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Derek Jacobi

Derek Jacobi
Derek Jacobi
Born: Oct 22, 1938 in Leytonstone, London, England, UK
Occupation: Actor
Active: '70s-2000s
Major Genres: Drama, Mystery
Career Highlights: I, Claudius, The Secret of NIMH, Richard II
First Major Screen Credit: Othello (1965)
Filmography
SECRET OF NIMH, THE 1982
DEAD AGAIN 1991
I, CLAUDIUS 1975
HAMLET 1997
LOVE IS THE DEVIL 1998
UP AT THE VILLA 2000
HENRY V 1989
ODESSA FILE, THE 1974
JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS 2000
MOLOKAI: THE STORY OF FATHER DAMIEN 1999
BODY, THE 2001
DIARIES OF VASLAV NIJINSKY, THE 2002
CADFAEL: A MORBID TASTE OF BONES 2000
TWO MEN WENT TO WAR 2004
NANNY MCPHEE 2006
CADFAEL COLLECTION, THE 2005
CADFAEL COLLECTION: DISC 1, THE 2005
CADFAEL COLLECTION: DISC 2, THE 2005
CADFAEL COLLECTION: DISC 3, THE 2005
CADFAEL COLLECTION: DISC 4, THE 2005
CADFAEL COLLECTION: DISC 5, THE 2005
CADFAEL COLLECTION: DISC 6, THE 2005
CADFAEL COLLECTION: DISC 7, THE 2005
CADFAEL COLLECTION: DISC 8, THE 2005
CADFAEL COLLECTION: DISC 9, THE 2005
CADFAEL COLLECTION: DISC 10, THE 2005
CADFAEL COLLECTION: DISC 11, THE 2005
CADFAEL COLLECTION: DISC 12, THE 2005
CADFAEL COLLECTION: DISC 13, THE 2005
ENDGAME 2009
TWIN SPIRITS 2009
27 Videos for Derek Jacobi
Endgame (2009) The Gathering Storm (2002) Hamlet (1996)
The Golden Compass (2007) Gosford Park (2001) Looking for Richard (1996)
Underworld: Evolution (2006) The Body (2001) Dead Again (1991)
Nanny McPhee (2005) Gladiator (2000) Henry V (1989)
Twin Spirits (2005) Jason and the Argonauts (2000) The Secret Garden (1987)
Two Men Went to War (2004) Up at the Villa (2000) The Secret of NIMH (1982)
Angelina Ballerina: The Show Must Go On - Christmas in Mouse Land (2002) Molokai: The Story of Father Damien (1999) The Human Factor (1979)
Nijinsky: From the Diaries of Vaslav Nijinsky (2002) Love is the Devil: Study for a Portrait of Francis Bacon (1998) I, Claudius (1975)
Revelation (2002) Cadfael: A Morbid Taste for Bones (1996) The Odessa File (1974)
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Biography:

One of Britain's most distinguished stage performers, Derek Jacobi is one of two actors (the other being Laurence Olivier) to hold both Danish and English knighthoods. Primarily known for his work on the stage, he has also made a number of films and remains best-known to television audiences for his stunning portrayal of the titular Roman emperor in I, Claudius. Born in Leytonstone, East London, on October 22, 1938, Jacobi was raised with a love of film, and he began performing on the stage while attending an all-boys school.

Thanks to the school's single sex population, his first roles with the drama club -- until his voice broke -- were all female. It was with one of his first male roles that Jacobi earned his first measure of acclaim: playing Hamlet in a school production staged at the 1957 Edinburgh Festival, he made enough of an impression that he was approached by an agent from Twentieth Century Fox.

Ultimately deemed too young to be signed to the studio, Jacobi instead went to Cambridge University, where he studied history and continued acting. His stage work at Cambridge was prolific and allowed him to work with classmates Ian McKellen and Trevor Nunn, and, thanks to his performance as Edward II, landed him his first job after graduation.

Jacobi acted with the Birmingham Repertory Theatre until his portrayal of Henry VIII attracted the attention of Laurence Olivier. Olivier was so impressed with Jacobi's work that he invited him to London to become one of the eight founding members of the prestigious National Theatre. Jacobi went on to become one of his country's most steadily employed and respected actors, performing in numerous plays over the years on both sides of the Atlantic (in 1985, he won a Tony Award for his work in {-Much Ado About Nothing}).

He also branched out into film and television, making his film debut with a secondary role in Douglas Sirk's Interlude (1957). He acted in numerous film adaptations of classic plays, including Othello (1965) and The Three Sisters (1970). However, it was through his collaborations with Kenneth Branagh on various screen adaptations of Shakespeare that he became most visible to an international film audience, appearing as the Chorus in Branagh's acclaimed 1989 Henry V and as Claudius in the director's 1996 full-length adaptation of Hamlet.

Jacobi made one of his most memorable (to say nothing of terrifying) screen impressions in Branagh's Hitchcock-inspired Dead Again (1991), portraying a hypnotist with a very shady background. In 1998, Jacobi earned more recognition with his portrayal of famed painter Francis Bacon in John Maybury's controversial Love Is the Devil: Study for a Portrait of Francis Bacon. On television, in addition to his celebrated work in I, Claudius, Jacobi has also earned praise for his roles in a number of other productions.

In 1989, he won an Emmy for his performance in the 1988 adaptation of Graham Greene's The Tenth Man. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide.