Charlie Cox

Actor

Birthday December 15, 1982

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace London, England

Age 41 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 5′ 10″

#4329 Most Popular

1982

Charlie Thomas Cox (born 15 December 1982) is an English actor.

2001

After graduating from Sherborne in 2001, he moved to London and began training at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School the following year.

2003

Cox was cast in his first significant professional role at age eighteen in the psychological thriller Dot the i, released in 2003.

Following filming, he enrolled at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School.

2004

In the summer following his first year of study, He was cast as Lorenzo in the 2004 Al Pacino-vehicle The Merchant of Venice, breaking the school's policy of not allowing students to audition for outside productions.

2005

Subsequently, he decided not to return to school and continued working, appearing in guest spots on TV and supporting roles in movies like the 2005 historical drama Casanova and the 2006 BBC sci-fi film A for Andromeda.

2007

Cox's breakout role was as Tristan Thorn in the 2007 fantasy film Stardust, one of a series of roles he had in predominantly British productions during the first decade of his career.

He made his West End debut the following year in a revival of the Harold Pinter plays The Lover and The Collection.

Cox's breakout role was as the main protagonist, Tristan Thorn, in the 2007 fantasy film Stardust, in which he starred opposite Claire Danes.

The film was successful with both critics and audiences globally and introduced Cox to a wider audience.

He made his West End debut the following year in Harold Pinter's The Lover/The Collection at the Ambassadors Theatre in London.

2008

It began previews on 15 January 2008 and opened on 29 January.

He was next seen in the 2008 film Stone of Destiny as Ian Hamilton and in the 2009 historical drama Glorious 39, which were widely released in the United Kingdom.

2010

Following his successes on-screen in the 2010s, he acted in a 2019 stage production of Harold Pinter's Betrayal, first in the West End and then on Broadway.

Cox was born in London, England, and raised in East Sussex.

He is the son of Patricia (née Harley) and Andrew Frederick Seaforth Cox, a publisher.

He is the youngest of five children and has one brother and three half-siblings from his father's first marriage.

Cox was raised Catholic and was educated at two private boarding schools: Ashdown House School in the village of Forest Row in East Sussex and Sherborne School in the market town of Sherborne in Dorset.

Growing up, Cox did not consider a career in acting and only seriously considered it during his last few years of school.

In 2010 he had the title role in Heinrich von Kleist's The Prince of Homburg at the Donmar Warehouse in London.

In September of that year, he played the closeted gay Duke of Crowborough in the first episode of the ITV drama series Downton Abbey.

2011

Cox portrayed Owen Sleater in the second and third seasons of HBO's Boardwalk Empire (2011–2012) and Jonathan Hellyer Jones in the 2014 film The Theory of Everything.

More recently, he starred in the RTÉ drama series Kin (2021) and the Netflix spy miniseries Treason (2022).

In 2011 he played St. Josemaría Escrivá in the Roland Joffé film There Be Dragons and Ishmael in Encore's Moby Dick miniseries.

Also in 2011, he signed on for a recurring role in the second season of the Martin Scorsese-produced HBO original series Boardwalk Empire as Owen Sleater, an Irish enforcer with ties to the IRA.

He received a Screen Actors Guild Award as part of the ensemble in 2011 and another nomination the following year.

2012

His character became a regular for the series' third season, broadcast in September 2012.

2013

In 2013 he starred in the independent film Hello Carter and the BBC Cold War thriller Legacy. He had lead roles in two unproduced CBS TV pilots: a political drama titled The Ordained in February 2013 and an untitled Wall Street show executive-produced by John Cusack in February 2014.

At the end of 2013, production began on the film The Theory of Everything, where Cox portrays Jonathan Hellyer Jones, the second husband of Jane Hawking.

2014

The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2014 and was nominated for Best Picture at the 2015 Academy Awards.

It was announced that Cox had won the role in May 2014, and later reported that Marvel had considered him for it since 2012.

Production on the first season began in summer 2014, and it premiered on Netflix in April 2015.

2015

He is best known for portraying Matt Murdock / Daredevil in the television series Daredevil (2015–2018) and other projects as part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

2017

Cox portrayed Matt Murdock in Marvel's Daredevil TV series as well as the 2017 team-up miniseries event The Defenders, produced and released through Netflix.

His performance was praised and given a Helen Keller Achievement Award for his role by the American Foundation for the Blind.

In late 2017 it was announced that he had joined the cast of Stripped, a thriller produced by Lorenzo di Bonaventura, who also produced Cox's breakout film Stardust, but it was never produced.

2018

It ran for three seasons and was produced over four years, concluding in late 2018.

In the following years, Cox shared his interest in reprising the role in a future project, also noting his contractual obligations by Marvel Studios to do so.

Between filming seasons of Daredevil, Cox made his New York theater debut, co-starring in the off-Broadway production of Incognito at the Manhattan Theatre Club.

He also acted opposite Michael Caine, Jim Broadbent, Ray Winstone, and others in the 2018 film King of Thieves, based on the true story of the 2015 Hatton Garden jewelry heist in London; it reunited him with James Marsh, who directed him in 2014's The Theory of Everything.