British actor
Eddie Marsan
Born Edward Maurice Charles Marsan
(1968-06-09 ) 9 June 1968 (age 56) Alma mater Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts Occupation Actor Years active 1990–present Spouse
Janine Schneider
(
m. 2002)
Children 4
Edward Maurice Charles Marsan (born 9 June 1968) is an English actor. He won the London Film Critics Circle Award and the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actor for the film Happy-Go-Lucky (2008).
Early life and education
Marsan was born on 9 June 1968[ 1] in the Stepney district of London to a working-class family; his father was a lorry driver and his mother was a school dinner lady and teacher's assistant.[ 2] [ 3] He was brought up in Bethnal Green and attended Raine's Foundation School .[ 4] He left school at 16 and initially served an apprenticeship as a printer before beginning his career in theatre.[ 3]
He trained at the Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts , graduating in 1991,[ 5] and went on to study under Sam Kogan [ 6] at the Kogan Academy of Dramatic Arts,[ 7] now known as The School of the Science of Acting,[ 7] of which Marsan is now a patron.[ 8] His first year at drama school was funded by Mr Benny, a bookmaker who ran a menswear shop where Marsan worked; he obtained scholarships for the rest of the course. It took many attempts for Marsan to get a place at drama school.[ 9]
Career
Marsan at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival
Marsan's first television appearance was in 1992 as a "yob " in the London Weekend Television series The Piglet Files . One of his more significant early television appearances was in the popular mid-1990s BBC sitcom Game On as an escaped convict who was an old flame of Mandy's. Marsan went on to have roles in Casualty , The Bill , Grass , Kavanagh QC , Grange Hill , Silent Witness , Ultimate Force , Southcliffe ,[ 10] and more. He also voiced the Manticore in the Merlin episode "Love in the Time of Dragons ".[ 11]
In 2011, he starred alongside Olivia Colman and Peter Mullan , all three actors relatively unknown at that time, in the British drama film Tyrannosaur .[ 12]
In 2013, he began portraying Terry Donovan, brother to the lead character in 7 series and 82 episodes of Showtime 's drama series Ray Donovan .[ 10] The same year he played Ludwig Guttmann in the television film The Best of Men . In May 2015, Marsan appeared as the practical magician Gilbert Norrell in the BBC period drama Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell .[ 13]
Marsan's film roles include the main villain in the 2008 superhero film Hancock alongside Will Smith and as Inspector Lestrade in Guy Ritchie 's Sherlock Holmes . His other films include Sixty Six , Gangs of New York ,[ 10] 21 Grams , The Illusionist ,[ 10] V for Vendetta , Gangster No. 1 , Miami Vice , Mission: Impossible III , I Want Candy , Vera Drake , Happy-Go-Lucky ,[ 10] Filth , Tyrannosaur [ 10] and Heartless .[ 14]
In 2021, Marsan appeared as anti-Fascist activist Soly Malinovsky in the television adaptation of the novel Ridley Road .[ 15] In 2022, he played the real-life role of John Darwin in ITV's drama series The Thief, His Wife and the Canoe .[ 16]
Marsan appeared as Mitch Winehouse, father of Amy Winehouse , in the biopic Back to Black , which was released in 2024.[ 17]
Personal life
Marsan married make-up artist Janine Schneider in 2002. They have four children.[ 18] Marsan is a humanist and was appointed a patron of Humanists UK in 2015.[ 19] He was critical of the lack of representation of working-class people in the arts in 2015 on BBC Radio 5 Live in which he stated too much drama is written from "the white, privileged, middle class perspective".[ 20] In 2024 he was interviewed on HARDtalk with an episode entitled "Do the arts neglect working-class people?".[ 9]
Marsan was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2025 New Year Honours for service to drama.[ 21] [ 22]
Filmography
Key
†
Denotes works that have not yet been released
Film
Television
Year
Title
Role
Notes
1992
The Piglet Files
Yob
Episode: "Sex, Spies and Videotape"
1992–1996
The Bill
Martin Price/Roy Kilby/Dean Stacey/Gary Vaughan
4 episodes
1996
Casualty
Rick Grant
Episode: "Chain Reactions"
EastEnders
Roddy
1 episode
Game On
Stoat
Episode: "Heavy Bondage & Custard Creams"
1996–1998
Grange Hill
Andy Sutcliffe/Eddie Sutcliffe
3 episodes
1997
Get Well Soon
Brian Clapton
Main cast, 6 episodes
Kavanagh QC
Ian Vincent
Episode: "The Ties That Bind"
1999
The Vice
Rhys
2 episodes
2000
The Mrs Bradley Mysteries
Ronald Quincy
Episode: "The Worsted Viper"
2001
The Monkey King
Pigsy
Miniseries, 2 episodes
2002
Ultimate Force
Badger
Episode: "The Killing House"
Judge John Deed
Ed Hay
Episode: "Nobody's Fool"
2003
Grass
Sunshine
3 episodes
Charles II: The Power and the Passion
Titus Oates
Episode #1.4
2004
Coming Up
Martin
Episode: "The Baader Meinhoff Gang Show"
Quite Ugly One Morning
Stephen Lime
Television film
Silent Witness
Derek Portnoy
2 episodes
2006
Friends and Crocodiles
Martin Butterworth
Television film
2008
God on Trial
Lieble
Television film
Little Dorrit
Pancks
Miniseries, 12 episodes
The 39 Steps
Scudder
Television film
2009
Criminal Justice
Saul
Main cast, 5 episodes
2009–2010
Law & Order: UK
Jason Peters
2 episodes
2010
Merlin
The Manticore (voice)
Episode: "Love in the Time of Dragons"
The Sarah Jane Adventures
Mr White
2-part story: Goodbye, Sarah Jane Smith
2011
Moby Dick
Stubb
Miniseries, 2 episodes
2012
Playhouse Presents
The Intruder
Episode: "Walking the Dogs"
The Best of Men
Ludwig Guttmann
Television film
2013
Southcliffe
Andrew Salter
4 episodes
2013–2020
Ray Donovan
Terry Donovan
Main cast, 80 episodes
2015
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
Gilbert Norrell
Miniseries, 7 episodes
River
Thomas Neill Cream
Miniseries, 6 episodes
Hunted
Narrator (voice)
Reality television series
2016
Galavant
Death
Episode: "Love and Death"
2017
Urban Myths
Bob Dylan
Episode: "Bob Dylan: Knockin' on Dave's Door"
2018
Indian Summer School
Narrator (voice)
Reality television series, 3 episodes
2021
The Pact
Arwel Evans
Miniseries, 4 episodes
Deceit
Paul Britton
Miniseries, 4 episodes
Ridley Road
Soly Malinovsky
4 episodes
2022
Ray Donovan: The Movie
Terry Donovan
Television film
The Thief, His Wife and the Canoe
John Darwin
Miniseries, 4 episodes
2023
The Power
Bernie Monke
Main role
The Winter King
Uther Pendragon
2 episodes
2024
Franklin
John Adams
Miniseries
Inside No. 9
Nathaniel
Episode: "The Curse of the Ninth"
Suspect
Alistair Underwood
Series 2
Supacell
Ray
2 episodes
Heartstopper
Geoff
3 episodes
TBA
Lockerbie †
Filming[ 27]
Video games
Awards and nominations
References
^ Southern, Nathan (2016). "Eddie Marsan" . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times . Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 31 March 2016 .
^ Simon, Alex (8 December 2008). "Eddie Marsan Keeps It Real" . The Hollywood Interview.com . Retrieved 29 April 2018 .
^ a b Taylor, Ella (7 January 2009). "Happy-Go-Lucky: Driver's Eddie" . LA Weekly . Retrieved 29 April 2018 .
^ "December Reunion" (PDF) . Old Raineians Newsletter : 3. April 1994. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 August 2020. Retrieved 16 May 2015 .
^ "Mountview Notable Alumni" . mountview.org.uk . Retrieved 18 April 2021 .
^ Kogan, Sam (2010). Kogan, Helen (ed.). The Science of Acting . UK, USA and Canada: Routledge. Back cover. ISBN 978-0-415-48812-9 .
^ a b "Patrons" . Kogan Academy of Dramatic Arts . Archived from the original on 16 July 2015. Retrieved 16 July 2015 .
^ Prospectus . The Academy of the Science of Acting and Directing. 2007. p. 4.
^ a b "HARDtalk - Eddie Marsan: Do the arts neglect working-class people? - BBC Sounds" . www.bbc.co.uk . Retrieved 7 May 2024 .
^ a b c d e f "Terry Donovan Played by Eddie Marsan" . paramountplus.com . Archived from the original on 1 March 2024. Retrieved 1 March 2024 .
^ "Love in the Time of Dragons - Merlin Series 3 Episode 9 of 14" . bbc.co.uk . 6 November 2010.
^ "Tyrannosaur 2011" . filmaffinity.com . 2011.
^ "Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell - Mr Norrell Played by Eddie Marsan" . bbc.co.uk . Retrieved 30 April 2015 .
^ Miska, Brad (3 February 2010). "Trailer for Lionsgate UK's Mass Release 'Heartless' " . Bloody-Disgusting . Retrieved 29 April 2018 .
^ "Interview with Eddie Marsan" . 28 September 2021. Retrieved 11 October 2021 .
^ Lawson, Mark (15 April 2022). "Death, fraud and canoes: how a mind-blowing insurance scam became an ITV drama" . The Guardian . Retrieved 16 May 2024 .
^ Ntim, Zac (2 February 2024). " 'Back To Black' Trailer: Marisa Abela Is Amy Winehouse In Sam Taylor-Johnson's Musical Biopic" . Deadline Hollywood . Retrieved 16 May 2024 .
^ Anderson, John (4 August 2010). "A Go-to Actor for 'That Guy' Roles" . The New York Times . Retrieved 29 April 2018 .
^ "Actor Eddie Marsan appointed Patron of the BHA" . Humanists UK . 11 November 2015. Retrieved 26 February 2021 .
^ "5 Live In Short - Actor Eddie Marsan: 'UK drama too white, middle-class' - BBC Sounds" . www.bbc.co.uk . Retrieved 7 May 2024 .
^ "New Year Honours: Gareth Southgate, Stephen Fry and Olympians on list" . www.bbc.com . Retrieved 3 January 2025 .
^ "No. 64607" . The London Gazette (Supplement). 30 December 2024. p. N13.
^ Hewitt, Chris (28 September 2012). "Martin Freeman joins 'The World's End' along with Eddie Marsan" . Empire . Retrieved 26 May 2013 .
^ D'Alessandro, Anthony (4 October 2018). "Eddie Marsan Along for the Ride In 'Fast & Furious' Spin-off 'Hobbs And Shaw' " . Deadline Hollywood . Retrieved 19 January 2019 .
^ D'Alessandro, Anthony (7 February 2022). " 'Fair Play': Sebastian de Souza, Eddie Marsan & Rich Sommer Join MRC & T-Street Finance World Thriller" . Deadline Hollywood .
^ "Toronto Jewish Film Festival - Midas Man, Opening Night Film, Canadian Premier" . Toronto Jewish Film Foundation . Archived from the original on 24 May 2024. Retrieved 1 June 2024 .
^ Szalai, Georg (5 March 2024). " 'Suits' Star Patrick J. Adams, Connor Swindells, Merritt Wever Cast in Netflix, BBC Series 'Lockerbie' " . Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved 5 March 2024 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab "Eddie Marsan Awards" . IMDB (Index source only) . Retrieved 30 January 2023 .
^ "BIFA 2004 Winners & Nominations" . BIFA. 2004. Retrieved 25 March 2019 .
^ "BIFA 2008 Winners & Nominations" . BIFA. 2008. Retrieved 25 January 2019 .
^ Levy, Emanuel (17 December 2008). "Oscar 2008: Dallas–Fort Worth Film Critics Awards" . Cinema 24/7 . Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
^ "BIFA 2011 Winners & Nominations" . BIFA. 2011. Retrieved 25 March 2019 .
^ "BIFA 2013 Winners & Nominations" . BIFA. 2013. Retrieved 25 March 2019 .
^ "The Winners of the 5th VOICES Film Festival" . voices-festival.org. 6 July 2015.
^ "Winners announced for the 2022 BAFTA Cymru Awards" . bafta.org . 9 October 2022.
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