English actor (born )
Nicholas Le Prevost (born 18 March ) is an Englishactor.
Le Prevost was born in Wiltshire. He was educated at Shaftesbury Grammar School, Shaftesbury, Dorset from to and at Kingswood School, Bath from to At school, he studied Ecclesiastical Architecture, and has said that, had he not become an actor, he would have liked to be an architect. He trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.[1][2]
Le Prevost's TV and radio credits include Coronation Street, The Imitation Game, It Takes a Worried Man, The Jewel in the Crown, HR, Brideshead Revisited, The Camomile Lawn, Harnessing Peacocks, Babblewick Hall, The Ghosts of Motley Hall, Up the Garden Path, The War of the Worlds, Inspector Morse, Midsomer Murders, Foyle's War, Agatha Christie's Poirot, The Vicar of Dibley and A Man for All Seasons.[3][4]
At the Laurence Olivier Awards, he was nominated for Best Performance in a Supporting Role in a Musical or Entertainment, for his performance in a West End production of My Fair Lady.[5] Also in , he appeared as Benedick in Gregory Doran's production of Much Ado About Nothing with the Royal Shakespeare Company, opposite Harriet Walter.[6][7]
Since , Le Prevost has been portraying Georges Simenon's fictional detective Jules Maigret for BBC Radio, replacing the late Maurice Denham in the role.[8] In , he appeared as W. Somerset Maugham in a BBC Radio adaption of the author's novel The Razor's Edge.[9]
His film work includes Clockwise, The Girl in a Swing, and Shakespeare in Love.[3] In he appeared on television in Margaret.[10]
In July , he appeared in a double bill of Tom Stoppard's The Real Inspector Hound and Richard Brinsley Sheridan's The Critic at the Minerva Theatre, Chichester.[11]
In , he appeared in ITV drama Wild at Heart as Gene.[12]
From February , he appeared in Man and Superman at the National Theatre, London.[13]
Le Prevost is a director of The Wrestling School, a London theatre company specialising in the work of Howard Barker.[12]
In , he appeared as Count Fiskon in the BBC TV series Father Brown episode "The Lair of the Libertines".[14] In , he had a cameo role as an investment banker for a fictitious London-based firm called Waterston and Price in the Danish thriller Follow the Money, which was shown on BBC 4 in spring of that year.