Bookmark and Share
Back To Previous page | Advanced Search              Find Hotels | Find LOG2012 Travel packages


GUIDE
 2012 - London Olympics
 2012 - Local Reporter
 A World of Olympics Sport
 About - Our City
TICKETS
 Attractions
 Concerts
 Exhibitions and Events
 Sightseeing
 Special Offers
 Sport
 Theatre
 Accommodation
 Bars & Pubs
 Business Link
 Clubs
 COMPETITIONS
 Discount Vouchers
 Education
 Employment
 Entertainment
 Essentials + Services
 Fashion
 Football & Rugby
 Gay Zone
 Hotels
 Leisure & Sport
 Nightlife
 Property & Finance
 Restaurants
 Shopping
 Special Services
 Taxis
 Transport
 Travel & Property
HOLIDAYS
 Properties in London
 Properties in GB
 Properties in Ireland
 Special Offers for GB
 Special Offers for London
 VIDEO SHOTS
 VISITOR Information
 Weddings
 Young People
 Site map
NEWSLETTER
Signup to get LOG2012 Newsletter:
TRANSLATION
       

About - Our City » City Celebs Email a Friend
David Tennant

The son of a Presbyterian minister, David Tennant was brought up in Bathgate, the post-industrial town between Edinburgh and Glasgow immortalised in a song by his favorite band, The Proclaimers. He decided to be an actor at a very young age (3 or 4) and was appearing on screen before he was even out of school. He was first talent-spotted by Scottish TV at a Saturday youth theatre club, an offshoot of the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama where he later trained.


After graduating, Tennant auditioned for the groundbreaking political Scottish Theatre Group 7:84 and landed the role of Giri the Hitman in their touring production of The Resistible Rise of Arturo Uiith — his first professional part. His second job, as King Arthur in an Edinburgh production, got such a bad review it made him cry. However, things began to look up when he landed a part in the award-winning BBC TV production of Takin` Over the Asylum. Tennant played manic-depressive Campbell Bain, a role that he claims changed his life. "They needed someone who could believably act 19 and bonkers." He could, and did, to much acclaim, and followed it up with a much-praised performance as the page boy in What the Butler Saw at the Lyttelton.
Then in 1996, when he was just 25, Tennant joined the Royal Shakespeare Company. His turn as Touchstone in As You Like It was praised as the most memorable in years. He was also applauded for his Jack Lane in The Herbal Bed, his leading role in Romeo and Juliet, and his portrayals of Antipholus of Syracuse in The Comedy of Errors (for which he received a a 2000 Ian Charleson Award nomination for Best classical actor under 30) and Captain Jack Absolute in The Rivals. Tennant is now a respected classical stage actor and has added to his awards with the 2005 Critics Award for Theatre in Scotland Best Male Performance, as Jimmy Porter in Look Back in Anger; a 2003 Laurence Olivier Theatre Award nomination for Best Actor for Lobby Hero; and a Theatre Management Association Best Actor Award for The Glass Menagerie.
Whilst forging his name in the theatre, Tennant also dipped his toe into the world of television, guest-starring in episodes of The Deputy, Foyle`s War, The Mrs. Bradley Mysteries, Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased), Rab C. Nesbitt, Holding the Baby and the multiple-award-winning People Like Us. He also appeared in a number of British films and co-starred in BBC4`s acclaimed live telefilm of The Quatermass Experiment in April 2005.


But three TV roles in particular won Tennant widespead recognition, both in the United Kingdom and internationally.


In He Knew He Was Right, Andrew Davies` acclaimed BBC adaptation of Trollope`s novel, Tennant provided the comic sub-plot as the Reverend Gibson, a flirtatious clergyman who is fought over by a pair of squabbling sisters.
In Blackpool, his Detective Inspector Peter Carlisle won critical acclaim ("David Tennant … crackles with raw energy" said the New York Daily News).
And his Casanova was a triumph, described by the Observer as "a perfect fusion of Brad Pitt and Michael Palin."
Landing the titular role on Doctor Who has made Tennant a household name around the world, but many fans also associate him with another role: Barty Crouch Junior in the big-screen blockbuster Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++

Email a Friend

About - Our City

Events Calender
Culture
City Celebs
Multi-Cultural London
Cockney Birthplace - East End
Pearly Kings & Queens
Her Majesty's Armed Forces
Royal London
Sightseeing
BA London Eye
Festivals
Parks & Gardens
Galleries
Museums
Climate
Business Etiquette
How your Business Can Benefit
Local Artists
Liverpool
Cruise Liner Gateway
Events
What to See and do
Attractions
Beach


LOGIN
Email:
Password:
New User     
Forgot Password ?
ADVERTISERS
 
 

LONDON Classifieds



OTHER CITIES
 2012 INTERNATIONAL
 Aberdeen
 ALDERSHOT TEAM GB TRAINING CAMP
 AsianWeddings2012
 Belfast
 Birmingham
 Blackpool
 Bournemouth
 Bradford
 Brighton
 Bristol
 Cambridge
 Cardiff
 Clubbing2012.com
 Dublin
 Dundee
 Edinburgh
 GayVillage2012
 Glasgow
 Inverness
 IRELAND
 Leeds
 Leicester
 Liverpool
 LONDON : LOG2012 - London2012 Websites guide
 Manchester 2012
 Newcastle
 Oxford
 Portsmouth
 Reading
 Restaurants2012
 SCOTLAND
 Sheffield
 Southampton
 Stirling
 WALES
 Weymouth
 WorldPropertiesOnline
 York

Home |  Advertise |  Forum |  Contact Us |  About Us |  Site Map |  Terms of Use |  Privacy Statement |  Other Cities Links |  Disclaimer © London 2012Websites Ltd

LOG2012 is an approved trading website by permission of London2012
London - 2012Websites Ltd is an independent company (and is not associated in any way with LOCOG, BOCOG or the IOC)
FreeWebSubmission.com
QuickRegister.net