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Throughout his early career, actor Daniel Craig enjoyed the anonymity that comes with not being an A-list actor talent. That changed, however, when it was announced that he was considered for the role of James Bond in the adaptation of Ian Flemings’ “Casino Royale” (2006), a reboot of the series widely considered to be the franchise’s return to form. Craig denied rumors that he was offered a three-picture deal – at the time, Pierce Brosnan was still in the running to continue his reign as the famed British agent....

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Filmography

Ten Minutes Older: The Cello - ( Cecil Thomas / / Lensing/Awaiting Release / Atom Entertainment )
Defiance - ( Tuvia Bielski / 2008 / Released / )
Flashbacks of a Fool - ( Joe Scot / 2008 / Released / )
Flashbacks of a Fool - ( Executive Producer / 2008 / Released / )
Quantum of Solace - ( James Bond / 2008 / Released / )
The Golden Compass - ( Lord Asriel / 2007 / Released / )
The Invasion - ( Ben Driscoll / 2007 / Released / )
Casino Royale - ( James Bond / 2006 / Released / )
Fateless - ( US Army Sergeant / 2006 / Released / )
Infamous - ( Perry Smith / 2006 / Released / )
Infamous - ( Song Performer / 2006 / Released / )
Renaissance - ( Voice of Barthelemy Karas / 2006 / Released / )
Layer Cake - ( XXXX / 2005 / Released / )
Munich - ( Steve / 2005 / Released / )
The Jacket - ( Mackenzie / 2005 / Released / )
Enduring Love - ( Joe / 2004 / Released / A-Film Distribution (Netherlands) )
The Mother - ( Darren / 2004 / Released / )
Sylvia - ( Ted Hughes / 2003 / Released / )
Road to Perdition - ( Connor Rooney / 2002 / Released / )
Lara Croft: Tomb Raider - ( Alex West / 2001 / Released / )
Hotel Splendide - ( Ronald Blanche / 2000 / Released / )
I Dreamed of Africa - ( Declan Fielding / 2000 / Released / )
Some Voices - ( Ray / 2000 / Released / )
The Trench - ( Sergeant Telford Winter / 2000 / Released / )
Elizabeth - ( John Ballard / 1998 / Released / Scanbox Denmark )
Love and Rage - ( Daniel Lynchehaun / 1998 / Released / )
Love Is the Devil - ( George Dyer / 1998 / Released / United King )
Obsession - ( John MacHale / 1997 / Released / )
A Kid in King Arthur's Court - ( Master Kane / 1995 / Released / )
The Power of One - ( Sergeant Jaape Botha / 1992 / Released / )

TV Credits
The 79th Annual Academy Awards ( 2007 / Released ): Actor
The 2006 MTV Europe Music Awards ( 2006 / Released ): Actor
Archangel ( 2005 / Released ): Actor
The Ice House ( 1998 / Released ): Actor
Kiss and Tell ( 1997 / Released ): Actor
The Hunger ( 1997 / Released ): Actor
Moll Flanders ( 1996 / Released ): Actor
Smoke Wrings ( 1996 / Released ): Actor
Genghis Cohn ( 1994 / Released ): Actor
Covington Cross ( 1992 / Released ): Actor
Copenhagen ( Released ): Actor

Full Biography (Back to top)


Throughout his early career, actor Daniel Craig enjoyed the anonymity that comes with not being an A-list actor talent. That changed, however, when it was announced that he was considered for the role of James Bond in the adaptation of Ian Flemings’ “Casino Royale” (2006), a reboot of the series widely considered to be the franchise’s return to form. Craig denied rumors that he was offered a three-picture deal – at the time, Pierce Brosnan was still in the running to continue his reign as the famed British agent. But rumors were enough to blow the lid off Craig’s obscurity and thrust the actor known to loathe publicity into the limelight, especially after he did indeed become the sixth actor to play 007. Even if he were not considered for the role, his increasingly high-profile work in films such as "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider" (2001), “Munich” (2005) and "Layer Cake" (2005) would have made him a star regardless.

Born on March 2, 1968 in Chester, England – also known as the Walled City – Craig grew up in nearby Liverpool, where his mother studied art at university and his stepfather, the painter Max Blond, plied his craft. At 16, he moved to London to train at the National Youth Theatre and later graduated from the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. In 1992, Craig made his film debut in the coming-of-age drama, “The Power of One,” wherein he played an Afrikaner soldier who beats and humiliates a white South African boxer (Stephen Dorff) trained by a black man (Morgan Freeman). Craig then appeared in “Genghis Cohn” (A&E, 1993), a satire about a Nazi SS officer (Robert Lindsay) confronted with the ghost of a Jewish comedian (Antony Sher) he killed in a concentration camp. After playing a commoner involved in a forbidden love with King Arthur’s daughter in the children’s fantasy, “A Kid in King Arthur’s Court” (1995), Craig gained fame in native England playing a hapless musician turned homeless person in the BBC’s “Our Friends in the North” (1996), an ambitious nine-part serial about the lives of four friends spanning thirty years.

In the PBS adaptation of Daniel Defoe’s “Moll Flanders” (1996), he played the enterprising bride’s one true love. He next appeared in the romantic thriller, “Obsession” (1997), wherein he was one of several characters whose divergent lives cross in Berlin. The period biopic, “Love is the Devil” (1998), offered him an opportunity to expand his range. Playing petty thief George Dyer, renowned painter Francis Bacon’s lover and artistic inspiration, Craig earned critical kudos in a film otherwise subjected to mixed reviews. A return to PBS in “The Ice House” (1998) found Craig playing an assistant investigator who doubts the Chief Inspector’s conclusion that a recently discovered corpse is the dead husband of a woman previously suspected in his disappearance. That same year, he appeared in “Elizabeth,” the widely acclaimed historical biopic starring an Oscar-snubbed Cate Blanchett as the Virgin Queen.

After landing major roles in smaller projects – the World War I drama “The Trench” (1999) and the late 19th century drama “Love and Rage” (1999) – Craig earned a British Independent Film Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of a schizophrenic man adjusting to the real world after his release from an institution in “Some Voices” (2000). He next appeared in a supporting role in the bland and uninspired romantic adventure, “I Dreamed of Africa” (2000), starring a well-meaning Kim Basinger. Craig then made the jump to larger Hollywood fare, appearing as old flame and fellow tomb raider Alex West in the live-action take on the popular video game, “Lara Croft: Tomb Raider” (2001), starring Angelina Jolie. In “Road to Perdition” (2002), he was the angry son of an Irish mobster (Paul Newman) who treats one of his hit men (Tom Hanks) like the son he never had. He next played poet Ted Hughes, husband to feminist icon Sylvia Plath (Gwyneth Paltrow), who committed suicide after he left their deteriorated marriage, in the uneven biopic, “Sylvia” (2003).

Craig caused a stir in the unsettling erotic drama, “The Mother” (2004), playing a man who beds a woman (Anne Reid) twice his age while sleeping with her daughter. The stark May-December romance earned rave reviews, but made little impression at the box office. After a stint as a university professor stalked by another man (Rhys Ifans) in the Hitchcockian “Enduring Love” (2004), he was an inmate at an institute for the criminally insane in the derivative thriller, “The Jacket” (2005). Meanwhile, the Bond rumors began to swirl amidst the release of “Layer Cake” (2005), a crime comedy from Matthew Vaughn, producer of “Snatch” (2001) and “Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels” (1999). Craig played a cocaine dealer seeking early retirement who is forced by a crime boss to find the missing daughter of an old pal (Michael Gambon). Meanwhile, Craig was cast by Steven Spielberg to co-star in “Munich” (2005), the true story about the massacre of Israeli athletes by Palestinian terrorists at the 1972 Olympics and the secret Mossad mission to exact revenge. Craig delivered a razor-edged performance as the one member of the team who whole-heartedly embraces the righteousness of their mission.

Just prior to the release of “Munich” and after months of speculation, Craig was officially revealed as the next James Bond in October 2005, becoming only the second British actor to play the role, though he held the distinction of being the first blond. Initially, Craig was greeted with concern – and in some corners, outright scorn – from critics, who felt his shorter stature – he was under 6-feet tall – and golden locks went against author Ian Fleming’s original vision of the character. Adding injury to insult, Craig reportedly lost two teeth while filming a fight scene, but it turned out that he had simply lost a crown. Nonetheless, the media hounds enjoyed their continued snipping at the actor’s heels. When “Casino Royal” (2006) was released, however, critics suddenly changed their tune, stating that the film was one of the best in years and that Craig rivaled Sean Connery with his complex and in-depth take on the Bond character. Meanwhile, Craig starred opposite Nicole Kidman in “The Invasion” (2007), a fourth film adaptation of Jack Finney’s Invasion of the Body Snatchers. After voicing Lord Asriel in “The Golden Compass” (2007) and playing a hedonistic British actor nearing the end of his career in “Flashbacks of a Fool” (2008), Craig returned to the James Bond role for the highly-anticipated “Quantum of Solace” (2008).


Profession(s):
Actor
Sometimes Credited As:
Daniel Wroughton Craig
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Family
daughter:Ella Craig (Born c. 1992; mother is Scottish actress and singer Fiona Loudon)
father:Tim Craig (Divorced from Daniel's mother)
mother:Olivia Craig (Divorced from Daniel's father)
sister:Lea Craig (Older)
step-father:Max Blond
wife:Fiona Loudon (Scottish; married from 1992-1994; mother of his daughter Ella)
Companion(s)
Heike Makatsch , Companion , ```..German; met on the set of "Obsession" in 1996; split in January 2004
Kate Moss , Companion , ```..Met March 2004 and dated about four months
Saskia Mitchell , Companion , ```..Produced his 2005 thriller "The Jacket"; spoke about their romance in a October 2006 Parade interview; rumored to have proposed in summer 2007, while on a romantic break in Italy


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Education
Guildhall School of Music and Drama London, England
Awards (Back to top)

Evening Standard British Film Award Best Actor "Casino Royale" 2007
London Critics Circle Film Award British Actor of the Year "Enduring Love" 2005

Milestones (Back to top)

2008 Appeared in his second James Bond film, the Marc Forster directed "Quantum of Solace"
2008 Co-starred in Edward Zwick's World War II drama "Defiance"
2007 Co-starred with Nicole Kidman in "The Invasion," a film based on the 1956 film "Invasion of the Body Snatchers"
2007 Signed a $60 million deal to star in the next four James Bond films
2007 Played Lord Asriel, a ruthless and mysterious adventurer in "The Golden Compass" a film adaptation of the first part of His Dark Materials trilogy
2006 Portrayed killer, Perry Smith in the Truman Capote biopic "Infamous"; earned an Independent Spirit Award Nomination for Supporting Male
2006 Cast as British Secret Service agent James Bond in "Casino Royale," the 21st James Bond film directed by Martin Campbell
2005 Starred in the British gangster hit "Layer Cake," based on JJ Connelly's London crime novel and directed by Matthew Vaughn
2005 Featured in the thriller "The Jacket" with Adrien Brody
2005 Cast in Steven Spielberg's drama "Munich," based on the tragic aftermath of the 1972 Munich Olympics
2004 Cast in the drama "The Mother"
2004 Starred opposite Samantha Morton and Rhys Ifans in "Enduring Love"
2003 Portrayed poet Ted Hughes in "Sylvia," a biopic of Sylvia Plath (played by Gwyneth Paltrow)
2002 Appeared in "Road to Perdition" directed by Sam Mendes
2001 Cast in "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider," the screen adaptation of the notorious computer game, starring Angelina Jolie
2000 Co-starred with Kim Basinger in "I Dreamed Of Africa"
1999 Featured in the World War I drama "The Trench"
1998 Had a small but impressive role in "Elizabeth" where he played a monk
1998 Co-starred as the painter's lover in "Love Is the Devil" a biopic of Francis Bacon
1996 Gained recognition with the hit TV series "Our Friends in the North"
1992 Made feature film debut in "The Power of One"
Moved to London when he was 16 to join the National Youth Theater

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