John Simm

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John Simm

Simm at the European premiere of The Dark Knight
Born John Ronald Simm
(1970-07-10) 10 July 1970
Leeds, England
Occupation Actor
Years active 1992–present
Spouse(s) Kate Magowan (2004–present)
Children 2

John Ronald Simm[1] (born 10 July 1970) is an English actor. He is best known for his roles as Sam Tyler in Life on Mars and the Master in Doctor Who, and has starred in many television dramas including Cracker, The Lakes, Sex Traffic, State of Play, Crime and Punishment, and Exile. He has been nominated twice for the BAFTA Award for Best Actor and is a Laurence Olivier Award nominee. He has appeared in films such as Wonderland, Human Traffic, and 24 Hour Party People. In 2010, he played Hamlet at the Crucible Theatre.

Early life

The eldest of three children, Simm was born in Leeds but the family moved to Lancashire when he was 2 years old. He grew up in and around Manchester, including Nelson, Lancashire, attending school at Edge End High School in the town. The family lived in a series of places around the northwest, including Manchester, Colne, Burnley, and Blackpool. His father, Ronald Simm, was a musician and from the age of 12; Simm joined his father on stage in the working men's clubs singing and playing the guitar.

In 1986, Simm enrolled at the Blackpool and the Fylde College in Lytham St. Annes for three years, and starred in Guys and Dolls and West Side Story at Blackpool's Grand Theatre. However, he soon decided that musical theatre didn't interest him, so he joined an amateur dramatic group and honed his skills in his spare time, playing the title roles in Billy Liar and Amadeus. He then moved to London to train at the Drama Centre London at the age of 19, where he studied the Stanislavski School of method acting and graduated in 1992.

Career

Independently of his acting, throughout the 1990s, Simm was a founding member, songwriter, and guitarist with the rock band Magic Alex[2] (named after the Beatles self-styled electronics wizard "Magic Alex" Mardas). The group played support on two British tours with Echo & the Bunnymen. Simm plays guitar on the album Slideling by his friend, Echo & the Bunnymen singer Ian McCulloch. Simm also played lead guitar on a few of McCulloch's solo live shows, including one at Wembley Arena as the main support to Coldplay. Magic Alex released one album, Dated and Sexist, before splitting in 2005.

Simm made his professional acting debut in 1992 with the role of Joby Johnson in an episode of the TV series Rumpole of the Bailey (there had been an earlier part in the BBC drama Between the Lines where Simm was in one scene as PC Witty, but the scene was cut). There then followed a variety of roles during which time he honed his craft in front of the camera, including a psycho in The Bill, a lovestruck schoolboy in Heartbeat, and a drugged-up burglar in The Locksmith. He also made two series of the BBC sitcom Men of the World, playing the lead role of Kendle Bains. His next project saw him take the role of Gary Kingston, a deluded murderer, in Chiller.

In 1995, Simm played the troubled teenager Bill Preece in the acclaimed ITV police drama Cracker.[3] This is considered his breakthrough role. He also made his feature film debut in Boston Kickout, beating Dennis Hopper for the Best Actor award at the Valencia Film Festival. In 1996, he made his professional stage debut in the Simon Bent play Goldhawk Road at the Bush Theatre, directed by Paul Miller. In 1997, he won the lead role of Danny Kavanagh in the first series of The Lakes, a BBC series written by Jimmy McGovern. In 1999, he starred in the second series of The Lakes as well as appearing as Jip in the award-winning cult clubbing film Human Traffic and Michael Winterbottom's acclaimed Wonderland. In 2000, he starred in the opening episode of the BBC drama Clocking Off, written by Paul Abbott, with whom he would work again in 2002 when he starred as Cal McCaffrey in the multi-award-winning political thriller series State of Play. Simm also played the lead role of loan shark John Parlour in Tony Marchant's Never Never for Channel 4. In 2001, he played Oz in a Caleb Lindsay film, Understanding Jane.

In 2002, Simm featured in another Michael Winterbottom film, 24 Hour Party People, as New Order frontman Bernard Sumner. At a live concert in Finsbury Park that same year, Simm sang the Joy Division song "Digital" onstage with New Order. It was also this year that he played Raskolnikov in the BBC adaptation of Crime and Punishment, adapted by Tony Marchant. Marchant also wrote The Knight's Tale, one of a series of modern reworkings of The Canterbury Tales, in which Simm played Ace. Later that year, Simm starred in the film Miranda.

In 2004, he played the researcher and charity investigator Daniel Appleton in the BAFTA award-winning Channel 4 drama Sex Traffic. This two-parter followed the plight of two young Moldovan sisters sold into sexual slavery. After playing Dr. Bruce Flaherty in Howard Davies' production of Joe Penhall's Blue/Orange, Simm starred as Detective Inspector Sam Tyler in the 2006 BBC series Life on Mars, playing a police officer sent back in time to 1973. The show won the Pioneer Audience Award for Best Programme at the 2007 BAFTA TV Awards, Simm was nominated but lost out on the award for Best Actor.[4] He left after the second series, feeling that he had taken the role as far as he could.

His next project, in March 2007, was The Yellow House for Channel 4, a biographical drama produced by Talkback Thames, based on the book of the same name by Martin Gayford about the turbulent relationship of artists Vincent van Gogh (Simm) and Paul Gauguin (John Lynch).[5] In the same year, Simm also returned to the theatre as the title character in Paul Miller's acclaimed Bush Theatre staging of Simon Bent's version of Elling, a comedy about two men just out of a psychiatric hospital adjusting to normal life and to each other. Following positive press reviews and an extended, sell-out run, the production was transferred to the Trafalgar Studios 1 in July 2007[6] and Simm was nominated for an Olivier Award for his performance.

In 2007, Simm was chosen by Russell T. Davies to play The Master, the nemesis of The Doctor in the long-running BBC series Doctor Who. He appeared in the final three episodes of series three: "Utopia", "The Sound of Drums", and "Last of the Time Lords". He reprised the role in the 2009 two-part special The End of Time.[7][8] In 2008, Simm played Edward Sexby in The Devil's Whore, a four-part English Civil War epic for Channel 4. He performed at the Royal Variety Performance with Alexander Armstrong and Ben Miller, and starred in the film Skellig, broadcast on Sky1 in April 2009.

Simm became involved in an ongoing project with director Michael Winterbottom called Everyday, to be filmed in real time over five years. The film premiered at the Toronto Film Festival in September 2012, and is in competition at the 2013 London Film Festival. Simm returned to the west end stage in autumn of 2009 to critical acclaim, starring in the Andrew Bovell play Speaking in Tongues at the Duke of York's Theatre. In September 2010, Simm played Hamlet at the Sheffield Crucible.[9] The production was a sellout and broke box office records for the theatre.[citation needed]

In 2011, Simm starred in Mad Dogs on Sky1. Simm plays Baxter in a project that reunited him with Philip Glenister and Marc Warren along with Max Beesley and Ben Chaplin. Mad Dogs became a critical and ratings success and received a BAFTA nomination for best drama serial, and a second and third series were commissioned. Mad Dogs 2 was shot in Mallorca and Ibiza in late 2011, and appeared on Sky 1 in January 2012, the same time as Mad Dogs 3 was being shot in South Africa. On BBC One in May 2011, Simm starred as Tom Rondstadt in Exile. His performance earned him his second BAFTA nomination for best actor.

From 17 May to 9 June 2012, Simm starred as Jerry[10] in a revival of Harold Pinter's Betrayal at the Crucible Theatre.[11] He plays John Middleton in The Village, a 6-part BBC drama which portrays life in a Derbyshire village during World War I.[12] From May-Aug 2013 he returned to The Trafalgar studios in London's west end to Star opposite Simon Russell Beale in a new production of Harold Pinter's "The Hothouse".

Personal life

Simm married actress Kate Magowan in April 2004 in the Forest of Dean; they have a son and a daughter.[13]

Filmography

Television

Year Title Role Notes
1992 Rumpole of the Bailey Joby Jonson Series Episode: "Rumpole and the Reform of Joby Jonson"
1993 Oasis Posh Robert 7 episodes
1993 Heartbeat Richard Francis Episode: "Wall of Silence"
1993 The Bill Paul Jeffries Episode: "Blind Spot"
1993 Men of the World Kendle Bains Series 1–2
1994 A Pinch of Snuff Clint Heppelwhite
1994 Meat Cecil
1995 Chiller Gary Kingston Episode: "Here Comes the Mirror Man"
1995 Cracker Bill Nash Episode: "Best Boys"
1997 The Locksmith Paul
1997–1999 The Lakes Danny Kavanagh Series 1–2
2000 Forgive and Forget Theo
2000 Clocking Off Stuart Leach Episode: "The Leaches' Story"
2000 Meet Ricky Gervais Himself Episode 6
2000 Never Never John Parlour
2001 Spaced Stephen Edwards Episode: "Back"
2002 Magic Hour Alex
2002 Crime & Punishment Raskolnikov
2002 White Teeth Mr. Hero Cameo
2003 State of Play Cal McCaffrey 6 episodes
2003 The Canterbury Tales Ace The Knight's Tale
2004 The All Star Comedy Show Various characters
2004 London Friedrich Engels
2004 Nero Caligula
2004 Sex Traffic Daniel Appleton
2005 Blue/Orange Dr. Bruce Flaherty
2006–2007 Life on Mars Sam Tyler Nominated – BAFTA Award for Best Actor
2007 The Yellow House Vincent van Gogh
2007–2010 Doctor Who Harold Saxon / The Master Episodes: "Utopia"
"The Sound of Drums"
"Last of the Time Lords"
"The End of Time, Part One"
"The End of Time, Part Two"
2008 The Devil's Whore Edward Sexby
2009 Skellig Dave
2010 Moving On Moose / Mike Episode: "Malaise"
2011 Mad Dogs Baxter 4 episodes
2011 Exile Tom Ronstadt Nominated – BAFTA Award for Best Actor
2012 Wartime Farm Narrator 4 episodes
2012 Mad Dogs 2 Baxter 4 episodes
2013–present The Village John Middleton 6 episodes
2013 Mad Dogs 3 Baxter 4 episodes
TBA Intruders Jack Whelan Regular

Film

Year Title Role Notes
1995 Boston Kickout Phil
1999 Human Traffic Jip
1999 Wonderland Eddie
2001 Understanding Jane Oz
2002 24 Hour Party People Bernard
2002 Miranda Frank
2008 Skellig Dave
2008 Tu£sday Silver
2012 Everyday Ian Filmed in real-time over a period of five years

Theatre

Year Title Role Notes
1996 Goldhawk Road Colin Bush Theatre
2007 Elling Elling Bush Theatre
Trafalgar Studios 1
2009 Speaking in Tongues Leon[14] Duke of York's Theatre
2010 Hamlet Hamlet[15] Crucible Theatre
2012 Betrayal Jerry[16] Crucible Theatre
2013 The Hothouse Gibbs Trafalgar Studios

References

  1. http://www.findmypast.co.uk/search/all/results?recordCount=-1&forenames=john&_includeForenamesVariants=on&surname=simm&_includeSurnameVariants=on&fromYear=1970&toYear=1970&region=&county=&mothersMaidenName=&_useMothersMaidenNameAsSurname=on&sortOrder=RK%3Atrue&_performExactSearch=on&event=B&recordType=ALL&route=
  2. "John Simm: Clocks and robbers". Total SciFi. 2007-02-01. Retrieved 2008-02-07. 
  3. "Best Boys" at the Internet Movie Database
  4. "Victoria Wood scoops Bafta double". BBC News Online. 2007-05-20. Retrieved 2007-05-20. 
  5. "Talkback Thames news release". Talkback Thames. 2006-11-15. Retrieved 2007-02-05. 
  6. "John Simm: The time of his life". London: Independent on Sunday. 11 February 2007. Retrieved 2007-02-11. 
  7. Lewinski, John Scott (4 April 2009). "Simm Returns as The Master in Doctor Who". Wired News. Retrieved 16 April 2009. 
  8. Colville, Robert (11 April 2009). "Russell T Davies Doctor Who interview: full transcript". Daily Telegraph (London). Retrieved 16 April 2009. 
  9. John Simm on playing Hamlet Daily Telegraph , 14th Sept 2010
  10. http://www.sheffieldtheatres.co.uk/event/betrayal-12/
  11. http://www.whatsonstage.com/news/theatre/london/E8831331905797/Aubrey+&+Tierney+join+John+Simm+in+Sheffield+Betrayal.html
  12. "The Village Press Pack", BBC Press Office, 19 March 2013. Retrieved 2013-03-19.
  13. . He is A Supporter Of Manchester United. Life On Mars star John Simm takes the stage to be near his children
  14. "Speaking in Tongues, Duke of York's Theatre, London", The Independent
  15. , The Independent 23 September 2010. Retrieved on 27 September 2010.

External links

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