Christopher Saul

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Christopher Saul

Christopher Saul
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NationalityBritish
CitizenshipEngland
OccupationActor

Christopher Saul is a Royal Shakespeare Company, National Theatre, West End and TV actor.

Biography

Christopher became inspired to become an actor after playing Othello in lower sixth form at grammar school in Skegness. He trained at The Rose Bruford College of Speech and Drama followed by a string of rep productions as well as being in the original production of Fiddler on the Roof.[1]

In 1975, Saul came to the RSC and appeared in Buzz Goodbody's production of Hamlet alongside Ben Kingsley, Charles Dance and George Baker. (It was shortly after the play's opening, Goodbury committed suicide.)[2]

TV work

This includes Play of the Month, Play for Today, The Professionals, the Doctor Who serial The Awakening, The Gentle Touch, Dempsey and Makepeace, The Bill (in numerous episodes, usually playing medical officers), Casualty, Agatha Christie's Poirot, One Foot in the Grave, London's Burning, Grange Hill, Coronation Street, Doctors, Judge John Deed and Emmerdale. He also had a regular role as Douglas Watson in Triangle and has narrated documentaries for The National Geographic channel plus numerous commercials.[3]

Theatre work

With the RSC, Saul played the title role in Julius Caesar at the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith during 2005. Finishing in January 2009, he appeared in Jonathan Kent's production of Oedipus, Starring Ralph Fiennes and Alan Howard at the Royal National Theatre. In 2017, he appeared in the RSC's production of A Christmas Carol, starring Phil Davis as Ebenezer Scrooge.

Along the way, Saul was awarded 'Outstanding Supporting Performer, non-resident production' in the 29th annual Helen Hayes Awards in Washington DC for his performances as Polonius and The Gravedigger in The Globe's production of Hamlet[4]. He has also penned a one-woman play Florence Flo Smith-Now and Then, based on his book of the same name, taken from the real-life audio recordings he made of his paternal grandmother, Flo Smith, when he was a drama student working on his dissertation in 1969, starring Ursula Mohan.[5] Based on his grandmother's life, the play can be seen from time to time in small theatres around the country.

References

External links

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