Rory Fleck Byrne

Rory Fleck Byrne (born 1988)[2] is an Irish actor and composer, known for Vampire Academy, Harlots and The Foreigner.

Rory Fleck Byrne
Born
Rory Fleck-Byrne

1988
England
NationalityIrish[1]
OccupationActor, composer
Home townKilkenny

Early life

Rory Fleck Byrne was born in England but moved to Ireland when he was nine years old.[2] There he lived in Kilkenny[3] until he moved to London in 2007 to train at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art,[2] graduating in 2010.[4] He lives in London.[2]

Career

Fleck Byrne's first acting job was in Liverpool in the play Antony and Cleopatra opposite Kim Cattrall.[2] In 2014 Byrne could be seen as Harry Abrams, an assistant of the psychological researcher Joseph Coupland, in the horror movie The Quiet Ones.[5] In 2016 he played Ruby in the movie Tiger Raid.[6] In 2017 he starred as Daniel Marney in eight episodes of Harlots, a drama series about Georgian-era brothels, and the women working there.[7] Fleck Byrne's character Daniel falls in love with the madam of a low-class brothel.[8] Later in 2017 he starred opposite Jackie Chan and Pierce Brosnan in The Foreigner.[9] Fleck Byrne played Brosnan's nephew Sean Morrison, a former British royal navy officer.[10] He later stated that up to then this was one of the best and most challenging experiences he had ever had. He had to train with a stunt team to fight martial arts and get into the mind of a hit-man.[11] As he enjoyed martial arts so much he continued to train it after the film was finished with a personal trainer in London.[12] Fleck Byrne also worked as an actor, writer and producer in the short films Inbox and Bodies.[13] Bodies was set in his hometown Kilkenny. It is about the relationship of two funeral directors who struggle to stay connected to life.[14] Inbox was released with help of the crowdfunding website Kickstarter.[15]

Next to appearing in movies and in TV series, Fleck Byrne also can be seen on stage, in plays including King Charles III (2014–2015),[16] Anna Karenina (2016)[17] and The Phlebotomist (2018).[18]

Personal life

Next to acting Fleck Byrne also enjoys singing. In an interview he mentioned that if he had not become an actor, he would have loved to have been the frontman of a band.[11] He also writes his own songs.[19]

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes
2005 Stealaway Mike Sullivan Film
2013 Untitled Blues Bill Ford Short
2014 The Quiet Ones Harry Abrams Film
2014 Vampire Academy Andre Dragomir Film
2015 Bodies Conor Short
2016 Tiger Raid Ruby Film
2017 The Date Brian Short
2017 Inbox Tom Short
2017 Pucker Short
2017 The Foreigner Sean Morrison Film
2019 After the Harvest II Cillian Film

Television

Year Title Role Notes
2014 Grantchester Ben Blackwood TV series, episode 1x04
2014 Damo and Ivor Liam Delaney TV series, episode 2x02-2x06
2016 Midsomer Murders Dale Nevins TV series, episode 18x06 Harvest of Souls
2016 Jack Taylor Alan TV series, episode 3x03 In Purgatory
2016 To Walk Invisible Arthur Nicholls TV movie
2017 Harlots Daniel Marney TV series, episode 1x01-1x08
2018 Death in Paradise Adam Warner TV series, episode 7x05 Murder on the Day of the Dead
2019 Ghosts Toby Nightingale TV series, episode 1x04 Free Pass

Theatre

Year Title Role Theatre Location References
2010 Antony and Cleopatra Demetrius/Dollabella Liverpool Playhouse Liverpool [20]
2011 Cause Célèbre Ewen Montagu The Old Vic London [21][22]
2011 Disco Pigs Pig Young Vic London [23]
2011 The Lion in Winter Philip Theatre Royal Haymarket, London [24]
2013 That Face Henry The Landor Theatre London [25]
2014 The Vortex Nicky Lancaster Gate Theatre Dublin [26]
2014 The Well Rested Terroris Singer Peacock Dublin [27]
2014–2015 King Charles III William Wyndham's Theatre London [28]
2016 Anna Karenina Vronsky Abbey theatre Dublin [17]
2018 The Phlebotomist Aaron Hampstead Downstairs London [18]

Other works

Year Title Type Role References
2014 Juno and the Paycock BBC Radio 4 Drama Johnny Boyle [29]
2018 Vive la Republique BBC Radio 4 Drama Daniel Cohn-Bendit [30]
gollark: You would be AMAZED how much stuff is broadcast unprotected over moðems.
gollark: GPS, rednet repeat channel, opus broadcasts, opus communication stuff, there's not much off that.
gollark: The majority of traffic is on a small minority of channels.
gollark: If you want to just get *most*, like I do, you do not.
gollark: If you want to trilaterate *absolutely every* message you do.

References

  1. "I'm playing British characters on stage but I'll always be Irish". The Irish Times. Retrieved 25 December 2017.
  2. Ciara Dwyer. "Rory Fleck-Byrne". Irish Independent.
  3. Eithne Shortall. "Earth child's bigger picture. Rory Fleck-Byrne stars alongside Pierce Brosnan and Jackie Chan in his latest film but there's another important role when it comes to travel and global injustice, the actor tells Eithne Shortall". The Times.
  4. "Rory Fleck-Byrne".
  5. Michael O'Sullivan. "Movie review: 'The Quiet Ones' keeps things interesting".
  6. "Gleeson's Iraq thriller to have world premiere in NY".
  7. "'Harlots' Finale Sneak Peek: Charlotte Contemplates the Ultimate Brothel Betrayal — Watch.author=Hanh Nguyen".
  8. Georgia Packham Anderson. "Rory Fleck Byrne – 1883 Magazine".
  9. Nestor Bentanco. "Rory Fleck Byrne Talks THE FOREIGNER in Exclusive Interview".
  10. "'The Foreigner's' Rory Fleck Byrne Takes On Jackie Chan With No Fighting Experience".
  11. "Rory F Byrne. The Irish newcomer on movie genres and acting megastars".
  12. Luis Lecca. "Exclusive: Rory Fleck Byrne on Going "Toe To Toe" With Jackie Chan in THE FOREIGNER".
  13. Brillant Nyansago. "In Conversation with Rory Fleck Byrne".
  14. Max Ianneselli. "RORY FLECK BYRN".
  15. B. Welby-Delimere. "Inbox short film".
  16. Libby Smith. "Rory Fleck – Byrne".
  17. Helen Meany. "Anna Karenina review – Lisa Dwan gives uncertain dazzle to Tolstoy".
  18. Lyn Gardner. "The Phlebotomist review – a gasp-worthy dystopian thriller".
  19. Paul Vaughan. "Rory Fleck Byrne".
  20. "Antony and Cleopatra".
  21. David Benedict. "Cause Celebre".
  22. "Saturday Drama. Cause Celebre". BBC.
  23. Matilda Battersby. "Disco Pigs, Young Vic, London".
  24. Matt Wolf. "The Lion in Winter, Theatre Royal, Haymarket".
  25. Miriam Zendle. "Reviews. That Face".
  26. John McKeown. "Theatre: A horribly good performance of beastliness".
  27. Peter Crawley. "Review: The Well Rested Terrorist".
  28. Lynn Slotkin. "REVIEW: KING CHARLES III".
  29. "Juno and the Paycock". BBC.
  30. "Vive la Republique". BBC.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.