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Dominic Mafham

Dominic Mafham
Dominic Mafham February 2016.jpg
Dominic Mafham on 27 February 2016
Born Dominic Mafham
(1968-03-11) 11 March 1968 (age 48)
Stafford, Staffordshire, England
Nationality British
Occupation Actor
Years active 1990–present
Spouse(s) Gwyneth Mafham
Children 2
Website http://www.dominicmafham.com

Dominic Mafham (born 11 March 1968 in Stafford, Staffordshire) is an English stage, film and television actor. He trained at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School.

Mafham began his career at The Royal Shakespeare Company in 1990. He was with the RSC for four years.

Mafham first came to prominence when he played Nigel Hawthorne's emotionally damaged son Daniel Pascoe in Paula Milne's The Fragile Heart. The drama was screened on Channel 4 in the UK in 1996. It won the 1997 BAFTA award for Nigel Hawthorne as Best Actor, and was nominated for several awards including Best Drama Serial. It was also nominated in the Royal Television Society awards that year.

Mafham played the central character - a high tech assassin in the Swiss Alps stricken with a conscience - in Duncan Jones' first film Whistle. The film gathered a cult following after showing at various international film festivals, and finally gained a larger audience when it was included on the DVD of Jones' first full-length feature Moon.

Mafham played Mortimer Lightwood in the BBC's 1998 adaptation of Charles Dickens' Our Mutual Friend. Much of the story is seen from Mortimer's perspective. Our Mutual Friend was acclaimed worldwide, and won four BAFTAs including Best Serial. It was nominated for four more BAFTAs, as well as awards from the Royal Television Society, the Broadcasting Press Guild and the San Francisco International Film Festival.

Since then, Mafham has appeared in more than 50 productions, including the films The English Patient and Shooting Fish, and the ITV medical drama Always and Everyone (A&E). He played the killer in the first episode of Foyle's War, Stephen Fry's errant brother Simon Kingdom in Kingdom, and Dr Richard Channing in the BBC World War Two drama Land Girls. He also appeared in two episodes of Lewis and The Clinic.


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