynamics and legal life. Most recently, in 2024, he appeared as Professor Henry Norris Russell in Stella Feehily's world premiere The Lightest Element at Hampstead Theatre, directed by Alice Hamilton, which dramatizes the challenges faced by astronomer Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin in a male-dominated field. These roles underscore Wadham's ongoing commitment to theatre, bridging historical and modern narratives. His stage successes, particularly Another Country, facilitated transitions into film and television.

Film

Julian Wadham made his feature film debut in 1987 as Hull in Maurice, James Ivory's adaptation of E.M. Forster's novel exploring themes of homosexual love and class in . Wadham gained prominence in 1994 with his role as , the astute navigating King George III's mental decline, in Nicholas Hytner's . The film, adapted from Alan Bennett's play, earned widespread critical acclaim for its sharp wit and historical insight, receiving seven Academy Award nominations, including and for . In 1996, Wadham appeared in two significant productions. He portrayed the Assistant Commissioner, a pragmatic official investigating anarchist threats, in Christopher Hampton's adaptation of Joseph Conrad's , a tense period thriller starring and . Later that year, he played Madox, the English cartographer and friend to the enigmatic Count Almásy, in Anthony Minghella's sweeping epic . The film won nine , including Best Picture, and Wadham's supporting performance was noted for its solid contribution to the ensemble's emotional depth amid the desert romance and wartime intrigue. Wadham continued with period dramas in the 2000s, including his role as Joseph Bonaparte, Napoleon's brother and King of Spain, in Miloš Forman's Goya's Ghosts (2006), a controversial tale of art, religion, and the Inquisition starring Javier Bardem. In 2011, he featured in two high-profile British historical films. As Trench Captain in Steven Spielberg's War Horse, Wadham depicted a World War I officer in the harrowing Christmas truce scene, contributing to the film's poignant exploration of humanity amid conflict. That same year, he played Francis Pym, a key cabinet minister under Margaret Thatcher, in Phyllida Lloyd's The Iron Lady, which earned Meryl Streep an Academy Award for Best Actress. Wadham's later roles emphasized British imperial and literary figures. In 2017, he appeared as Alick Yorke, a court official wary of Queen Victoria's Indian servant, in Stephen Frears' Victoria & Abdul, a light-hearted examination of late-Victorian starring . Also in 2017, he portrayed General , the Allied commander clashing with [Winston Churchill](/page/Winston Churchill) over D-Day strategy, in Jonathan Teplitzky's Churchill, with Brian Cox in the title role. In 2018, Wadham played Mr. Arbuthnot, a sympathetic figure in Oscar Wilde's declining years, in Rupert Everett's directorial debut The Happy Prince, a poignant biopic of the writer's final days. He also took on Ollendorff, a publisher aiding the titular author's rise, in Wash Westmoreland's , celebrating the French writer's fight for literary independence with in the lead. More recently, Wadham appeared as Mr. Bailey in François Girard's (2019), a post-World War II drama about a lost violin prodigy, starring and . In 2023, he portrayed Jean de Cambaceres, a French statesman and ally to Bonaparte, in Ridley Scott's epic Napoleon, focusing on the emperor's military conquests and personal life with .

Television

Julian Wadham began his television career in the late with roles in acclaimed British miniseries, showcasing his versatility in dramatic and legal genres. His breakthrough came in the 1988 BBC miniseries Blind Justice, where he portrayed James Bingham, a radical in a chamber tackling social injustice cases; the production won the Royal Television Society Award for Best Drama Series. In 1992, he appeared as Gavin Kaye in the miniseries Goodbye Cruel World, depicting the emotional toll of motor neurone disease on a family, which also earned the Royal Television Society Award for Best Drama Series. Throughout the 1990s and early , Wadham took on varied roles in television movies and series, blending mystery, historical, and biographical elements. He played the titular suspect in the 1994 ITV The Trial of Lord Lucan, a dramatized courtroom exploration of the infamous 1974 disappearance and murder case. In the 2004 docudrama Wren: The Man Who Built Britain, he embodied King Charles II, highlighting the monarch's patronage of architect during the Restoration era. Wadham also featured in mystery series, including as Simon Fletcher in the 1999 episode "Death's Shadow" of ITV's Midsomer Murders and as William Chettham in the 2009 episode "The Creeper," contributing to the show's rural crime narratives. Similarly, in the 2009 ITV episode "The Point of Vanishing" of Lewis, he portrayed Tom Rattenbury, a controversial atheist entangled in a investigation. Wadham's work in the and expanded into high-profile historical and contemporary dramas, often echoing the authoritative presence seen in his film roles through prestige television formats. In the 2011 second series of ITV's , he appeared as Lieutenant General Sir Herbert Strutt, inspecting the estate turned convalescent home during . Recent credits include Rufus McHugh QC in the 2023 BBC crime drama The Gold, examining the 1983 Brink's-Mat robbery's aftermath, and David Stancliffe, , in the final episode of Netflix's (2023). In 2024, he played Andrew Mansfield MP, a shrewd , in on , and The Interviewer in the Netflix thriller series , involving espionage and political intrigue. These roles underscore Wadham's range across genres, from intimate family dramas and procedural mysteries to sweeping historical epics, maintaining a steady presence in British television through 2025.

Audio

Julian Wadham has significantly expanded his career into audio productions since the mid-2010s, leveraging his distinctive voice for full-cast dramas and narrations that complement his established screen presence. His voice skills, honed through extensive training, have proven particularly effective in this medium, allowing for nuanced portrayals in recorded formats. A cornerstone of Wadham's audio work is his portrayal of in ' The Avengers – The Lost Episodes series, which began in 2014 and continues to release new volumes as of 2023. In this ongoing project, Wadham recreates the iconic secret agent from the original television series, adapting lost scripts into full-cast audio dramas alongside co-stars such as Howell as Dr. David Keel and Lucy Briggs-Owen as Carol Wilson in early volumes. The series has grown to include over 20 episodes across multiple releases, earning praise for Wadham's sophisticated interpretation of Steed's urbane charm and dry wit, as noted in production interviews. Beyond The Avengers, Wadham has appeared in various adaptations and audio collections, contributing to dramatic readings and short-form plays. Notable examples include his role as Dickie Mountbatten in a 1996 BBC Radio 4 dramatization of the Mountbatten family's history, where he voiced the alongside a exploring post-independence . He also featured in the 2010 BBC Radio collection The Surreal and Supernatural Stories of , delivering readings of ghostly tales such as "The Almond Tree" with a haunting gravitas that enhances the atmosphere. Wadham's audiobook narrations further demonstrate his versatility in audio, with acclaimed recordings of classic literature produced for publishers like and Audio. He narrated ' The Moonstone (2013), bringing tension to the Victorian mystery through his measured pacing and character distinctions; Gerald Durrell's Myself and Other Animals (2015), infusing humor into the naturalist's memoirs; and Daphne du Maurier's (2005), capturing the eerie time-slip narrative with subtle intensity. These works, among others like Jane Austen's (2008), highlight his post-2015 focus on literary , broadening his reach in the audio market.

Awards and nominations

Screen Actors Guild Awards

{| class="wikitable" ! Year ! Category ! Nominated work
! Result
1997
Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture
''The English Patient''
Nominated
}

References

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