Ben Whishaw

Benjamin John Whishaw (born 14 October 1980) is an English actor. After winning a British Independent Film Award for his performance in My Brother Tom (2001), he was nominated for an Olivier Award for his portrayal of the title role in a 2004 production of Hamlet. This was followed by television roles in Nathan Barley (2005), Criminal Justice (2008) and The Hour (2011–12) and film roles in Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (2006), I'm Not There (2007), Brideshead Revisited (2008), and Bright Star (2009). For Criminal Justice, Whishaw received an International Emmy Award and received his first BAFTA Award nomination.

Ben Whishaw
Whishaw in 2018
Born
Benjamin John Whishaw

(1980-10-14) 14 October 1980 (age 43)[1]
Alma materRoyal Academy of Dramatic Art
OccupationActor
Years active1999–present
PartnerMark Bradshaw (2012–2022)

In 2012, Whishaw played the title role in a BBC Two adaptation of Richard II, broadcast as part of The Hollow Crown series of William Shakespeare adaptations, for which he won the British Academy Television Award for Best Actor. The same year, he appeared as Q in the James Bond film Skyfall (2012), going on to reprise the role in Spectre (2015) and No Time to Die (2021). He has voiced Paddington Bear in Paddington (2014), its sequel Paddington 2 (2017) and the follow-up television series. His other film roles in the 2010s have included Cloud Atlas (2012), The Lobster (2015), Suffragette (2015), The Danish Girl (2015), and Mary Poppins Returns (2018). In 2020, he had a leading role as Patrick "Rabbi" Milligan in the fourth season of the black comedy crime drama Fargo. In 2022, he starred in the BBC medical drama series This Is Going to Hurt, and in 2023 led the comedy-drama short film Good Boy, which was shortlisted for Best Live Action Short Film at the 96th Academy Awards.[2]

Whishaw received a third BAFTA Award nomination for the leading role in London Spy (2015) and, for his portrayal of Norman Scott in the miniseries A Very English Scandal (2018), won the British Academy Television Award for Best Supporting Actor, the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Series, Miniseries or Television Film and the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited Series or Movie.

Early life

Whishaw was born on 14 October 1980 in Clifton, Bedfordshire, and was brought up there and in neighbouring Langford. He is the son of Linda (née Hope), who works in cosmetics, and Jose Whishaw who works in sports with young people.[3] He has a fraternal twin, James.

His mother is of English ancestry, while his father is of French, German and Russian descent.[4] The family's original surname was not Whishaw but Stellmacher, a German occupational name for a wheelwright.[4][5] Whishaw's paternal grandfather, born Jean Vladimir Stellmacher and living in Kassel, Germany[6] changed his name to John Victor Whishaw after World War II during which he served as a British spy in the German army. He was born in Istanbul in 1922 to a Russian mother and German father.[5]

Whishaw was a member of the Bancroft Players Youth Theatre, at Hitchin's Queen Mother Theatre. He attended Henlow Middle School and then Samuel Whitbread Community College in Clifton. He graduated from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in 2003.[7]

Career

Whishaw was involved in many productions with Big Spirit Youth Theatre, including If This Is a Man (also performed as The Drowned & The Saved), a piece devised by the company based on the book of the same name by Primo Levi, a chemist, writer and survivor of Auschwitz concentration camp.[8] It was adapted as a physical theatre piece by the group and taken to the 1995 Edinburgh Festival, where it garnered five-star reviews and great critical acclaim.[9]

Whishaw with Judi Dench in Peter and Alice, at the Noël Coward Theatre in 2013

As the lead in Trevor Nunn's 2004 production of Hamlet at the Old Vic, Whishaw received highly favourable reviews, was nominated for the Olivier Award for Best Actor and received third prize at the Ian Charleson Awards. The role was shared with Al Weaver in an unusual arrangement. Whishaw played all nights except for Mondays and matinées. Nunn is reported to have made this arrangement due to the youth of the two actors playing the lead, to relieve some of the pressure on each.

His film and television credits include Layer Cake and Chris Morris's 2005 sitcom Nathan Barley, in which he played a character called Pingu. He was named "Most Promising Newcomer" at the 2001 British Independent Film Awards for My Brother Tom. In 2005 he was nominated as best actor in four award programs for his portrayal of Hamlet. He also played Keith Richards in the Brian Jones biopic Stoned. In the spring of 2005, Whishaw received much attention for his role as a drug dealer in the world premiere of Philip Ridley's controversial stage play Mercury Fur.[10]

In Perfume, Whishaw played Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, a perfume maker whose craft turns deadly. The film was released in Germany in September 2006 and in America in December 2006. In the same year, Whishaw worked on Paweł Pawlikowski's abandoned The Restraint of Beasts.[11] Whishaw appeared as one of the Bob Dylan reincarnations in I'm Not There in 2007, in the BBC's Criminal Justice in 2008, in a new adaptation of Brideshead Revisited, and in a stage adaptation of The Idiot at the National Theatre called ...some trace of her.[12]

At the end of 2009 he starred in Cock, a new play by Mike Bartlett at the Royal Court Theatre, about a gay man who falls in love with a woman.[13][14] In 2009 he also starred as the poet John Keats in the film Bright Star. In February 2010, Whishaw made a successful off-Broadway debut at MCC Theater in the American premiere of the awarding-winning play The Pride by Alexi Kaye Campbell. He played Ariel in Julie Taymor's 2010 film adaptation of The Tempest and was featured in The Hour, a BBC Two drama series.[15]

In 2012 Whishaw appeared as Richard II in the television film Richard II, a part of the BBC Two series The Hollow Crown. He received the British Academy Television Award for Leading Actor.[16] Also in 2012, he appeared as part of the ensemble cast of the science-fiction drama film Cloud Atlas, adapted from the novel of the same name.

Whishaw appeared in the 23rd James Bond film, Skyfall, in the role of Q.[17] He portrayed a younger Q than in previous films; Peter Burton and Desmond Llewelyn both received the role when they were in their forties, while Llewelyn and John Cleese played the role into their eighties and sixties, respectively. In addition, he was teamed a fourth time with Daniel Craig after they starred in the films The Trench, Enduring Love and Layer Cake.

In spring 2013, Whishaw starred on stage alongside Judi Dench in the world premiere of Peter and Alice, a new play by John Logan, inspired by the lives of Alice Liddell and Peter Llewelyn Davies.[18][19] From October 2013 to February 2014, Whishaw appeared on stage in the revival of Jez Butterworth's play Mojo, also starring Rupert Grint, Brendan Coyle, Daniel Mays and Colin Morgan.[20] He was nominated for a WhatsOnStage Award for Best Actor for both roles.[21] In the summer of 2015 he appeared as Dionysos in Euripides' tragedy Bakkhai at the Almeida Theatre in London.[22]

Whishaw's Paddington Bear designed statue—"Special Delivery"—in Covent Garden, London, auctioned to raise funds for the NSPCC

In 2014, Whishaw starred in the independent film Lilting as well as voicing Paddington Bear in the film Paddington.[23] In 2015, Whishaw co-starred in The Lobster, a romantic science fiction drama from Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos; appeared in Suffragette, a story of the early feminist movement written by Abi Morgan and also starring Carey Mulligan, Helena Bonham Carter, Meryl Streep and his The Hour co-star, Romola Garai;[24] reprised his role of Q in Spectre, the 24th Bond film, and played author Herman Melville in Ron Howard's In the Heart of the Sea.[25][26]

In 2017, Whishaw reprised his role as Paddington Bear in Paddington 2. In 2018, he portrayed Norman Scott in the BBC One miniseries A Very English Scandal, opposite Hugh Grant as parliamentarian Jeremy Thorpe, and also starred as Michael Banks in Mary Poppins Returns. In 2020, Whishaw had a lead role in the fourth season of the critically acclaimed FX black comedy crime drama Fargo, portraying Patrick "Rabbi" Milligan, alongside Chris Rock, Jason Schwartzman, Jessie Buckley and Jack Huston.

Whishaw reprised his role of Q in No Time to Die, the 25th James Bond film, which released worldwide on 30 September 2021.[27] As of 2022, Whishaw stars in the BBC and AMC medical drama This Is Going to Hurt, an adaptation of comedian Adam Kay's memoir recalling his time as a junior NHS doctor in 2006. Whishaw is also credited as an executive producer.[28] Whishaw appeared in Sarah Polley's Women Talking, the film adaptation of Miriam Toews' novel of the same name, for which he was nominated for several acting awards for his performance.[29] In 2023, he appeared in Passages for which he received a nomination for Best Supporting Performance at the 39th Film Independent Spirit Awards.[30]

He will portray Russian writer and ultranationalist Eduard Limonov in Limonov, the Ballad of Eddie, directed by Kirill Serebrennikov.[31][32][33]

Trivia

Whishaw's regular dubbing voice for the French-speaking world is Yoann Sover who has dubbed his performances in 7 films and 4 tv series as of 2021.[34]

Personal life

For several years, Whishaw refused to answer questions about his personal life, saying: "For me, it's important to keep a level of anonymity. As an actor, your job is to persuade people that you're someone else. So if you're constantly telling people about yourself, I think you're shooting yourself in the foot."[35] In 2011, he told Out magazine: "As an actor you have total rights to privacy and mystery, whatever your sexuality, whatever you do. I don't see why that has to be something you discuss openly because you do something in the public eye. I have no understanding of why we turn actors into celebrities."[36] Whishaw entered into a civil partnership with Australian composer Mark Bradshaw in August 2012.[37] In 2014, he publicly discussed his coming out, saying that it was a tense experience for him but "everyone was surprisingly lovely".[38] He split from Mark Bradshaw in 2022.[39]

Acting credits

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1999The TrenchPte. James Deamis
The EscortJay
2001BabyLittle JoeShort film
My Brother TomTom
2002Spiritual RampageShort film
2003Ready When You Are Mr. McGillBruno
The Booze CruiseDaniel
200477 BedsIshmaelShort film
Enduring LoveSpud
Layer CakeSidney
2005StonedKeith Richards
2006Perfume: The Story of a MurdererJean-Baptiste Grenouille
2007I'm Not ThereArthur
2008Brideshead RevisitedSebastian Flyte
2009The InternationalRene Antall
Bright StarJohn Keats
Love HateTomShort film
2010The TempestAriel
2011The ProdigiesGil YepesIrish and UK dub
2012SkyfallQ
Cloud AtlasCabin Boy
Robert Frobisher
Store Clerk
Georgette
Tribesman
2013Beat[40]UnknownShort film
The Zero TheoremDoctor 3
Teenage[41]British BoyVoice
Documentary
Days and NightsEric[42][43]
2014LiltingRichard[42]
PaddingtonPaddington BearVoice and Facial Motion Capture
2015The Muse[44]Edward DunstanShort film
The LobsterLimping Man
Unity[45]NarratorVoice
Documentary
SuffragetteSonny
The Danish GirlHenrik
SpectreQ
In the Heart of the SeaHerman Melville[25]
2016A Hologram for the KingDave
2017Paddington 2[46]Paddington BearVoice
Family HappinessShort film
2018National Theatre Live: Julius CaesarBrutus
Palo SantoPalo Santo HologramShort film
Mary Poppins ReturnsMichael Banks
2019Little JoeChris
The Personal History of David CopperfieldUriah Heep
2020SurgeJoseph
2021No Time to DieQ
2022Women TalkingAugust Epp
2023Bad BehaviourElon Bello
PassagesMartin
Good BoyDannyShort film[47]
2024Paddington in PeruPaddington BearVoice; post-production
Limonov, the Ballad of EddieEduard LimonovPost-production[32][31]

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
2000Black CabRyanEpisode: "Work"
Other People's ChildrenSully4 episodes
2005Nathan BarleyPingu6 episodes
2008Criminal JusticeBen Coulter5 episodes
2011–12The HourFreddie Lyon12 episodes
2012Richard IIRichard II of EnglandTelevision film
2014Playhouse PresentsEzraEpisode: "Foxtrot"
2015London SpyDanny5 episodes
2017QueersPerceEpisode: "The Man on the Platform"
2018A Very English ScandalNorman Scott3 episodes
2019–presentThe Adventures of PaddingtonPaddington BearVoice[48]
2020FargoRabbi Milligan7 episodes[49]
2022This Is Going to HurtAdam Kay7 episodes[50]
Platinum Party at the PalacePaddington BearQueen Elizabeth II sketch[51]

Theatre

YearTitleRoleTheatreNotes
2003His Dark MaterialsBrother JasperRoyal National Theatre
2004HamletHamletOld Vic
2005Mercury FurElliotPaines Plough at the Menier Chocolate Factory
2006The SeagullKonstantinRoyal National Theatre
2007Leaves of GlassStevenSoho Theatre
2008...some trace of herPrince MyshkinRoyal National Theatre
2009CockJohnRoyal Court Theatre
2010The PrideOliverLucille Lortel Theatre
2013Peter and AlicePeter Llewelyn DaviesNoël Coward Theatre
MojoBabyHarold Pinter Theatre
2015BakkhaiDionysusAlmeida Theatre
2016The CrucibleJohn ProctorWalter Kerr Theatre
2017AgainstLukeAlmeida Theatre
2018Julius CaesarBrutusBridge Theatre
2019Norma Jeane Baker of TroyMarilyn MonroeThe Shed
2024Waiting for GodotVladimirTheatre Royal Haymarket

Radio

YearTitleRole
2004ArthurArthur
2006Look Back in AngerJimmy Porter
2011CockJohn

Awards and nominations

See also

References

External links

Acting roles
Preceded by
Frank MacCusker
Uriah Heep actor
from David Copperfield

2019
Most recent
Preceded by Michael Banks actor
from Mary Poppins Returns

2018
Preceded by Paddington Bear actor
2014–present
Incumbent
Preceded by Q actor
2012–present
Preceded by Richard II actor
2012
Most recent
Preceded by
Katrina Gourley
Ariel actor
from The Tempest

2010
Succeeded by
Preceded by Sebastian Flyte actor
from Brideshead Revisited

2008
Most recent
New title Daniel actor
from The Booze Cruise

2003
Succeeded by