Eddie Marsan Movies
A prolific character actor in his native Britain,
Eddie Marsan specialized in challenging and provocative roles, in slightly tough and edgy projects that often took advantage of his unique, immediately identifiable countenance. After debuting as a bit player and guest star in English television series including Casualty, Game On, and
The Bill,
Marsan took one of his premier big-screen bows in
Michael Radford's crime thriller
B. Monkey (1998), then effectively played one of Tammany Hall's minions opposite
Daniel Day-Lewis and
Leonardo DiCaprio in
Martin Scorsese's period crime epic
Gangs of New York (2002). On a much different note,
Marsan subsequently teamed up with English
cause célèbre director
Mike Leigh in the abortion-themed character study
Vera Drake (2004) -- in which the actor ushered in a partly improvised portrayal of a kindly road worker who romances the title character's daughter.
Drake brought
Marsan an upsurge of attention, and thereafter, assignments rolled in quickly and furiously from both sides of the Atlantic. These included supporting roles in
Isabel Coixet's gentle, atmospheric drama
The Secret Life of Words,
Neil Burger's period supernatural drama
The Illusionist, and the mega-budgeted action extravaganza
Mission: Impossible III. 2008 marked a busy period for
Marsan; that year, he both tackled a supporting part opposite
Will Smith and
Charlize Theron in the superhero comedy
Hancock, and -- on a much-anticipated note -- re-teamed with
Mike Leigh for a prominent role as an angsty teacher in the slice-of-life comedy
Happy-Go-Lucky. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi