BAFTA-winning, veteran actor Bill Nighy gained international recognition in 2003 thanks to his role as a fading former rock star in the hit romantic comedy Love Actually. Nighy had remained a relatively obscure figure even in his native England until a memorable turn as a controversial politician in series three of the acclaimed television comedy drama Auf Wiedersehen, Pet found him finally thrust into the spotlight in 2002. A Caterham, Surrey, native, Nighy excelled in English language and literature early on; though his journalistic instincts were strong, his lack of education prevented his from a career in the media. Work as a bike messenger for Field Magazine helped the aspiring writer keep his toes in the business, and a suggestion by his girlfriend that Nighy try his hand at acting eventually prompted him to enroll in the Guildford School of Dance and Drama. As the gears began to turn and his career as an actor started to gain momentum, Nighy was encouraged to stick with the craft after landing a series of small roles. Though British television provided Nighy with most of his early exposure, supporting roles in such features as Curse of the Pink Panther (1983) and The Phantom of the Opera (1989) found the actor honing his skills and laying the groundwork for future feature success. Though Nighy stuck almost exclusively to the small screen in the early '90s, his supporting role in the 1993 Robin Williams film Being Human seemed to mark the beginning of a new stage in his career focusing mainly on features. A role in the 1997 film Fairy Tale: A True Story found Nighy climbing the credits, and the following year he joined an impressive cast including Timothy Spall, Stephen Rea, and Billy Connolly in the rock comedy Still Crazy. It was his role in Still Crazy that gained Nighy his widest recognition to date — earning the up-and-coming actor the Peter Sellers Evening Standard Award for Best Comedy Performance. Nighy's role as a conflicted husband who embarks on a heated extramarital affair in 2001's Lawless Heart continued his impressive career trajectory, and later that same year he would land a role in The Full Monty director Peter Cattaneo's jailbreak comedy Lucky Break. A role in the long-running U.K. television series Auf Wiedersehen, Pet finally found Nighy earning some deserved recognition in 2002, and after a winning performance as the patriarch of an eccentric family in I Capture the Castle (2003), he continued to earned even more accolades for his performance in Love Actually. His part as an ancient vampire in the gothic action horror hit Underworld found Nighy's recognition factor rising for mainstream audiences on the other side of the pond, and before jetting into the future with The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy in 2005, the increasingly busy actor would appear in no less than three feature films in 2004, including the horror comedy Shaun of the Dead and the animated fantasy The Magic Roundabout Movie. By the time Nighy recieved an Emmy-nomination for his role as a loved-starved civil servant falling for an enigmatic younger woman in the 2005 made for television romantic comedy drama The Girl in the Cafe, television fans in both the US and the UK knew well of Nighy's impressive range as an actor. Yet another small screen role in that same year's Gideon's Daughter allowed Nighy a chance to play serious once again before venturing into lands of fantasy by reprising his role as Viktor in Underworld: Evolution, and taking to the high-seas to as legendary sailor Davy Jones in director Gore Verbinski's big-budget summer extravaganza Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest. |