Alun Armstrong

Actor

Popular As Robert Alun Armstrong

Birthday July 17, 1946

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Annfield Plain, County Durham, England

Age 78 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 5' 10" (1.78 m)

#11641 Most Popular

1946

Alan Armstrong (born 1946 ), known professionally as Alun Armstrong, is an English character actor.

He grew up in County Durham in North East England, and first became interested in acting through Shakespeare productions at his grammar school.

1964

Armstrong took part in the National Youth Theatre summer school in 1964, but his background and northern accent made him feel out of place.

He auditioned for RADA but was not accepted.

He instead studied fine art at Newcastle University.

He found the course pretentious and felt that he did not fit in, and he was sent down after two years when he stopped attending classes.

Armstrong had jobs with a bricklayer and as a gravedigger before he decided to try acting again.

He started out as an assistant stage manager at the Cambridge Arts Theatre, then went on to a Theatre in Education company affiliated with the Sheffield Repertory Theatre.

He also performed in several Radio 4 dramas.

1970

Since his career began in the early 1970s, he has played, in his words, "the full spectrum of characters from the grotesque to musicals... I always play very colourful characters, often a bit crazy, despotic, psychotic".

His credits include several Charles Dickens adaptations, and the eccentric ex-detective Brian Lane in New Tricks.

He is also an accomplished stage actor who spent nine years with the Royal Shakespeare Company.

He originated the role of Thénardier in the London production of Les Misérables, and won an Olivier Award in the title role in Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street.

Born Alan Armstrong in Annfield Plain, County Durham, his father was a coal miner and both his parents were Methodist lay preachers.

He attended Annfield Plain Junior School, then Consett Grammar School, where a teacher inspired him to try acting.

In the lower sixth, he played Petruchio in The Taming of the Shrew, a role he later played with the Royal Shakespeare Company.

During the 1970s, he appeared in various TV series, including episodes of Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads?, Porridge, Public Eye and The Sweeney.

He was cast in two mini-series dealing with coal miners in North East England.

1971

Armstrong made his screen debut in Get Carter (1971).

On learning that the film was being made in Newcastle, Armstrong wrote a letter to MGM, the studio making the film, and was invited to meet director Mike Hodges, who was keen to cast local actors.

Armstrong has appeared in a number of films, although usually in supporting roles.

1974

He played Joe Gowlan in The Stars Look Down (1974) based on the novel by A. J. Cronin and he appeared in Ken Loach's Days of Hope (1975) set in his native County Durham.

1977

In A Bridge Too Far (1977), he had a small role as one of the British troops at the Battle of Arnhem.

He played a French soldier, Lieutenant Lecourbe, in Ridley Scott's 1977 film The Duellists.

In 1977, he was the strict Deputy Headmaster in Willy Russell's Our Day Out, a television play about a group of poor schoolchildren on a daytrip.

1981

He also starred in the 1981 Yorkshire Television drama Get Lost!

Armstrong has portrayed characters from the works of Charles Dickens.

1982

He played Wackford Squeers and Mr. Wagstaff in the eight-hour Royal Shakespeare Company stage adaptation of The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby that was filmed for television in 1982.

1983

He had a supporting role as the bandit leader Torquil in the 1983 fantasy film Krull.

1987

His first cinematic lead role was as Maxwell Randall, the titular vampire in Alan Clarke's snooker musical Billy the Kid and the Green Baize Vampire (1987).

Armstrong sang "I Bite Back".

1992

In Patriot Games (1992), Armstrong played an SO-13 officer.

1995

In Braveheart (1995), he played the Scottish noble Mornay who betrayed William Wallace.

1999

He also had small roles as the High Constable in Sleepy Hollow (1999), Cardinal Jinette in Van Helsing (2004), Magistrate Fang in Roman Polanski's Oliver Twist (2005) and Uncle Garrow in Eragon (2006).

Armstrong has had over 80 roles in television productions.

He has appeared in two versions of Oliver Twist: the 1999 ITV mini-series as Agnes Fleming's father Captain Fleming and the 2005 Roman Polanski film as Magistrate Fang.

He has had roles in four BBC Dickens adaptations, as Daniel Peggotty in David Copperfield (1999); as Inspector Bucket in Bleak House (2005); as Jeremiah and Ephraim Flintwinch in Little Dorrit (2008); and as Hiram Grewgious in The Mystery of Edwin Drood (2012).

2001

He was the villainous Egyptian cult leader Baltus Hafez in The Mummy Returns (2001), and he portrayed Saint Peter with a Geordie accent in Millions (2004).

2007

In a 2007 interview, Armstrong singled out Days of Hope as a favourite: "I loved that because it was my own history and background that was being dramatised and, in a way, nothing gets better than that".

In the comedy series A Sharp Intake of Breath, he played a variety of characters who complicate the life of the main character played by David Jason.