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Jim Broadbent

British actor
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Jim Broadbent
Jim Broadbent
Born:
May 24, 1949, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England (age 74)
Awards And Honors:
Academy Award (2002)
Academy Award (2002): Actor in a Supporting Role
Golden Globe Award (2008): Best Actor in a Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television
Golden Globe Award (2002): Best Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture

Jim Broadbent (born May 24, 1949, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England) British actor known for his versatility and his often humorous roles. He received an Academy Award for his performance in Iris (2001).

Broadbent was born into a theatrically inclined family: both his father, a furniture maker, and his mother, a sculptor, were founding members of the Lindsey Rural Players, an amateur theatre group in Lincolnshire, England. As a child, Broadbent was educated at a Quaker boarding school in Reading, and, after a brief period at an art school, he moved to the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art. He graduated in 1972 and began his stage career with a number of prominent theatre companies, including the Royal National Theatre and the Royal Shakespeare Company. His first major production came with Ken Campbell’s Illuminatus (1976), a 12-hour science-fiction epic in which Broadbent played more than a dozen roles.

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Broadbent’s film career commenced with small roles in The Shout (1978), The Hit (1984), and two films directed by Terry Gilliam, Time Bandits (1981) and Brazil (1985). He appeared in a variety of television roles in the late 1980s and played a number of character roles in successful films of the early ’90s, including The Crying Game (1992)—about a British soldier kidnapped by a member of the Irish Republican Army—and Woody Allen’s Bullets over Broadway (1994). Broadbent gained significant exposure in two films by British director Mike Leigh. In Leigh’s offbeat comedy Life Is Sweet (1990), he starred as the working-class father of twin daughters, and he played W.S. Gilbert in Topsy-Turvy (1999), a film depicting the nuanced relationship of playwright Gilbert and composer Arthur Sullivan.

In 2001 Broadbent had what was perhaps his most successful year, both critically and commercially. He played the title character’s father in Bridget Jones’s Diary, a comedy about the adventures of a bumbling 30-something single woman; he reprised the role in Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason (2004) and Bridget Jones’s Baby (2016). In the musical Moulin Rouge! he appeared as Harold Zidler, the dancing and singing owner of the fantastic Moulin Rouge theatre. Finally, Broadbent starred opposite Judi Dench as Iris Murdoch’s husband, John Bayley, in Iris (2001), a film that chronicled the two authors’ early lives together, their marriage, and Murdoch’s struggle with Alzheimer disease. For his part in Iris, Broadbent won the Academy Award for best supporting actor.

Broadbent had supporting roles in Leigh’s Vera Drake (2004), a drama about a woman who performs illegal abortions in 1950s England, and in The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe (2005), the film adaptation of the beloved children’s novel by C.S. Lewis. He subsequently appeared in the quirky action-comedy Hot Fuzz (2007) and as King William IV in the historical drama The Young Victoria (2009). In Leigh’s Another Year (2010) Broadbent starred as half of a contented married couple whose lives are surrounded by misery.

In 2011 Broadbent provided the voice of Santa Claus in the animated film Arthur Christmas, and he portrayed Denis Thatcher, the husband of British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher (played by Meryl Streep), in The Iron Lady. He took on multiple roles for Cloud Atlas (2012), an epic mosaic of stories set in disparate times and places. Broadbent also garnered attention for his portrayal of Professor Horace Slughorn in two of the popular Harry Potter films (2009, 2011). He later played the psychiatrist of a devious bipolar police officer in Filth (2013) and a police detective in the television miniseries The Great Train Robbery (2013), about the famous British heist that occurred in 1963.

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Broadbent was cast as an antiques dealer in Paddington (2014), an adaptation of the classic children’s book series about a Peruvian bear exploring London. He later appeared in the sequel (2017). Roles in 2015 included the avuncular mentor of a young man who becomes entangled in a web of international espionage in the television miniseries London Spy, a kindly Irish priest in the cinematic adaptation of Colm Tóibín’s novel Brooklyn (2009), and an antagonist of the title character in The Lady in the Van. In 2017 Broadbent appeared on the HBO TV series Game of Thrones, a fantasy epic in which he portrayed an “archmaester” at the Citadel, home to scholars and healers. His film credits that year included The Sense of an Ending. Broadbent then played an English lord in the movie Black 47 and an earl in the TV movie King Lear (both 2018), a modern retelling of Shakespeare’s play. In 2020 he appeared in the family comedy Dolittle and portrayed a priest in the TV miniseries Black Narcissus, an adaptation of a novel by Rumer Godden.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.