Cultural depictions of Charles I of England
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Charles I of England has been depicted in popular culture a number of times.
[edit] Film and television
On screen, Charles has been portrayed by:
- Russell Thorndike in the British silent film Henrietta Maria; or, The Queen of Sorrow (1923)
- Henry Victor in the British silent film The Royal Oak (1923), in which he also played Charles II
- Hugh Miller in The Vicar of Bray (1937)
- Robert Rietty in The Scarlet Blade (1963)
- Stephen MacDonald in the BBC TV drama series Witch Wood (1964)
- Kenneth Colley in a drama in the BBC TV series Thirty-Minute Theatre entitled Revolutions: Cromwell (1970)
- Alec Guinness in Cromwell (1970)
- Jeremy Clyde in the BBC TV drama series The Children of the New Forest (1977) and By the Sword Divided (1983)
- Stephen Fry in the BBC TV comedy short Blackadder: The Cavalier Years (1988), with very similar mannerisms to the current Prince of Wales
- Bill Paterson in The Return of the Musketeers (1989), loosely based on the novel Twenty Years After
- Aleksei Petrenko in the Russian film Mushketyory 20 let spustya (1992), also based on Twenty Years After
- Chris Kirk in the British TV drama documentary Civil War: England's Fight for Freedom (1997)
- Rupert Everett in To Kill a King (2003)
- Martin Turner briefly at the beginning of the BBC TV miniseries Charles II: The Power & the Passion (2003)