Movies Manias
From - 2023 - S02 E01

From - 2023 - S02 E01

Added on: June 18, 2025

Language: Hindi and English

Year: 2023

Categories: Horror

Oliver Robert Ford Davies OBE (born 12 August 1939) is an English actor, theatre historian, director, playwright, and writer. He is best known for his extensive theatre work, and to a broader audience for his role as Sio Bibble in Star Wars Episodes I to III. He is also known for his role as Maester Cressen in HBO series Game of Thrones.

Oliver Robert Ford Davies[1][a] was born in Ealing, Middlesex, England on 12 August 1939.[3] His father was a teacher.[4]

He attended the King's School, Canterbury.[citation needed] Aged 11, he performed in a school play, Richard of Bordeaux, and found that he .mw-parser-output .inline-quote{quotes:none}.mw-parser-output .inline-quote-italic{font-family:inherit;font-style:italic}.mw-parser-output .inline-quote-marks{quotes:"\"""\""}liked being someone else.[4] In 1956 he joined the eminent Ealing amateur company Questors.[5]

He won a scholarship to Merton College, Oxford, where he read history and became president of the Oxford University Dramatic Society. After obtaining his DPhil,[6] he did a postgraduate teaching qualification.[4]

From 1964[4] Davies worked as a history lecturer at the University of Edinburgh before taking up acting professionally in 1967,[4] "to give acting a go". Among his students was future foreign secretary of the UK Robin Cook.[7]

In 1959, as a member of the Oxford University Experimental Theatre Club, Davies appeared in his first Stratford performance in the Memorial Theatre's open-air production of Bartholomew Fair.[8][9]

His first professional appearances were, at the age of 27, in the 1967 season at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre – which at that time included Michael Gambon, Brian Cox, Timothy Dalton, and Anna Calder-Marshall.[4] Short Seasons at the Mermaid, London, the Oxford Playhouse and the Cambridge Arts Theatre followed.[10] Davies' long and prolific association with the Royal Shakespeare Company started in 1975, when director Terry Hands cast him as Mountjoy in Henry V.[11][12]

His big breakthrough in theatre came in 1990, when he was given the lead role in David Hare's Racing Demon at the National Theatre in London.[4]



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