Timothy Dalton Movies
British actor
Timothy Dalton has excelled in roles calling for both panache and psychological complexity. His stage training has included stints at the National Youth Theatre, the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, and the star-making Birmingham Repertory.
Dalton's extensive work in the classics with the Royal Shakespeare Company led to his being cast as King Philip of France in the film
The Lion in Winter (1968). In 1971,
Dalton appeared in
Mary, Queen of Scots, simultaneously launching a lengthy romantic involvement with that film's star,
Vanessa Redgrave. When
Roger Moore quit the
James Bond film series in 1986, it looked for a while as though his successor would be television star
Pierce Brosnan; instead, the
Bond producers made the eleventh-hour decision to cast
Dalton as secret agent 007 in
The Living Daylights. Though dashing in a tuxedo and more than willing to perform his own stunts,
Dalton was more effectively felt in the role of the dastardly movie swashbuckler-cum-Nazi spy in the breezy sci-fi film
The Rocketeer (1991).
Dalton would find his niche in the 90's and 2000's appearing in several made-for-TV productions, like 1992's Framed, and 1994's Scarlett, a mini-series based on Gone with the Wind in which Dalton played Rhett Butler. He would go on to appear in several more TV movies, like Hercules and Marple: The Sittaford Mystery. Dalton's also taken on numerous stage roles, notably playing Lord Asriel in the theater production of His Dark Materials in 2004.
In 2007 he spoofed his own persona ever so lovingly in the action comedy Hot Fuzz. He became part of the Pixar family by voicing one of the dramatically inclined plaything in Toy Story 3. That same year he had a major part in the infamous bomb The Tourist. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi