David Oakes
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David Oakes | |
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Born | Rowan David Oakes 14 October 1983 Fordingbridge, Hampshire, England |
Alma mater | • Bristol Old Vic Theatre School • University of Manchester |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 2008–present |
Website | davidoakes.co.uk |
David Oakes (born 14 October 1983) is an English film, television and theatre actor.
Contents
Early life and education
He was born in Fordingbridge,[1] Hampshire, England, the son of a Church of England canon[2] and a professional musician.
Oakes was head boy at Bishop Wordsworth's School, in Salisbury, Wiltshire, where he was also heavily involved with the Salisbury Playhouse and their youth theatre, Stage 65. He graduated with a first in English Literature from the University of Manchester.[2]
He attended the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School from 2005 to 2007.[3]
Career
He played the villainous William Hamleigh in the television miniseries The Pillars of the Earth (2010), produced by Ridley Scott's production company.[4] Subsequently, Oakes was cast in the television miniseries The Borgias (2011), airing on Showtime.[5] He played Juan Borgia opposite Jeremy Irons.
Continuing a career on television playing morally dubious characters, Oakes had a role in The White Queen for BBC One and Starz playing George, Duke of Clarence. It was broadcast in mid-2013.
Television
Year | Title | Role | Director | Channel | Notes |
2008 | Bonekickers | Alfred, Lord Tennyson | Iain B. MacDonald | BBC One | Episode 6 "Follow the Gleam" |
Walter's War | Oswald Hennessey | Alrick Riley | BBC Four | ||
2009 | Henry VIII: The Mind of a Tyrant | George Cavendish | Channel 4 | Episode 3 "Lover" | |
Trinity | Ross Bonham | Colin Teague | ITV2 | Episodes 1, 2, 3 | |
2010 | The Pillars of the Earth | Lord William Hamleigh | Sergio Mimica-Gezzan | TV miniseries; Appeared in all eight episodes | |
2011–2012 | The Borgias | Juan Borgia | Neil Jordan, John Maybury, David Leland, John Amiel, Kari Skogland, Jeremy Podeswa et al. | Season 1 & 2 | |
2012 | World Without End | Bishop Henri | Michael Caton-Jones | Channel 4 | |
2013 | Ripper Street | Victor Silver | Andy Wilson | Episode 8 What Use Our Work? | |
The White Queen | George, Duke of Clarence | James Kent, Jamie Payne and Colin Teague | |||
2014 | Kim Philby: His Most Intimate Betrayal | Kim Philby | BBC2 | Two part drama documentary by Ben MacIntyre | |
2015 | Endeavour | Jocelyn "Joss" Bixby | Sandra Goldbacher | ITV & Mammoth Productions | |
The Living and the Dead | William Payne | Sam Donovan | BBC | ||
2016 | Victoria | Prince Ernest II, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha | Tom Vaughan, Sandra Goldbacher & Oliver Blackburn | ITV & Mammoth Productions |
Film
Year | Title | Role | Producer | Notes |
2012 | Truth or Die | Justin | Corona Pictures | UK release on 6 August 2012; Called "Truth or Dare" in the UK |
100Dniowk@ | David Potter | Agresywna Banda | Polish Feature Film | |
2013 | Love By Design | Adrian | Solar Junction | Rom Com with Jane Seymour and Olivia Hallinan |
Goblin? | Harry | Multi Story Film | Short film with The Borgias co-star Holliday Grainger | |
Who Shall I Play With Now? | Gregory | Dog Ate Cake | UK premiere on 29 June 2013 at the Wimbledon Shorts Festival | |
2014 | Sins of a Father | Martin | Andrew Piddington | A re-shot, re-edited version of the 1991 film Shuttlecock with Alan Bates and Lambert Wilson |
2016 | Cold Skin | Friend | Xavier Gens | An adaptation of the novel co-starring Ray Stevenson |
Radio
- Oakes has performed with The Fitzrovia Radio Hour[citation needed]
- 2008: A Dance to the Music of Time as Charles Stringham (BBC Radio 4)
Stage
Year | Title | Role | Theatre | Director |
2006 | Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare | Claudio & Verges | Royal Shakespeare Company & Bristol Old Vic Theatre School | John Hartoch |
2007 | Love's Labour's Lost by William Shakespeare | Dumaine | Shakespeare's Globe & International Tour | Dominic Dromgoole |
We the People (World Premiere) by Eric Schlosser | Charles Pinckney & Gunning Bedford Jnr | Shakespeare's Globe | Charlotte Westenra | |
2008 | Old Vic New Voices: The Twenty-four Hour Plays | Davide | Old Vic Theatre | |
Journey's End by R. C. Sherriff | Raleigh | Mercury Theatre, Colchester | Tony Casement | |
Mary Stuart by Friedrich Schiller | Mortimer | Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh | Aida Karic | |
2009 | All The Little Things We Crushed (World Premiere) by Joel Horwood | Hugh | Almeida Theatre, London | Simon Godwin |
2011 | Three Farces ("Slasher and Crasher", "A Most Unwarrantable Intrusion" & "Grimshaw, Bagshaw and Bradshaw") by John Maddison Morton | Samson Slasher & John Bagshaw | Orange Tree Theatre, London | Henry Bell |
2013 | Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen adapted by Simon Reade | Darcy | Open Air Theatre, Regent's Park, London | Deborah Bruce |
2014-2015 | Shakespeare in Love (World Premiere) by Marc Norman & Tom Stoppard adapted by Lee Hall | Christopher Marlowe | Noël Coward Theatre, West End, London | Declan Donnellan |
2015 | The Trial of Macbeth by Jonathan Myerson | Banquo | Noël Coward Theatre | Christopher Haydon |
- In 2006, David performed a 90-minute abridged version of Much Ado About Nothing as part of the Royal Shakespeare Company's "Complete Works" festival along with his final year graduates from the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School.[6]
- Since appearing at Shakespeare's Globe at the outset of his career, David has frequently performed in numerous rehearsed readings as part of their "Read Not Dead" initiative. Including their landmark 200th reading of Philip Massinger's A New Way To Pay Old Debts; David played Wellborn alongside a cast including Benjamin Whitrow, Alan Cox and Nicholas Rowe.[7]
- Other performances between 2008 and 2013 for "Read Not Dead" include: An early quarto edition of Henry IV: Part One as Prince Hal oppopsite Benjamin Whitrow's Falstaff, Calderon's Life is a Dream (La Vida Es Sueno) as Segismundo, Taming Of A Shrew as Aurelias, The Spanish Tragedy as Lorenzo, The Return from Parnassus as Ingenioso, Bassianus as Geta, Gorboduc as a "smooth, almost oily[8]" Arostus, John Lyly's Love's Metamorphosis as Montanus and Thomas Middleton's Your Five Gallants as Tailby.[9]
- Oakes set up a theatre company called Dog Ate Cake with a long term theatrical collaborator, Henry Bell[10]
- David was nominated for both WhatsOnStage and Broadway World awards for his performance in Shakespeare in Love in 2015. The production was also nominated for an Olivier Award.
- In 2015 David starred as Banquo in a charity fundraiser for the Shakespeare Schools Festival.[11] The event was largely improvised by the actors and lawyers involved, but based on a framework written by Jonathan Myerson. The cast also included Christopher Ecclestone as Macbeth, Haydn Gwynne as Lady Macbeth, Patterson Joseph as MacDuff and Pippa Bennett-Warner as one of the Weird Sisters. The event interrupted the events of Shakespeare's play following the death of Duncan and placed Macbeth on trial for Murder with David, Patterson and Haydn appearing as witnesses for the prosecution and Christopher and Pippa as witnesses for the defence. The event was overseen by High Court Judge, Sir Michael Burton, the QC's were John Kelsey-Fry, Jonathan Laidlaw, Dinah Rose and Ian Winter, and the foreman of the Jury was Jeremy Paxman.[12]
Theatre Direction
Oakes has directed a number of theatre pieces alongside his acting career. In 2003 he took a stage adaptation of The Wicker Man to the Epping Forest Theatre Festival. Rehearsing in and around his home town of Salisbury, Oakes "got kicked out of the [Cathedral] Close for rehearsing pagan rituals for [his] open-air production of The Wicker Man.”[13]
At University he directed numerous plays including Martin McDonagh's Beauty Queen of Leenane, Harold Pinter's The Dumb Waiter and Anthony Minghella's Whale Music[14]
Also whilst at University, in 2005 Oakes assisted director Natalie Wilson on a production of "Smilin' Through" which was co-produced by the Truant Company, Birmingham Repertory Theatre and Contact Theatre, Manchester Later that year, Oakes once again turning to literary adaptation, took a production of Stephen King's The Boogeyman to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.[14]
With his and Bell's theatre company, Dog Ate Cake, in 2009 Oakes directed a small tour revival of John Maddison Morton's Box and Cox[15]
Oakes frequently directs at Shakespeare's Globe extending their Read Not Dead Series, a study devoted to performing fully staged readings of the entirety of the Early Modern Canon of Drama: Most recently Oakes directed Robert Greene's The Honourable History of Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay[16] and Lewis Theobald's "Happy Ending" version of John Webster's Duchess of Malfi, "The Fatal Secret".[17]
David recently directed an extract of Robert Daborne's A Christian Turn'd Turk as part of a special Read Not Dead event at Shakespeare's Globe. Four directors with four scholars were teamed up with actors and presented their arguments and selected scenes at a special hustings event on Thursday 29 May 2014
Personal life
Oakes plays both the clarinet and bass clarinet, and is a strong bass singer.[10]
He is an avid follower of folk music, and continues to support the Bristol folk group Sheelanagig.[1]
He has an extensive collection of canoes and is currently developing a comedy pilot based on this interest. His preferred canoe method is kayak but he also enjoys Canadian canoeing.
Art
Oakes is an avid fine line sketcher. He is increasingly known for sketching on-set animals upon coloured pages of script reissues and giving them to production members.[18] In May 2015 he exhibited as part of the Dulwich Artists Open House Festival[19] alongside artist and designer Sarah Hamilton.
See also
References
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to [[commons:Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).|Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).]]. |
- davidoakes.co.uk, Oakes's official website
- David Oakes at the Internet Movie Database
- Dog Ate Cake Official Website
- David Oakes Prints
- David Oakes at the London Theatre Database
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- Articles with dead external links from October 2010
- Articles with hCards
- Articles with unsourced statements from November 2010
- Commons category link from Wikidata
- 1983 births
- 20th-century English male actors
- 21st-century English male actors
- Alumni of Bristol Old Vic Theatre School
- Alumni of the University of Manchester
- English male film actors
- English male musical theatre actors
- English male stage actors
- English male television actors
- English male voice actors
- Living people
- People educated at Bishop Wordsworth's School
- People from Fordingbridge