爱乐之城钢琴曲谱子:求Matthew MacFadyen的个人资料~

来源:百度文库 编辑:查人人中国名人网 时间:2024/05/02 09:03:24
就是演05<傲慢与偏见>里达西的那位演员~!

明星档案

中文名:马修·麦克菲迪恩
英文名:Matthew MacFadyen
性 别:女
图片:
http://imagecache2.allposters.com/IMAGES/MMPH/C57655.jpg
http://www.smh.com.au/ffximage/2004/10/22/mcfadyen_narrowweb__200x245.jpg

演员作品集
傲慢与偏见(2005)
在我父亲的洞穴里 In My Father's Den (2004-10-7)
罪孽的代价 The Reckoning (2003-8-6)
军情五处第一季 MI-5 (2002-5-16)
拦截密码战 Enigma (2002-1-22)
完美的陌生人 Perfect Strangers (2001-5-10)
宝贝喜临门 Maybe Baby (2000-6-2)
Warriors Warriors (1999-11-29)
Wuthering Heights Wuthering Heights (1998-10-18)

完全档案(英文的不好意思,不过你可以自己翻译一下)
Biography

Matthew was born in Great Yarmouth in Norfolk in 1974. His birth sign is Libra.

He is married to former Spooks co-star and fellow actor Keeley Hawes. They have a young daughter called Maggie.

His mother was an actress and trained drama teacher. His father was in the Oil business, and he spent much of his childhood moving around, as his father's job often took the family overseas to such places as the Far East and Brazil. His Grandfather was also involved in directing amateur drama. He has a younger brother called Jamie.

He attended Oakham School in Rutland, Leicestershire, where he was a drama scholar from 1990 to 1992.

He left school in 1992, and although he was turned down by the National Youth Theatre, he was accepted at RADA where his contemporaries included Ioan Gruffudd.

In 1995 he graduated from RADA and joined the Cheek by Jowl Company, where made his stage debut that year as Antonio in 'Duchess of Malfi'. Other notable performances followed with Cheek by Jowl and in 1996 he also starred with the Royal Shakespeare Company as Demetrius in 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' at Stratford. He then played the role of Charles Surface in 'School for Scandal' at the Barbican in 1998. He followed this with the role of Benedick in 'Much Ado About Nothing', again with Cheek by Jowl.

He also appeared in various productions in the West End, on Broadway (New York) and on RSC international Tours.

In 1999, he was nominated for an RSC Ian Charleson Award for 'Best Classical Actor under 30'.

He made his television debut in the 1998 Granada Television production of 'Wuthering Heights' in the role of Hareton Earnshaw, Heathcliffe's nephew and heir to the the Linton fortune.

In 1999, he played his first starring role as the football-mad scouser Pte Alan James in the highly acclaimed, Bafta award-winning BBC drama 'Warriors', for which he was nominated for a Royal Television Society Best Actor award.

In 2000, he appeared as the mysterious lodger Waller in 'Murder Rooms: The Dark Beginnings of Sherlock Holmes'. He also returned to the Theatre that year to play Mr Brougham in the Royal National Theatre's production of 'Battle Royal'.

Also in 2000, he made his film debut playing Hugh Laurie's obnoxious boss Nigel in the Ben Elton film of his own novel, 'Maybe Baby'.

In 2001 was a busy year - he played a small but pivotal role in the film 'Enigma', playing the battle-scarred naval officer Cave, alongside Dougray Scott and Kate Winslet.

After this he took the part of King's Justice in 'The Reckoning', which had a limited release in the USA in March 2004, but has yet to be seen in the UK.

Having by now gained a solid reputation as a very talented screen actor, he took the starring role of Daniel, the naive young Surveyor caught up in family intrigue, in the acclaimed Stephen Poliakoff drama serial 'Perfect Strangers'. In this he starred alongside one of his boyhood heroes, veteran actor Sir Michael Gambon, (who played his Father) and Lindsay Duncan.

He next took the role of the dissolute and caddish bounder Sir Felix Carbury in the Bafta Award-winning BBC2 production of Anthony Trollope's dramatic period novel 'The Way We live Now', a series which encapsulated the power, passion and corruption at the dawn of the capitalist age.

In 2002 he took on his most mainstream role to date - starring as MI5 Senior Case Officer Tom Quinn in the Bafta Award-winning BBC1 drama series 'Spooks'. The series focuses on the lives and work of a high-tech anti-terrorism squad who find themselves at the heart of the action in their quest to thwart the activities of terrorists operating within the UK. Every day, they must battle with the dangerous and psychologically demanding aspects of their work, and the effect that it can have on their personal lives.

His latest tv role was in 'The Project', a new two-part, fact-based drama commissioned for the BBC, which portrayed the rise to power of New Labour and their subsequent landslide victory in the 1997 General Election. Again Matthew took a starring role as Paul Tibbenham, an idealistic university graduate and labour supporter who eventually rises through the ranks to be a major part of the team that helped the party to power .

In 2003, Matthew returned as Tom Quinn in the second series of 'Spooks', which was shown over 10 weeks in the early Summer.

In the winter of 2003, he travelled to New Zealand to star in the film 'In My Father's Den', adapted from the book of the same name by the well-known Kiwi writer Maurice Gee. The film was released in New Zealand and Australia in the Summer of 2004, and on limited release in the UK in June 2005.

In Spring 2004, he filmed his final scenes for Series 3 of 'Spooks' which was shown in the UK in Autumn 200. His character, Tom Quinn, was written out of the series after the first 2 episodes.

In the Summer of 2004 he filmed the lead role of Mr Darcy in Working Title Film's brand new production of Pride and Prejudice.

In Spring/Summer 2005 he starred at the National Theatre as Prince Hal in William Shakespeare's Henry IV Parts 1 and 2 opposite Sir Michael Gambon as Falstaff.

Pride & Prejudice opened in cinemas in the UK on 16 September 2005 and will be released in the USA and Canada on 18 November 2005.

See Performance History for full details.

其他内容你去看看他的官网吧:
http://www.matthew-macfadyen.co.uk/

明星档案

中文名:马修·麦克菲迪恩
英文名:Matthew MacFadyen
性 别: 男
图片:
http://imagecache2.allposters.com/IMAGES/MMPH/C57655.jpg
http://www.smh.com.au/ffximage/2004/10/22/mcfadyen_narrowweb__200x245.jpg

演员作品集
傲慢与偏见(2005)
在我父亲的洞穴里 In My Father's Den (2004-10-7)
罪孽的代价 The Reckoning (2003-8-6)
军情五处第一季 MI-5 (2002-5-16)
拦截密码战 Enigma (2002-1-22)
完美的陌生人 Perfect Strangers (2001-5-10)
宝贝喜临门 Maybe Baby (2000-6-2)
Warriors Warriors (1999-11-29)
Wuthering Heights Wuthering Heights (1998-10-18)

完全档案(英文的不好意思,不过你可以自己翻译一下)
Biography

Matthew was born in Great Yarmouth in Norfolk in 1974. His birth sign is Libra.

He is married to former Spooks co-star and fellow actor Keeley Hawes. They have a young daughter called Maggie.

His mother was an actress and trained drama teacher. His father was in the Oil business, and he spent much of his childhood moving around, as his father's job often took the family overseas to such places as the Far East and Brazil. His Grandfather was also involved in directing amateur drama. He has a younger brother called Jamie.

He attended Oakham School in Rutland, Leicestershire, where he was a drama scholar from 1990 to 1992.

He left school in 1992, and although he was turned down by the National Youth Theatre, he was accepted at RADA where his contemporaries included Ioan Gruffudd.

In 1995 he graduated from RADA and joined the Cheek by Jowl Company, where made his stage debut that year as Antonio in 'Duchess of Malfi'. Other notable performances followed with Cheek by Jowl and in 1996 he also starred with the Royal Shakespeare Company as Demetrius in 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' at Stratford. He then played the role of Charles Surface in 'School for Scandal' at the Barbican in 1998. He followed this with the role of Benedick in 'Much Ado About Nothing', again with Cheek by Jowl.

He also appeared in various productions in the West End, on Broadway (New York) and on RSC international Tours.

In 1999, he was nominated for an RSC Ian Charleson Award for 'Best Classical Actor under 30'.

He made his television debut in the 1998 Granada Television production of 'Wuthering Heights' in the role of Hareton Earnshaw, Heathcliffe's nephew and heir to the the Linton fortune.

In 1999, he played his first starring role as the football-mad scouser Pte Alan James in the highly acclaimed, Bafta award-winning BBC drama 'Warriors', for which he was nominated for a Royal Television Society Best Actor award.

In 2000, he appeared as the mysterious lodger Waller in 'Murder Rooms: The Dark Beginnings of Sherlock Holmes'. He also returned to the Theatre that year to play Mr Brougham in the Royal National Theatre's production of 'Battle Royal'.

Also in 2000, he made his film debut playing Hugh Laurie's obnoxious boss Nigel in the Ben Elton film of his own novel, 'Maybe Baby'.

In 2001 was a busy year - he played a small but pivotal role in the film 'Enigma', playing the battle-scarred naval officer Cave, alongside Dougray Scott and Kate Winslet.

After this he took the part of King's Justice in 'The Reckoning', which had a limited release in the USA in March 2004, but has yet to be seen in the UK.

Having by now gained a solid reputation as a very talented screen actor, he took the starring role of Daniel, the naive young Surveyor caught up in family intrigue, in the acclaimed Stephen Poliakoff drama serial 'Perfect Strangers'. In this he starred alongside one of his boyhood heroes, veteran actor Sir Michael Gambon, (who played his Father) and Lindsay Duncan.

He next took the role of the dissolute and caddish bounder Sir Felix Carbury in the Bafta Award-winning BBC2 production of Anthony Trollope's dramatic period novel 'The Way We live Now', a series which encapsulated the power, passion and corruption at the dawn of the capitalist age.

In 2002 he took on his most mainstream role to date - starring as MI5 Senior Case Officer Tom Quinn in the Bafta Award-winning BBC1 drama series 'Spooks'. The series focuses on the lives and work of a high-tech anti-terrorism squad who find themselves at the heart of the action in their quest to thwart the activities of terrorists operating within the UK. Every day, they must battle with the dangerous and psychologically demanding aspects of their work, and the effect that it can have on their personal lives.

His latest tv role was in 'The Project', a new two-part, fact-based drama commissioned for the BBC, which portrayed the rise to power of New Labour and their subsequent landslide victory in the 1997 General Election. Again Matthew took a starring role as Paul Tibbenham, an idealistic university graduate and labour supporter who eventually rises through the ranks to be a major part of the team that helped the party to power .

In 2003, Matthew returned as Tom Quinn in the second series of 'Spooks', which was shown over 10 weeks in the early Summer.

In the winter of 2003, he travelled to New Zealand to star in the film 'In My Father's Den', adapted from the book of the same name by the well-known Kiwi writer Maurice Gee. The film was released in New Zealand and Australia in the Summer of 2004, and on limited release in the UK in June 2005.

In Spring 2004, he filmed his final scenes for Series 3 of 'Spooks' which was shown in the UK in Autumn 200. His character, Tom Quinn, was written out of the series after the first 2 episodes.

In the Summer of 2004 he filmed the lead role of Mr Darcy in Working Title Film's brand new production of Pride and Prejudice.

In Spring/Summer 2005 he starred at the National Theatre as Prince Hal in William Shakespeare's Henry IV Parts 1 and 2 opposite Sir Michael Gambon as Falstaff.

Pride & Prejudice opened in cinemas in the UK on 16 September 2005 and will be released in the USA and Canada on 18 November 2005.

See Performance History for full details.

其他内容你去看看他的官网吧