Nigel Hawthorne

Nigel Hawthorne

  • Birthday: 1929-04-05
  • Deathday: 2001-12-26
  • Place of birth: Hertfordshire, England, UK

Biography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Sir Nigel Barnard Hawthorne, CBE (5 April 1929 – 26 December 2001) was an English actor, perhaps best remembered for his role as Sir Humphrey Appleby, the Permanent Secretary in the 1980s sitcom Yes Minister and the Cabinet Secretary in its sequel, Yes, Prime Minister. For this role he would win four Bafta Awards during the 1980s in the 'Best Light Entertainment Performance' Category. In the 1990s He would win two more Bafta Awards, one as Best TV Actor for 'The Fragile Heart' and one as Best Film Actor for 'The Madness of King George'. His role in the latter also garnered him his sole Oscar Nomination. Description above from the Wikipedia article Nigel Hawthorne, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia

Filmography

History of the World: Part I

1981

As Citizen Official - The French Revolution

Firefox

1982

As Pyotr Baranovich

The Black Cauldron

1985

As Fflewddur Fflam (voice)

The Plague Dogs

1982

As Dr. Boycott (voice)

The Madness of King George

1994

As George III

Richard III

1995

As The Duke of Clarence

Higher Love

2001

As Uncle Cullen

Amistad

1997

As Martin Van Buren

Demolition Man

1993

As Dr. Raymond Cocteau

The Winslow Boy

1999

As Arthur Winslow

Madeline

1998

As Lord Covington

Tarzan

1999

As Professor Archimedes Q. Porter (voice)

Twelfth Night

1996

As Malvolio

The Big Brass Ring

1999

As Kim Mennaker

Call Me Claus

2001

As Nick

The Object of My Affection

1998

As Rodney Fraser

Atatürk: Founder of Modern Turkey

1999

As Sir Percy Lorraine, British Ambassador

Murder in Mind

1997

As Dr. Ellis

Sweeney 2

1978

As Detective Chief Inspector Dilke

Turtle Diary

1985

As Publisher

Freddie as F.R.O.7.

1992

As Brigadier G (voice)

Memoirs of a Survivor

1981

As Victorian Father

The Clandestine Marriage

1999

As Lord Ogleby

A Reasonable Man

1999

As Judge Wendon

King of the Wind

1990

As Achmet

Relatively Speaking

1989

As Philip Carter

Animal Stories

2005

As Narrator (Orig. U.K.)

The Chain

1984

As Mr Thorn

The World Cup: A Captain's Tale

1982

As John Westwood

The Trials of Oz

1991

As Brian Leary

The Knowledge

1979

As Mr Burgess

Edward & Mrs. Simpson

1978

As Walter Monkton

Inside

1996

As Colonel

A Woman Called Golda

1982

As King Abdullah

Destiny

1978

As Major Lewis Rolfe

A Handful of Time

1989

As Ted Walker

Gandhi

1982

As Kinnoch

Flea Bites

1992

As

Spiderweb

1976

As Erik Lönnrot

Watership Down

1978

As Captain Campion (voice)

A Tale of Two Cities

1980

As Mr. CJ Stryver

Jenny's War

1985

As Colonel

The Misanthrope

1980

As Philinte

The Hunchback of Notre Dame

1982

As Magistrate at Esmeralda's trial

Portrait or Bust

1994

As Himself (uncredited)

Alma Mater

1971

As Major

The Tempest

1980

As Stephano

The House

1984

As General Fagg

Yes, Prime Minister: Re-elected

2013

As Self (Archive Material)

The Emergency Channel

1973

As Graham

Dead on Time

1983

As Doctor

Jessie

1980

As Mr Edmonds

Child of Hope

1975

As Police Captain

The Floater

1975

As Morris Shelman

Buffet

1976

As Jack

Protest

1981

As Stanek / Vanek

Carve Her Name with Pride

1958

As Park Soldier (uncredited)

Victoria & Albert

2001

As Lord William Lamb

Occupations

1974

As Libertini

The Spirit of Man

1989

As Rev. Jonathan Guerdon

Once Upon a Halloween

2005

As Fflewddur Fflam

The Sailor's Return

1978

As Mr Fosse

The Hiding Place

1975

As Pastor De Ruiter

The Shawl

1989

As John

The Critic

1982

As Mr. Sneer

Pope John Paul II

1984

As Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski

A Rod of Iron

1980

As Trevor

Late-Flowering Lust

1994

As Cousin John

Production

Murder in Mind

1997

As Associate Producer

Higher Love

2001

As Executive Producer

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