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Tim Plester

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Timothy Marc Plester (born 10 September 1970) is a British actor, playwright, and filmmaker, best known for the documentaries Way of the Morris and The Ballad of Shirley Collins - plus a multifarious number of cameo roles for film and TV.

Key Information

Early life and education

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Born and raised in Banbury, Oxfordshire, Plester graduated from Dartington College of Arts in Devon, with a BA in Theatre, and went on to obtain an MA (Hons) in playwriting studies from Birmingham University.[citation needed]

Career

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Plester's award-winning documentary Way of the Morris [1] premiered at SXSW 2011[2] and received a limited theatrical release in UK cinemas before being released on DVD. Co-directed with Rob Curry and produced independently by Fifth Column Films,[3] the feature-length documentary includes contributions from Billy Bragg, Fairport Convention's Chris Leslie and members of The Adderbury Village Morris Men. It was selected by the UK Film Focus as one of the "Breakthrough" British films of 2011. Plester and Curry are also responsible for the short field-recorded documentary Here We’m Be Together (which premiered at the 2014 BFI London Film Festival). The Ballad of Shirley Collins, the duo's feature-length film about the iconic English folk-singer Shirley Collins, premiered at the 2017 BFI London Film Festival). Partly funded by a successful kickstarter campaign, the film also screened at the Rotterdam international film festival and CPH:DOX in Denmark. Southern Journey (Revisited), Plester and Curry's third feature-length documentary together, premiered at Sheffield Doc/Fest in 2020 and was screened on Sky Arts in the autumn of 2021. Other work together includes Hillbilly Homilies, a profile piece on the Appalachain poet Maurice Manning, and The Battle Of Denham Ford, which won a Special Mention in the UK Competition at Sheffield Doc/Fest 2021. The directing duo are currently completing work on a feature-length documentary about the folklorist Doc Rowe, following a hugely successful crowdfunding campaign in 2023. They are also working with the illustrator and land-rights campaigner Nick Hayes on an adaptation of his best-selling book, 'The Book of Trespass'.

1-2-3-4 Plays, published in 2020 (cover design by Holly Wales)

Plester's writing credits for film include Ant Muzak (2002), a short film directed by Ben Gregor and starring Nick Moran and Mackenzie Crook. It was the winner of an Audience Award at the 2003 Sydney Film Festival and was nominated for 'Best UK Short' at the 2003 Soho Rushes Festival and the 2002 Raindance Film Festival. He also wrote and created Blake's Junction 7 (2004) - again directed by Ben Gregor and starring Johnny Vegas, Mackenzie Crook, Mark Heap, Raquel Cassidy and Martin Freeman – which premiered at the 2004 Edinburgh Film Festival. Both films became cult hits and were released on DVD in 2008, along with a third film entitled World of Wrestling (2007). Again created and written by Plester and directed by Gregor, the film stars Mackenzie Crook, Kevin Eldon, Patrick Baladi, Miranda Hart and Kris Marshall. In 2007, Plester also completed work on an offbeat romantic comedy entitled English Language (With English Subtitles) - which marked his directorial debut. The short, in which Plester also starred (alongside MyAnna Buring and Craig Parkinson), premiered at the 2007 Los Angeles Film Festival and went on to screen at over 45 film festivals worldwide, picking-up 5 awards along the way. He has also written and directed the JFK-inspired beat poem Et In Motorcadia Ego! and the award-winning 15-second film Slapphappy[4], which premiered at the Belfast Film Festival in 2008.

Winner of the 1992/93 'National Student Playwright Of The Year' award, Plester has writing credits for the theatre including: Dakota (Edinburgh Festival 1995 and National Tour 1996); Mad Dog Killer Leper Fiend (Edinburgh Festival 1996 and London's Man In The Moon Theatre 1997); and Yellow Longhair (London's Oval House Theatre 2000). A collection of his stageplays 1-2-3-4 Plays was published in September 2020.

Plester's many and varied acting credits for TV and film include: Lockout (EuropaCorp), Kick-Ass (Universal), Control (Northsee Pictures), Cuban Fury (Big Talk), Closer to the Moon (Mandragora Movies), Wolf Hall (BBC), Bone in the Throat (Hello and Company), Shifty (Metrodome), Doctor Who (BBC), Life On Mars (BBC), Hustle (BBC), Murphy's Law (BBC), 1066: The Battle For Middle Earth (Channel 4), Magicians (Universal Films), It's All Gone Pete Tong (Vertigo Films), Galavant (ABC), Heist (BBC), Ant Muzak (Film Club), Criminal Justice (BBC), Five Daughters (BBC), Silent Witness (BBC), The Wrong Mans (BBC), Uncle Dad (SMG), Goths (BBC), Residents (BBC), Poliakoff's Friends and Crocodiles (BBC), both series of Paul Whitehouse’s Happiness (BBC) and the 2009 BAFTA-winning short film September. Plester played petty thief Linus Brody in the first two series’ of the BBC Birmingham production WPC 56. He played the role of Black Walder Rivers in the HBO series Game of Thrones[5][6] and the homeless junkie Julian in After Life.[7]

In 2018, he played Roy Thomas Baker, Queen's producer, in the film Bohemian Rhapsody. In September 2019, he appeared in an episode of Doctors as Martin Taylor. In 2020, he appeared as Mark in the independent Icelandic feature film Backyard Village. Plester has also appeared in three episodes of Mackenzie's Crook's re-booted version of Worzel Gummidge for the BBC. In 2025, he made his Star Wars debut as Fay Drolla, the rebel droidsmith who reprograms K-2SO in Episode 9 of Andor Season 2.


References

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from Grokipedia
Tim Plester (born 10 September 1970) is a British actor, playwright, and filmmaker known for his multifaceted career exploring acting in major television productions and directing documentaries on British folk customs and roots music.[1][2] Plester, a self-described folknographer, gained recognition for co-directing Way of the Morris, which premiered at SXSW in 2011 and examines Morris dancing traditions, and The Ballad of Shirley Collins, featured at BFI London Film Festival in 2017, chronicling the folk singer's career and influence.[2] His acting credits include roles in HBO's Game of Thrones, Netflix's After Life, Disney+'s Andor, BBC's Wolf Hall, and films such as Bohemian Rhapsody and Kick-Ass.[2][3] As a playwright, Plester won the National Student Playwright of the Year award in 1992/93 and graduated from David Edgar's MA in Playwriting Studies; his works, including Zapruder Highway and Dakota, are collected in 1-2-3-4 Plays.[2] He has also created award-winning short films like English Language [With English Subtitles], Ant Muzak, and Blake's Junction 7, blending comedy with cultural commentary.[2]

Early life and education

Upbringing in Banbury

Timothy Marc Plester was born on 10 September 1970 in Banbury, a market town in northern Oxfordshire, England.[4][5] Raised in the surrounding rural landscape of the Cherwell Valley, Plester experienced the rhythms of traditional English countryside life, including agricultural cycles and seasonal community events that characterized the region's working-class communities.[6] Plester's early immersion in local vernacular customs stemmed from his family's deep involvement in Adderbury Morris dancing, a tradition revived in the village near Banbury during the mid-20th century. He followed his father, Bill Plester, and uncle, Jim Plester, into the Adderbury Morris Men, participating as a dancer from a young age and gaining firsthand exposure to the physicality, music, and communal rituals of this folk practice.[7] This familial grounding in regional heritage, rooted in post-war rural England, cultivated a lasting affinity for authentic British folk elements, distinct from formalized cultural institutions.[6] The socio-economic context of Banbury's industrial and agrarian blend further shaped Plester's perspective, emphasizing self-reliant, community-driven customs over urban abstractions, which later informed his grounded approach to cultural documentation.[8]

Formal education and early influences

Plester attended Dartington College of Arts in Devon from 1990 to 1994, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in theatre, a program noted for its emphasis on practical, hands-on training in performance and dramatic arts rather than purely theoretical study.[9][10] The institution, situated in the rural West Country, fostered an experimental environment drawing from regional artistic traditions, which aligned with Plester's developing interest in storytelling through structured dramatic practice.[11] During his undergraduate years, Plester demonstrated early creative engagement by winning the 1992/93 National Student Playwright of the Year award, marking an initial foray into scriptwriting as a foundational element of his performative influences.[2] This recognition highlighted his nascent skills in crafting narratives, serving as a bridge from academic exercises to exploratory writing that informed his later self-identification as a documenter of cultural expressions, though rooted in formal theatrical techniques acquired at Dartington.[2] The college's location and curriculum exposed Plester to interdisciplinary influences from Devon's arts community, prioritizing devised theatre and site-specific work over conventional scripts, which shaped his pre-professional approach to blending observation with enactment.[9] These elements provided a disciplined entry into performance arts, distinct from informal regional customs, and laid groundwork for his structured exploration of narrative forms without reliance on external folklore immersion at this stage.[11]

Filmmaking and documentary work

Key documentaries on British folk traditions

Tim Plester has co-directed two prominent documentaries that document and preserve aspects of British folk traditions, emphasizing their historical continuity and cultural significance amid modern challenges. These works, rooted in his personal connection to rural English customs, prioritize empirical observation of practitioners and archival material over interpretive narratives, highlighting the endurance of vernacular practices like Morris dancing and traditional balladry.[1] [12] In Way of the Morris (2011), co-directed with Rob Curry, Plester traces the origins and persistence of Morris dancing, a ritual folk dance with roots traceable to at least the 15th century in England, through fieldwork in villages like Adderbury, Oxfordshire, where his family participated. The 64-minute film follows Plester's investigation into contemporary Morris sides—groups of dancers and musicians—while linking the tradition to the sacrifices of participants in World War I, including visits to the Somme battlefields where Adderbury Morris men perished, underscoring causal connections between communal rituals and historical trauma. It received a 100% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on six reviews, praised for its authentic portrayal of the dance as a living agrarian heritage rather than a caricature. The documentary contributed to heightened public interest in Morris dancing's pre-industrial functions, such as fertility rites and seasonal celebrations, by featuring interviews with elder practitioners and footage of performances that demonstrate unbroken transmission across generations despite urbanization.[13] [14] [15] Plester's The Ballad of Shirley Collins (2017), also co-directed with Curry, profiles English folk singer Shirley Collins, focusing on her mid-20th-century fieldwork collecting ballads from Appalachian and Southern U.S. traditions with roots in British migration, and her subsequent vocal loss due to nervous breakdown in 1975, followed by a revival in the 2010s. The 93-minute film employs archival recordings and contemporary sessions to illustrate causal resilience in folk transmission, showing how Collins recovered her voice through re-engagement with modal tunes and unaccompanied singing preserved orally since medieval times. It earned an 88% Rotten Tomatoes score from eight reviews, noted for evidencing the empirical recovery of endangered repertoires against commercial dilution. By prioritizing Collins's firsthand accounts and musical demonstrations, the work advances awareness of balladry's role in maintaining cultural memory, with verifiable outcomes including her 2016 album Lodestar, which revived interest in traditional English song forms.[16] [17] [18] As a self-described folknographer, Plester's approach in these films favors direct engagement with primary sources—living performers, historical sites, and unaltered recordings—over academic theorizing, countering tendencies in contemporary media to romanticize or globalize folk elements into pop hybrids. This method yields verifiable documentation of traditions' adaptive survival, such as Morris dancing's post-war revival through informal networks, fostering empirical appreciation for their role in community cohesion independent of institutional validation.[1]

Other directorial and production contributions

Plester wrote and produced the short comedy Ant Muzak (2002), directed by Ben Gregor, which depicts faded 1980s pop stars from a fictional band encountering absurdities during a late-night supermarket visit, starring Nick Moran and Mackenzie Crook.[19] The film's low-budget production, emphasizing satirical humor over polished effects, exemplified Plester's early commitment to independent filmmaking that prioritized quirky, uncommercial narratives.[20] In Blake's Junction 7 (2005), also directed by Gregor, Plester served as screenwriter, crafting a parody of the 1970s BBC sci-fi series Blake's 7 featuring deliberately amateurish sets, wobbly effects, and a cast including Martin Freeman, Johnny Vegas, and Mark Heap as bumbling space revolutionaries.[21] This self-financed short highlighted Plester's versatility in blending cult references with low-fi aesthetics, allowing for direct cultural critique without studio interference.[20] Plester extended this approach in World of Wrestling (2007), where he wrote and produced a mockumentary-style comedy on amateur wrestling, directed by Gregor and starring Jonathan Ryland alongside Crook, poking fun at sports spectacle through exaggerated personas and minimal resources.[22] These shorts, released together on DVD in 2008, garnered a niche following for their raw, DIY ethos, contrasting Hollywood's high-production values by enabling unvarnished commentary on pop culture ephemera.[20] Additionally, Plester produced Et in Motorcadia Ego! (2013), a poetic short exploring memento mori themes through iconography tied to the JFK assassination, maintaining his preference for introspective, budget-constrained projects that delve into historical symbolism without mainstream gloss.

Acting career

Breakthrough television roles

Plester gained prominence for his portrayal of Black Walder Rivers, a bastard son of Walder Frey known for his foul temper and ruthless demeanor, in HBO's Game of Thrones. He first appeared in season 3, episode 6 ("The Climb"), and the pivotal Red Wedding episode ("The Rains of Castamere"), where his character participated in the Frey family's betrayal of the Starks, contributing to the massacre's grim execution. Plester reprised the role in season 6, episode 7 ("The Broken Man"), engaging in tense negotiations with Jaime Lannister over Frey-Lannister alliances, showcasing his ability to embody cold-blooded pragmatism amid the series' political intrigue.[3] In 2019, Plester delivered a standout supporting performance as Julian Kane, a heroin-addicted newspaper delivery man on the fringes of society, in Ricky Gervais's Netflix series After Life. His character's interactions with the widowed protagonist Tony Johnson highlighted raw vulnerability and dark humor, as Julian navigated addiction, petty crime, and fleeting human connections in episodes spanning season 1, including attempts to score drugs and awkward social encounters. The role underscored Plester's skill in portraying gritty, unvarnished realism within the show's exploration of grief, isolation, and moral ambiguity on Britain's social underbelly.[23] Plester's television presence expanded into science fiction with a cameo as Fay Drolla in season 2 of Disney+'s Andor, which premiered episodes in early 2025. Appearing in episode 9 under director Janus Metz, his understated portrayal added depth to the Star Wars universe's rebel espionage narrative, emphasizing subtle character motivations in a high-stakes Imperial resistance storyline. This role marked his entry into franchise television, leveraging his established range for concise, impactful contributions to serialized drama.[2]

Film appearances and character portrayals

Plester debuted in feature films with a supporting role in Control (2007), directed by Anton Corbijn, portraying a figure in the biopic of Joy Division singer Ian Curtis, contributing to the film's depiction of Manchester's post-punk underbelly.[3] His role emphasized authentic, peripheral characters drawn from working-class milieus, a recurring archetype in his cinematic work that mirrors real-world socioeconomic fringes without romanticization.[24] In Kick-Ass (2010), Plester appeared as a henchman in the superhero satire directed by Matthew Vaughn, embodying the expendable criminal underling in high-octane action sequences that highlighted chaotic urban vigilantism.[25] This part extended his pattern of gritty, non-lead portrayals, often as antagonists or sidelined operatives reflecting causal hierarchies in crime-ridden settings. The film earned a 76% critics' score on Rotten Tomatoes from 278 reviews, praised for its irreverent energy despite violent excess. Plester's role as John James Mace in Lockout (2012), a science-fiction action thriller directed by James Mather and Stephen St. Leger, cast him as a imprisoned operative aiding the protagonist (Guy Pearce) during a prison riot on a space station. Mace's character, a tough, loyal contact navigating penal system brutality, underscored underclass resilience amid institutional collapse, aligning with empirical portrayals of confinement's dehumanizing effects.[26] The film garnered a 38% Rotten Tomatoes rating from 71 reviews, with critics noting its derivative Die Hard-in-space formula but acknowledging solid ensemble support. A shift to biographical drama came in Bohemian Rhapsody (2018), where Plester played record producer Roy Thomas Baker, capturing the engineer's eccentric contributions to Queen's sound during pivotal recording sessions. This ensemble role, amid Rami Malek's Freddie Mercury lead, portrayed Baker as a meticulous collaborator in the music industry's competitive dynamics, grounded in archival production details.[2] The film achieved commercial success with over $900 million in box office earnings but divided critics at 60% on Rotten Tomatoes from 414 reviews, faulted for conventional narrative yet commended for musical fidelity. Recent independent efforts include Ezequiel in Undergods (2020), a speculative anthology exploring mortality through interconnected tales, where Plester's character navigated dystopian undercurrents as a peripheral survivor.[25] In Backyard Village (2021), he portrayed Mark, a community figure in the dramedy examining isolation and makeshift solidarity, reflecting authentic grassroots coping mechanisms post-crisis.[25] Forthcoming roles encompass the Counselor in American Sweatshop (2025), a thriller on content moderation's psychological toll directed by Uta Briesewitz, and an unspecified part in The Thing with Feathers (2025), a family drama led by Benedict Cumberbatch delving into grief and folklore-inspired resilience.[27] These selections prioritize indie narratives over spectacle, favoring portrayals of overlooked societal strains verifiable through production logs and festival circuits.[28]

Personal life and cultural advocacy

Interests in vernacular customs and roots music

Tim Plester self-identifies as a folknographer, a term reflecting his personal immersion in British roots music and vernacular customs, distinct from his filmmaking pursuits. This orientation prioritizes direct participation and empirical observation of traditions rooted in agrarian and communal life, such as seasonal dances and archival song collections that preserve pre-modern social structures.[1] Plester maintains active membership in the Adderbury Village Morris Men, a group performing dances revived on May 1, 1975, after a post-World War I lapse due to dancers' deaths in combat. Following his father Bill and uncle Jim—key figures in the revival—he performs the high-stepping routines with bells, sticks, and handkerchiefs, embodying rituals historically tied to fertility, warding off misfortune, and village cohesion rather than modern reinterpretations. These practices, documented in village records since the 19th century, underscore causal links to rural England's pre-industrial economy and social order.[7][29] On social media, Plester advocates for unadulterated heritage preservation, posting videos of Morris performances and promoting initiatives like the 2023 crowdfunding to digitize folklorist Doc Rowe's archive of over 25,000 audio-visual items capturing raw customs—such as cheese-rolling at Cooper's Hill and straw bear processions—collected since 1965 to avert cultural erosion from urbanization and disinterest. This effort, raising funds for public online access, counters perceptions of such rites as archaic by emphasizing their verifiable historical roles in community resilience and identity formation.[30][31][32]

Family and lifestyle

Plester is married to Emma, with whom he has one child.[1]
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