Toby Stephens

Actor

Birthday April 21, 1969

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace London, England

Age 54 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 1.8 m

#2873 Most Popular

1956

The production was reportedly the first BBC radio dramatisation of the novel though Moonraker was on South African radio in 1956, with Bob Holness providing the voice of Bond.

He has since appeared in a number of adaptations of other James Bond novels.

1969

Toby Stephens (born 21 April 1969) is a British actor who has appeared in films in the UK, US and India.

Stephens, the younger son of actors Dame Maggie Smith and Sir Robert Stephens, was born on 21 April 1969 at the Middlesex Hospital in Fitzrovia, London.

He was educated at Aldro School and Seaford College in West Sussex.

He then trained at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA).

1992

Stephens began his film career with the role of Othello in 1992, in Sally Potter's Orlando.

He has since made regular appearances on television (including in The Camomile Lawn, 1992) and on stage.

He played the title role in a Royal Shakespeare Company production of Coriolanus shortly after graduation from LAMDA; that same season he played Claudio in Measure for Measure for the RSC.

1996

He played the lead in the film Photographing Fairies and played Orsino in Trevor Nunn's 1996 film adaptation of William Shakespeare's Twelfth Night.

2002

He is known for the roles of Bond villain Gustav Graves in the 2002 James Bond film Die Another Day, for which he was nominated for the Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor, William Gordon in the 2005 Mangal Pandey: The Rising film and Edward Fairfax Rochester in the 2006 BBC television adaptation of Jane Eyre.

In 2002 he took on the role of Gustav Graves in the James Bond film Die Another Day.

Aged 33 at the time of film's release, he remains the youngest actor to have played a Bond villain.

2004

He played Stanley Kowalski in a West End production of Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire, and Hamlet in 2004.

He has appeared on Broadway in Ring Round the Moon.

2005

In 2005 he played the role of a British Army captain in the Indian film, The Rising: Ballad of Mangal Pandey, portraying events in the Indian rebellion of 1857.

The following year he returned to India to play a renegade British East India Company officer in Sharpe's Challenge.

2006

In late 2006 he starred as Edward Rochester in the highly acclaimed BBC television adaptation of Jane Eyre (broadcast in the United States on PBS in early 2007) and The Wild West in February 2007 for the BBC in which he played General George Armstrong Custer in Custer's Last Stand.

Stock-pot was the producer of One Day, a short 2006 film shown at international film festivals, in which Stephens played a small part as the boss of McInnerny's character.

2007

During mid-2007, Stephens played the role of Jerry in a revival of Harold Pinter's Betrayal under the direction of Roger Michell.

Later that year, Stephens starred as Horner in Jonathan Kent's revival of William Wycherley's The Country Wife.

The play was the inaugural production of the Theatre Royal Haymarket Company.

2008

In February 2008, the Fox Broadcasting Company gave the go-ahead to cast Stephens as the lead in a potential one hour, prime time US television show, Inseparable, to be produced by Shaun Cassidy.

Billed as a modern Jekyll and Hyde story, the show was to feature a partially paralysed forensic psychologist whose other personality is a charming criminal.

Stephens' casting was highly unusual, because Fox had not yet approved a script nor purchased a pilot for the show.

However, in mid-May 2008, The Hollywood Reporter announced that "[b]y the time the network picked up the pilot (...) [the producers'] hold on Stephens had expired (...)"

In May 2008, Stephens performed the role of James Bond in a BBC Radio 4 production of Ian Fleming's Dr. No, as part of the centenary celebration of Fleming's birth.

Also in May 2008, Stock-pot Productions announced that Stephens will have the lead role in a feature-length film entitled Fly Me, co-starring Tim McInnerny.

On 5 October 2008, Stephens appeared onstage at the London Palladium as part of a benefit entitled "The Story of James Bond, A Tribute to Ian Fleming".

The event, organised by Fleming's niece, Lucy Fleming, featured music from various James Bond films and Bond film stars reading from Fleming's Bond novels.

Stephens took the part of James Bond himself in the readings.

In early December 2008, Stephens read from Coda, the last book written by friend Simon Gray, for BBC Radio 4.

The excerpts from which Stephens read included Gray's description of his participation as godfather at the christening of Stephens' son Eli.

2009

Early in 2009, Stephens appeared as Prince John in season 3 of the BBC series Robin Hood.

The series aired on BBC America in the United States.

Stephens appeared in two episodes of a six-part television series, Strike Back, based on the novel by Chris Ryan.

In mid-2009, Stephens returned to the London stage in the Donmar Warehouse production of Ibsen's A Doll's House alongside Gillian Anderson and Christopher Eccleston.

2010

The series aired in May 2010.

2014

From 2014 to 2017, he starred as Captain Flint in the Starz television series Black Sails, followed by one of the lead roles in the Netflix science fiction series Lost in Space from 2018 to 2021.

He currently stars as the Greek God Poseidon in Percy Jackson and the Olympians.