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Mark Rylance

Sir David Mark Rylance Waters (/rləns/; born 18 January 1960) is an English actor, playwright and theatre director. He is known for his roles on stage and screen having received numerous awards including an Academy Award, three BAFTA Awards, two Olivier Awards and three Tony Awards. In 2016 he was included in the Time 100 list of the world's most influential people.[2] In 2017 he was made a knight by Queen Elizabeth II.


Mark Rylance

David Mark Rylance Waters

(1960-01-18) 18 January 1960[1]
Ashford, Kent, England
  • Actor
  • playwright
  • theatre director

1980–present

(m. 1989)

Susannah Waters (sister)
Jonathan Waters (brother)
Juliet Rylance (stepdaughter)

He was the first artistic director of Shakespeare's Globe in London, between 1995 and 2005. After training at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London, he made his professional debut at the Citizens Theatre in Glasgow in 1980. He appeared in the West End productions of Much Ado About Nothing in 1994 and Jerusalem in 2010, winning the Olivier Award for Best Actor for both. He has also appeared on Broadway, winning three Tony Awards: two for Best Actor for Boeing Boeing in 2008 and Jerusalem in 2011, and one for Best Featured Actor for Twelfth Night in 2014. He received Best Actor nominations for Richard III in 2014 and Farinelli and the King in 2017.


Rylance's film appearances include Prospero's Books (1991), Angels & Insects (1995), Institute Benjamenta (1996), Intimacy (2001) and The Other Boleyn Girl (2008). He attracted attention for his portrayal of Rudolf Abel in Steven Spielberg's Bridge of Spies (2015), for which he won the Academy Award and BAFTA for Best Supporting Actor. He subsequently collaborated with Spielberg in the title role of The BFG (2016) adapted from the Roald Dahl children's book and as James Halliday in Ready Player One (2018) based on the novel of the same name. Other notable roles include in the films Dunkirk (2017), The Trial of the Chicago 7 (2020), Don't Look Up (2021), Bones and All (2022) and The Outfit (2022).


On television, Rylance won the British Academy Television Award for Best Actor for his role as David Kelly in the 2005 Channel 4 drama The Government Inspector and for playing Thomas Cromwell in the 2015 BBC Two mini-series Wolf Hall he also received Emmy Award and Golden Globe Award nominations. Rylance is a patron of the London International Festival of Theatre; of the London-based charity Peace Direct, which supports peace-builders in areas of conflict; and of the British Stop the War Coalition.

Early life and education[edit]

Rylance was born in Ashford, Kent to Anne (née Skinner) and David Waters, both teachers of English. One of his grandmothers was Irish.[3] Both of his grandfathers were British POWs of the Japanese.[4] His maternal grandfather, Osmond Skinner, spent decades as a banker with the Hong Kong Shanghai Bank. After being shot in the stomach during the Battle of Hong Kong, Skinner was recuperating when he witnessed the St. Stephen's College massacre. He then spent four years in a POW camp. He was able to survive thanks to HSBC contacts who brought him food.[5]


Rylance's parents moved to the US in 1962; he first moved to Connecticut, then to Wisconsin in 1969, where his father and mother taught English at the University School of Milwaukee, which Rylance attended.[6] He returned to England in 1978. Rylance has a sister named Susannah, an opera singer and author, and a deceased brother, Jonathan, who was a sommelier at Chez Panisse.[7]


Rylance took the stage name of Mark Rylance because his given name, Mark Waters, was already taken by someone else registered with Equity. He trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in London from 1978 to 1980 under Hugh Cruttwell; and with Barbara and Peter Bridgmont at the Chrysalis Theatre School in Balham, London.

Personal life[edit]

Marriage and family[edit]

Rylance is married to director, composer and playwright Claire van Kampen, whom he met in 1987 while working on a production of The Wandering Jew at the National Theatre. They were married in Oxfordshire on 21 December 1989.[42] Through this marriage, he became a stepfather to her two daughters from a previous marriage, actress Juliet Rylance and filmmaker Nataasha van Kampen. Nataasha died in July 2012 at the age of 28, following which Rylance withdrew from his planned participation in the 2012 Summer Olympics opening ceremony in London and was replaced by Kenneth Branagh.[43][44]


Rylance's brother, Jonathan Waters, died in May 2022, following a collision with a vehicle while cycling.[45]

Mark Rylance, Louis Jenkins. Nice Fish: a Play. Grove Press, 4 April 2017.  0-8021268-5-5.

ISBN

Mark Rylance. PlayA Recollection in Pictures and Words of the First Five Years of Play at Shakespeares's Globe Theatre. Photogr.: Sheila Burnett, Donald Cooper, Richard Kolina, John Tramper. Shakespeare's Globe Publ., London, UK. 2003.  0-9536480-4-4.

ISBN

The Wisdom of Shakespeare Series by Peter Dawkins (Foreword by Mark Rylance):

The Wisdom of Shakespeare in As You Like It. I.C. Media Productions, 1998. Paperback.  0-9532890-1-X.

ISBN

The Wisdom of Shakespeare in The Merchant of Venice. I.C. Media Productions, 1998. Paperback.  0-9532890-0-1.

ISBN

The Wisdom of Shakespeare in Julius Caesar. I.C. Media Productions, 1999. Paperback.  0-9532890-2-8.

ISBN

The Wisdom of Shakespeare in The Tempest. I.C. Media Productions, 2000. Paperback.  0-9532890-3-6.

ISBN

The Wisdom of Shakespeare in Twelfth Night. I.C. Media Productions, 2002. Paperback.  0-9532890-4-4.

ISBN

Peter Dawkins. The Shakespeare Enigma (Foreword by Mark Rylance). Polair, UK. 2004. Illustrated paperback, 476pp.  0-9545389-4-3.

ISBN

. Improvisation in Rehearsal (Foreword by Mark Rylance). Nick Hern Books, UK. 2009. Paperback, 256pp. ISBN 978-1-85459-523-2.

John Abbott

Dave Patrick. The View Beyond: Sir Francis Bacon: Alchemy, Science, Mystery (The View Series) (Foreword by Mark Rylance, Ervin Lazslo, Rose Elliot). Deep Books, UK. 2011. Paperback, 288pp.  978-1-905398-22-5.

ISBN

at IMDb

Mark Rylance

at the Internet Broadway Database

Mark Rylance

Official homepage

on Farinelli (theatre play), Bridge of Spies etc. Oct-2015

Interview

Interview with Mark Rylance at the Globe on wisdom, Sir Francis Bacon, Shakespeare Jun-94

Mark Rylance performing the Peacebuilder, Henri Ladyi, Congo

(subscription required) Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine

doollee.com listing of Rylance's works written for the stage

Spotlight.com Rylance's referenced by other stars