David Threlfall

David John Threlfall[1][2]

(1953-10-12) 12 October 1953

1977–present

(m. 1995)
[3]

2

Early life[edit]

The son of a plumber/builder, Tom Threlfall and his wife, Joyce Foulds, David was born in Crumpsall, Manchester, Lancashire. The family lived in Blackley then moved to the Bradford area of Manchester and then Burnage when he was 8/9.[4] His introduction to drama came from school and two English teachers, Alan Johnson and Frank Casey, at Wilbraham High School, where he was a contemporary of the younger Lorraine Ashbourne.


He studied at Art college in Sheffield (now Sheffield Hallam University), but only stayed for a year. A few months of labouring and thinking followed. Then, having consulted a magazine in a public library which listed drama colleges, Threlfall successfully applied to Manchester Polytechnic School of Theatre. By graduation, he had an audition with Mike Leigh.[5]


Threlfall has been a supporter of Manchester City since childhood and was the voice over for the film played before every home game during the 2017–18 season.[6]

Career[edit]

Threlfall graduated from the Manchester Polytechnic School of Theatre. He has notched up a wide range of film and television credits since his 1977 acting debut in "The Kiss of Death" (Mike Leigh). Was in the original Play for Today version of the film Scum as the eloquent Archer.[7] Television appearances include Trevor in Mike Leigh's 1977 made-for-TV film Kiss of Death, Leslie Titmuss in Paradise Postponed, Edgar in the Granada Television production of King Lear (1983) opposite Laurence Olivier in the title role. He also had regular roles in the situation comedies Nightingales and Men of the World, and guest appearances in dramas such as Cutting It, The Knock, CI5: The New Professionals and Spooks. He played Prince Charles in Diana: Her True Story (1993) and his father Prince Philip in The Queen's Sister (2005). Threlfall played the central character of Frank Gallagher in Paul Abbott's Shameless, shown on Channel 4 for 11 series between 2004 and 2013.


He also played the role of Friedrich Kritzinger in the BBC/HBO drama Conspiracy, a dramatisation of the infamous Wannsee Conference. In 2006, he played the domineering husband of wartime diarist Nella Last, in the TV drama Housewife, 49. Film credits include John le Carré's The Russia House, Patriot Games, Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World, Elizabeth: The Golden Age, alongside Cate Blanchett, and Nowhere Boy in which he took the part of John Lennon's Uncle George.


He also had a small role in the 2006 film Alien Autopsy and played the character Martin Blower in the 2007 film Hot Fuzz, acting alongside Simon Pegg and Nick Frost. He starred in an episode of The Whistle Blowers. He starred as the lead role in the fifth episode of the BBC docu-drama series Ancient Rome: The Rise and Fall of an Empire as the Emperor Constantine I.


Threlfall voiced the part of Iago in Othello for the Arcangel audio production of same. He also voiced the detective Paolo Baldi in BBC Radio 4's Baldi.[8] He also read Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness for a radio adaptation. In 1980, he played Smike in the eight-hour stage version of The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby for the Royal Shakespeare Company in both London and New York.


Other notable stage performances include Riddley Walker, Oedipus, Macbeth, Your Home In The West and Peer Gynt "The Count of Monte Cristo" all at the Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester, Bolingbroke in Richard II and Orgon in Tartuffe at the National Theatre in London. Frank McGuiness' "Someone Who'll Watch Over Me" at the Ambassador's Theatre 2005 for which he received an Olivier Nomination. Also Beckett's rarely performed "The Old Tune" with Niall Buggy directed by Trevor Nunn at Jermyn Street Theatre 2019 .Threlfall played Jack in When the Whales Came (1989), opposite Paul Scofield and Helen Mirren.


In 2013, he played retired London detective Len Harper in the short murder mystery BBC series What Remains alongside Russell Tovey and Amber Rose Revah.[9]


In March 2016, he appeared as the lead in Don Quixote, at the Swan Theatre, Stratford for the [Royal Shakespeare Company where he is an Associate Artist]. The play was revived in 2018 at the Garrick Theatre in London. He is also a director of ATS (Artists Theatre School) started by Amanda Redman 24 years ago to help give young actors who cannot afford full time Drama School fees get exposure to training from industry professionals

Awards and honours[edit]

Threlfall was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from Manchester Metropolitan University on 15 July 2013. An Honorary Doctorate from Sheffield Hallam University in 2014. He has a SWET (Olivier) Award, 2 TONY nominations and an EMMY Nomination, The Clarence Derwent Award, 5 RTS Awards and a BAFTA for Housewife49 with Victoria Wood. Two Sony Radio Awards for playing Spike Milligan 2018 and Ken Dodd 2020 [10]

Personal life[edit]

Threlfall has been married to Bosnian actress Brana Bajic since 1995.[11] They met in 1994, whilst working on The Count of Monte Cristo at the Royal Exchange Theatre in Manchester.[11] They have two children.


Threlfall has said that despite his Shameless character being a chain smoker, in real life he is a non-smoker who has a dislike for nicotine.[12]

Blackie, The Sons of Light by for the Royal Shakespeare Company at The Other Place, Stratford-upon-Avon (1977)

David Rudkin

Jake, A&R by for the Royal Shakespeare Company at the Warehouse Theatre, London (1978)

Pete Atkin

Fitz, Savage Amusement by for the Royal Shakespeare Company at the Warehouse Theatre, London (1978)

Peter Flannery

Mike, Shout Across The River by for the Royal Shakespeare Company at the Warehouse Theatre, London (1978)

Stephen Poliakoff

Julius Caesar at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon (1979)

Mark Antony

Slender, at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon (1979)

The Merry Wives of Windsor

Viktor, by Nikolai Erdman for the Royal Shakespeare Company at The Other Place, Stratford-upon-Avon (1979)

The Suicide

Smike, adapted by David Edgar for the Royal Shakespeare Company at the Aldwych Theatre, London and then at the Plymouth Theatre, New York (1980)

The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby

Bolingbroke, at the Royal National Theatre, London (1985)

Richard II

Riddley Walker, by Russell Hoban at the Royal Exchange, Manchester (1986)

Riddley Walker

for the Oxford Playhouse at the Edinburgh Festival (1986)

Hamlet

Oedipus, by Sophocles at the Royal Exchange, Manchester (1987)

Oedipus

The Traveller by Jean Claude Van Itallie at the , Leicester and then the Almeida (1987)

Haymarket Theatre

Macbeth, at the Royal Exchange, Manchester (1988)

Macbeth

by George Chapman at the Old Vic (1988)

Bussy D'Ambois

Ian, Over a Barrel by Stephen Bill, , Watford (1989)

Palace Theatre

Gregers Werle, by Henrik Ibsen at the Phoenix Theatre, London (1990)

The Wild Duck

Micky, Your Home in the West by Rod Wooden at the (1991)

Royal Exchange, Manchester

The Count, at the Royal Exchange, Manchester (1994)

The Count of Monte Cristo

Lovborg, by Henrik Ibsen at the Chichester Festival Theatre (1996)

Hedda Gabler

The Count, The Rehearsal by at the Criterion Center (1996)

Jean Anouilh

Norman Nestor, Odysseus Thump by Richard Hope at the , Leeds (1997)

West Yorkshire Playhouse

Garry Essendine, by Noël Coward at the Royal Exchange, Manchester (1998)

Present Laughter

by Henrik Ibsen at the Royal Exchange, Manchester (1999)

Peer Gynt

Orgon, by Moliere at the National Theatre, London (2002)

Tartuffe

Robert, by Joe Penhall at the Duchess Theatre, London (2001)

Blue/Orange

by David Almond at the Young Vic, London (2003)

Skellig

Michael, by Frank McGuiness at the Ambassadors Theatre, London (2005)

Someone Who'll Watch Over Me

Don Quixote, adapted by James Fenton from the novel by Miguel de Cervantes at the Swan Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon (2016)

Don Quixote

Cream, (Beckett Triple Bill) at Jermyn Street Theatre, directed by Trevor Nunn (2019)

The Old Tune

Harry Wade, by Martin McDonagh at the John Golden Theatre (2022)

Hangmen

Maurice Grosse, The Enfield Haunting (2023)

at IMDb

David Threlfall