Birthday: 27 May 1970, Salisbury, Wiltshire, England, UK
Birth Name: Joseph Alberic Twisleton-Wykeham-Fiennes
Height: 183 cm
Joseph Alberic Twisleton-Wykeham-Fiennes was born in Salisbury, Wiltshire, to Jennifer Anne Mary Alleyne (Lash), a novelist, and Mark Fiennes, a photographer. He is one of six children. Four of his siblings are also in the arts: Ralph Fiennes, an actor; Martha Fiennes, a director; Magnus Fiennes, a musician; and Sophie Fiennes, a producer. He is of...
Show more »
Joseph Alberic Twisleton-Wykeham-Fiennes was born in Salisbury, Wiltshire, to Jennifer Anne Mary Alleyne (Lash), a novelist, and Mark Fiennes, a photographer. He is one of six children. Four of his siblings are also in the arts: Ralph Fiennes, an actor; Martha Fiennes, a director; Magnus Fiennes, a musician; and Sophie Fiennes, a producer. He is of English, Irish, and Scottish origin.He was brought up in West Cork, Ireland. He left art school, and began working with the Young Vic Youth Theatre, and then went on to train at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. His first professional stage appearance was in the West End in The Woman In Black, followed by A Month In The Country. He joined the Royal Shakespeare Company for two seasons and performed roles in Dennis Potter's Son Of Man, Les Enfants Du Paradis, Troilus and Cressida, and Peter Whelan's The Herbal Bed. Show less «
I'm a believer, however naively, that someone will place me in a project because they've seen my wor...Show more »
I'm a believer, however naively, that someone will place me in a project because they've seen my work, rather than me being bullish or so ambitious that I get the part by any other means. Show less «
I've always believed that you shouldn't want to mend a broken heart, because that's someone you don'...Show more »
I've always believed that you shouldn't want to mend a broken heart, because that's someone you don't want to forget. Scars can be good. Show less «
I withdrew after Shakespeare in Love (1998) and went back to the theater, to what I know. I went bac...Show more »
I withdrew after Shakespeare in Love (1998) and went back to the theater, to what I know. I went back to what my initial voice was, which was to find a range and freedom and a creative energy. If that meant not following up with a typical leading-man role, then that's what it is. I'm an actor, and whatever speaks to me I will do. Show less «
It takes years to establish yourself, and then you have one big film and everyone calls you an overn...Show more »
It takes years to establish yourself, and then you have one big film and everyone calls you an overnight success. You think, 'Christ, I've been sweating and crying for seven years.' Show less «
"But it's a strange thing when people judge you because you're not doing some big Hollywood film. Ar...Show more »
"But it's a strange thing when people judge you because you're not doing some big Hollywood film. Are you suggesting I should be in The Dukes of Hazzard (1979)? I mean, hello?". Show less «
Being the youngest makes you long for more of a voice. You find that voice early in theatrics of the...Show more »
Being the youngest makes you long for more of a voice. You find that voice early in theatrics of the kitchen. I was the one screaming, 'Hey, where is my food?'. Show less «
Who has gone through their lives without those ups and downs, whether they are a journalist or an ac...Show more »
Who has gone through their lives without those ups and downs, whether they are a journalist or an actor or a painter or an accountant? There are always going to be times when it doesn't flow as much as you were hoping. So of course I'm going to fail. And when I do fail I hope I fail better and better, again and again. I am happy to fail. Show less «
What's that Russian saying? 'How do you make God Laugh? - Tell him your plans.' It's kind of true.
What's that Russian saying? 'How do you make God Laugh? - Tell him your plans.' It's kind of true.
For a lot of British actors, the theatre is home. It's what they did before you knew them, as it wer...Show more »
For a lot of British actors, the theatre is home. It's what they did before you knew them, as it were. Show less «
"Well, that's his journey. I know that I might have only got Shakespeare in Love (1998) because some...Show more »
"Well, that's his journey. I know that I might have only got Shakespeare in Love (1998) because someone else turned it down; it's a very small marketplace. So it would feel weird to say, 'Oh, yeah I could have been there on Oscar night', because the whole chemistry of the film is built around that particular actor. Who knows if it would have had the same effect with a different cast. It's a mercurial world of alchemy" [on turning down Adrien Brody's role in The Pianist (2002) which garnered the actor an Oscar]. Show less «
I don't read reviews. I can always spot an actor who's read his reviews, because if they're good, he...Show more »
I don't read reviews. I can always spot an actor who's read his reviews, because if they're good, he's swaying about the stage, and if they're bad, he's changed his performance. He comes in limping or something. Show less «
I was in this guy's office in LA two years ago and he said: 'Love your work, Joe, love your work.' I...Show more »
I was in this guy's office in LA two years ago and he said: 'Love your work, Joe, love your work.' I'm thinking, wow, he came all the way to catch me as Christ in Son of Man at the Barbican. I asked what he'd seen me in and he replied: 'Nothing' - without a flicker of irony. I thought, OK, that's how it works. Show less «
It's weird. I never hid adolescence. I kind of bypassed it, and I'm a bit angry that I didn't go thr...Show more »
It's weird. I never hid adolescence. I kind of bypassed it, and I'm a bit angry that I didn't go through all the angst. I had the acne but no angst. From the age of about five to twelve I was very bad, a hideous little terror who beat people up. I was a member of a Rough Gang - we went around and terrorised all the pupils in school. I was this really nasty kid, and then overnight I turned into the man I am now. Show less «