Simon Paisley Day | |
---|---|
Born | Gillingham, Kent, England | 13 April 1967
Other names | Simon Who |
Occupation | Actor |
Children | 2 |
Simon Paisley Day (born 13 April 1967), also credited as Simon Day, is an English stage and screen actor. His most recent work includes Timon of Athens (2008), Entertaining Mr Sloane (2009), Private Lives (2010), Twelfth Night (National Theatre, 2011), The Taming of the Shrew (Shakespeare's Globe, 2012) and portraying Sir Cosmo Duff Gordon in the 2012 ITV mini-series Titanic .
Paisley Day was born in Gillingham, Kent. He read Drama and American Literature at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, England. Afterwards, Paisley Day undertook training at Bristol Old Vic for two years before embarking on a career as an actor. [1]
Paisley is a well-established theatre actor and has performed in plays such as The Taming of the Shrew , Hamlet , The Crucible and Troilus and Cressida . His television credits include Sherlock , Being Human , Midsomer Murders Doctor Who and Spartacus . His big-screen credits include The Eagle of the Ninth , The Queen of Sheba's Pearls and Churchill: The Hollywood Years . [2]
Paisley Day lives in Whitstable, with his wife and two children. [3]
Year | Title | Character | Production |
---|---|---|---|
2004 | Churchill: The Hollywood Years | Larry | Little Bird |
2004 | The Queen of Sheba's Pearls | Headmaster Evans | AB Svensk Filmindustri |
2007 | Flawless | Boland | Future Films |
2011 | The Eagle | Surgeon | Focus Features |
2011 | The Painting | Man | Inclusive Media |
2014 | Pudsey the Dog: The Movie | Reverend Treeboys | Vertigo Films |
2014 | The Falling | Psychiatrist | Cannon and Morley Productions |
2017 | Victoria & Abdul | Mr. Tyler [4] | BBC Films |
2019 | Brexit: The Uncivil War | Douglas Carswell | Channel 4 / HBO |
2019 | Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker | General Quinn | Lucasfilm Ltd. and Bad Robot |
2023 | Shé (Snake) | Mr. Grimsby | A Minor, National Film and Television School |
Year | Title | Character | Production | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2022 | This England | Dominic Cummings | Sky Atlantic | |
2020 | Alex Rider | Dr. Baxter | Netflix | |
2017 | The Crown | Meryn Lewis | Netflix | |
2015 | Doctor Who | Rump | BBC | Episode: "Face the Raven" |
2014 | The Musketeers | Cluzet | Episode: "The Good Soldier" | |
2012 | Titanic | Sir Cosmo Duff Gordon | ITV | Episode Two and Four |
2012 | Sherlock | Major Barrymore | BBC | Series 2, "The Hounds of Baskerville" |
2011 | Hustle | Consultant | BBC | Series 7, "The Fall of Railton FC" |
2010 | Being Human | Alan Cortez | BBC | Season 2, episode 6 |
2008 | Midsomer Murders | Randall Colquhoun | ITV | Blood Wedding |
2007 | The Relief of Belsen | Major Stadler | Channel 4 | TV movie |
2006 | The Catherine Tate Show | Mr Aga Saga | BBC | Season 3, episode 6 |
2006 | Hotel Babylon | Mr Austin | BBC | Season 1, episode 1 |
2005 | Space Race | Kammler | BBC | TV series documentary, Race to the Moon |
2005 | The Last Detective | Bald Man | ITV | Towpaths of Glory |
2005 | The Bill | Martin Glass | ITV | Season 21, episode 31 |
2005 | Doctor Who | Steward | BBC | Episode: "The End of the World" |
2004 | Shane | Suicide Steve | ITV | Season 1, episode 6 |
2004 | He Knew He Was Right | Sir Henry Woddis | BBC | |
2004 | Spartacus | Orsino | USA Network | TV movie |
2002 | Bertie and Elizabeth | Arthur Wood | ITV | TV movie |
1995 | Wycliffe | SOCCO | ITV | Lost Contact |
1995 | Pie in the Sky | Roger | BBC | Lemon Twist |
1994 | The Knock | Jeremy Pointon | ITV | Season 1, episode 6 |
1994 | Peak Practice | ITV | Long Weekend | |
1994 | The House of Eliott | Harry | BBC | Season 3, episode 2 |
1993 | London's Burning | ITV | Season 6, episode 8 | |
1992 | Casualty | Heart surgeon | BBC | Body and Soul |
1992 | Red Dwarf | Cdr. Randy Navarro | BBC | Series 5, "Holoship" |
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The Taming of the Shrew in performance has had an uneven history. Popular in Shakespeare's day, the play fell out of favour during the seventeenth century, when it was replaced on the stage by John Lacy's Sauny the Scott. The original Shakespearean text was not performed at all during the eighteenth century, with David Garrick's adaptation Catharine and Petruchio dominating the stage. After over two hundred years without a performance, the play returned to the British stage in 1844, the last Shakespeare play restored to the repertory. However, it was only in the 1890s that the dominance of Catharine and Petruchio began to wane, and productions of The Shrew become more regular. Moving into the twentieth century, the play's popularity increased considerably, and it became one of Shakespeare's most frequently staged plays, with productions taking place all over the world. This trend has continued into the twenty-first century, with the play as popular now as it was when first written.