Nick Brimble | |
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Born |
Nicholas Brimble 22 July 1944 Bristol, England |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1968–present |
Height | 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) |
Nick Brimble is an English actor whose long career takes in theatre, television, film and voice work.
Nick Brimble was born in Bristol. His father was a schoolteacher, who was also a keen amateur actor, an activity in which Nick was involved on occasions as a child. For several summers, his father also managed the French/Czech High-Wire Act, the White Devils. When they toured Britain, the Brimble family travelled with them. In July 1961 he organised their blindfolded high-wire crossing of Cheddar Gorge. At the end of the season’s tour of Britain, Nick travelled through France with the White Devils helping as they set up and performed in towns as they went - returning for the start of the autumn school term.
Nick attended Bristol Grammar School. In his first year, he played Miranda in a school production of The Tempest. His parents gave him a season ticket to the Bristol Old Vic where he saw every play from the age of 11 until he went to university at 18.
Nick studied Philosophy and English Literature at the University of Sussex from 1962-66. He left with an MA and went on to teach English and Drama at the University of Baghdad. His stay in Iraq only lasted one year due to the political unrest there and he left at the outbreak of the Six-Day War in 1967, driving back to the UK overland in a battered mini car purchased from British tourists he had met in Baghdad. The next year he taught at a south London comprehensive school, before deciding to try his luck as an actor.
In 1968 Brimble became Youth Theatre Organiser at the Marlowe Theatre in Canterbury. He administered the TIE (Theatre In Education) company, which toured plays to schools in Kent. He also acted in the plays as well as driving the van and doing whatever else was necessary. At the same time he appeared in small parts for the main Marlowe Theatre Company. In 1970 Brimble and other members of the TIE company formed Actors' Circus, an independent company. The first production was Waiting for Godot at the University of Kent’s Gulbenkian Theatre in which Brimble played Vladimir.