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WRATH OF THE TITANS
BILL NIGHY (Hephaestus) is an award-winning actor of the stage and screen. His
more recent film work includes the blockbuster "Harry Potter and the Deathly
Hallows – Part 1,” in the role of Minister of Magic Rufus Scrimgeour. Nighy
earlier won a BAFTA
Award, a London Film Critics Circle Award, and an Evening Standard British Film
Award for his performance as an aging rock star in Richard Curtis's 2003
ensemble comedy hit "Love Actually.” He also won a Los Angeles Film Critics
Award for his collective work in that film, as well as "AKA,” "I Capture the
Castle” and "Lawless Heart.”
His long list of film credits also includes "Wild Target,” with Rupert Grint and
Emily Blunt; "Pirate Radio,” which reunited him with Richard Curtis; Bryan
Singer's "Valkyrie,” with Tom Cruise; Richard Eyre's "Notes on a Scandal,” for
which he earned a London Film Critics Circle Award nomination; "Underworld” and
"Underworld: Evolution”; Fernando Meirelles' "The Constant Gardener,” garnering
a British Independent Film Award (BIFA) nomination; "Lawless Heart,” which
brought him a BIFA nomination; and "Still Crazy,” for which he won an Evening
Standard British Film Award. He is also unrecognizable as the tentacled pirate
captain Davy Jones in "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest” and "Pirates
of the Caribbean: At World's End,” and lent his voice to several animated
features, including "Flushed Away.”
Also well known for his work on the small screen, Nighy recently earned a Golden
Globe Award nomination for Best Actor for his performance in the BBC television
movie "Page Eight,” directed by David Hare and produced by "Harry Potter”
producer David Heyman. Nighy has worked several times with director David Yates,
including the acclaimed BBC project "State of Play,” for which he won a BAFTA TV
Award for Best Actor. Yates also directed him in the BBC telefilm "The Young
Visiters,” and HBO's "The Girl in the Café,” which brought him a Golden Globe
Award nomination for Best Actor in a Television Movie or Miniseries. He later
won a Golden Globe in the same category for his performance in the 2005 telefilm
"Gideon's Daughter.” His television work also includes dozens of series guest
roles and longform projects, including the one for which he first gained
attention, 1991's "The Men's Room.”
Born in England, Nighy began his career on the British stage and has since
earned acclaim for his work in numerous plays, including David Hare's "The
Vertical Hour,” "Pravda” and "A Map of the World.” He has also performed in
plays by other leading dramatists, including Tom Stoppard, Harold Pinter, Brian
Friel, Anton Chekhov and Peter
Gill. He received an Olivier Award nomination for Best Actor for his performance
in Joe Penhall's "Blue/Orange.” On Broadway, he starred in the 2006 premiere of
David Hare's "The Vertical Hour,” directed by Sam Mendes.
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