Regé-Jean Page

Regé-Jean Page is a British actor. He played Chicken George in the 2016 miniseries Roots and from 2018 to 2019 was regular cast member on the ABC legal drama For the People. In 2020, Page is starring in the Netflix period drama, Bridgerton.

Regé-Jean Page
Born1990
OccupationActor
Years active2004-present

Life and career

Page Harare, Zimbabwe and moved to London at the age of 14.[1] He graduated from the Drama Centre London in 2013 and began acting on stage, appearing in The History Boys and Merchant Of Venice opposite Jonathan Pryce.[2] He also starred on the final season of BBC Three drama series Waterloo Road in 2015.

In 2016, Page made his American debut playing the role of Chicken George in the History Channel big budget miniseries Roots, a remake of the 1977 miniseries with the same name, based on Alex Haley's 1976 novel, Roots: The Saga of an American Family. The series and Page's performance received critical acclaim.[3][4][5] Also that year, he was cast as a male lead in the ABC pilot Spark.[6] The following year, he was cast in the Shonda Rhimes produced legal drama series For the People.[7][8] The series was canceled after two seasons in 2019. Page also appeared in the 2018 post-apocalyptic film Mortal Engines and co-starred opposite Tessa Thompson in the 2020 drama film Sylvie's Love.[9] He later was cast in a male leading role in the Shonda Rhimes-produced period drama series Bridgerton for Netflix.[10][11]

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes
2004 Troublemaker Jay Short film
2015 Survivor Robert Purvell
2016 Second Summer of Love Rupert Short film
2016 The Merchant of Venice Solanio
2018 Mortal Engines Captain Khora
2020 Sylvie's Love Chico

Television

Year Title Role Notes
2005 Casualty Daniel Kimpton Episode: "Teacher's Pet/Crash and Burn"
2013 Fresh Meat Dean 2 episodes
2015 Waterloo Road Guy Braxton Series regular, 8 episodes
2016 Roots Chicken George Miniseries
2016 Spark Alex Lavelle TV pilot
2018-2019 For the People Leonard Knox Series regular, 20 episodes
2020 Bridgerton Simon Basset Series regular
gollark: Why not just let people manually define that when "marrying"?
gollark: Thus, break marriage into its essential components and allow them to be manually done separately with fewer restrictions.
gollark: Exactly, If it's a recognized thing by the government they can apply annoying constraints, like they did with gay marriage before.
gollark: Wait, I have an even BETTER idea: HYPERGRAPHS.
gollark: It's not based because you can't marry unilaterally.

References

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