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Oliver Ford Davies

Oliver Ford Davies
Photo Credit:

Oliver Ford Davies

Oliver Ford Davies film credits include Sense and Sensibility, Mrs Dalloway, Scandal, and Star Wars Episodes I, II and III. His numerous theatre credits include Larkin With Women, Hamlet, and David Hare's trilogy of Racing Demon (Olivier Award, Best Actor).

Excerpt:
Chapter 1 from Conspirata
Mar 18, 2010
Imperium will be released on February 02, 2010 in Compact Disk
Feb 02, 2010
Imperium is now available in Compact Disk
Feb 02, 2010
Conspirata will be released on February 02, 2010 in Compact Disk, eAudio
Feb 02, 2010
Conspirata is now available in Compact Disk, eAudio
Feb 02, 2010
Audio Excerpt:
Conspirata
Jan 23, 2010
Audio Excerpt:
Imperium
Jan 23, 2010
Excerpt:
Chapter 1 from Conspirata
Jan 05, 2010
Excerpt:
Chapter 1 from Imperium
Jun 20, 2009
Audio Excerpt:
Imperium
Mar 19, 2009
Imperium will be released on November 10, 2008 in eAudio
Nov 10, 2008
Imperium is now available in eAudio
Nov 10, 2008
Imperium will be released on September 19, 2006 in
Sep 19, 2006
Imperium is now available in
Sep 19, 2006
Imperium will be released on September 19, 2006 in
Sep 19, 2006
Imperium is now available in
Sep 19, 2006

Authors on the Web

Guardian.co.uk, January 13, 2012
...mountain cave. Look what it did for Achilles. The Death of Ivan Ilyich , by Leo Tolstoy, read by Oliver Ford Davies (3hrs unabridged, Naxos, £13.99) Having shamefully given up on The Kreutzer Sonata , another of his novellas – verbosity has its...
Guardian.co.uk, November 8, 2011
...immerses us in the period with enormous pictorial bravura and provides a framework for two hugely impressive performances. Oliver Ford Davies makes a memorably troubled Andrewes, suggesting his conservatism was the product of past sins. Stephen Boxer...
Techwatch, July 27, 2011
...season two, for which casting began in May 2011.  Season two will star Gwendoline Christie, Liam Cunningham, Oliver Ford Davies and Stephan Dillane among its stellar cast. Filming for season two started this month, with reports of a return to the...
Yorkshire Evening Post, March 31, 2011
...Jack Butcher as William and Oliver Ford Davies as Tom. Photo by Catherine Ashmore When Michelle Magorian first wrote her heartbreaking tale of parenthood set in wartime England she had no idea it would become a...
Cotswold Journal, March 10, 2011
...Goodnight Mister Tom comes to Malvern Theatres next week as part of the book’s 30th anniversary celebrations. Oliver Ford Davies plays the title role in David Wood’s play taken from Michelle Magorian’s story set during the dark and dangerous...
The Stage, December 8, 2011
...As my colleague Michael Coveney (reviewing for The Stage) observes, Lancelot Andrewes, Bishop of Ely is played by Oliver Ford Davies with “a stunning cerebral fortitude” and “in a great Act II scene, Edgar pitches him in debate with the ghost of...
Culture Critic, December 1, 2011
...clerics who fought to translate the Bible, 400 years ago, into a language every British citizen could understand. Oliver Ford Davies portrays troubled leading translator Andrewes. For more information visit:...
Spectator, November 24, 2011
...word at Isaiah 2: 4. The second half of the play gathers momentum as its focus tightens on Oliver Ford Davies’s Andrewes as lynchpin of the translation project. Ford Davies brilliantly shows us an Andrewes in 1610 haunted and shaped by a conscience...
Apple, November 11, 2011
...Maul. Directed by: George Lucas Starring: Liam Neeson, Ewan McGregor, Natalie Portman, Jake Lloyd, Ian McDiarmid, Pernilla August, Oliver Ford Davies, Hugh Quarshie, Ahmed Best, Anthony Daniels, Kenny Baker, Frank Oz, Terence Stamp, Brian Blessed,...
Mail Online UK, November 10, 2011
...inform the King James version. Twenty-four years later, Tyndale’s ghost visits the Bishop of Ely, Lancelot Andrewes (Oliver Ford Davies). The play takes off with a scene in which the two of them squabble over the wording of passages of translation like...
Mail Online UK, November 10, 2011
...inform the King James version. Twenty-four years later, Tyndale's ghost visits the Bishop of Ely, Lancelot Andrewes (Oliver Ford Davies). The play takes off with a scene in which the two of them squabble over the wording of passages of translation like...
The Independent, November 9, 2011
...prison cell. He's later propelled forward to 1610 as the ghostly projection of the troubled conscience of Oliver Ford Davies's donnishly dry and anguished Bishop Lancelot Andrewes. Their encounter underlines the debt the King James version owes to...