SAG-AFTRA Foundation and BroadwayWorld.com have partnered for a filmed Conversations Q&A series to recognize and celebrate the vibrant theatre community in New York City and the actors who aspire to have a career on the stage and screen.
To RSVP simply register with your email: https://members.sagfoundation.org/events/6389. Limited seats available. Seating is first come, first served, and not guaranteed.
Please direct any questions to nyrsvp@sagfoundation.org and include "David Tennant" in the subject line.
Over his twenty-seven year-long acting career, David Tennant has left a trail of memorable characters over an expansive and diverse array of film, television and on stage credits.
Currently, David can be seen on stage as the title character in Shakespeare's Richard II as a part of the Brooklyn Academy of Music's King & Country: Shakespeare's Great Cycle Of Kings series. The series marks the celebration of the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's death and will run at the BAM Harvey Theater through April 29th.
This past November, Tennant starred as the villainous 'Dr. Zebediah Kilgrave' otherwise known as 'The Purple Man' opposite Krystin Ritter in the Netflix Marvel series Jessica Jones. The streaming service aired the 13-episode in its entirety on November 20th, 2015.
Tennant will next star as the world-renowned Scottish psychiatrist RD Laing in Robert Mullan's Mad to be Normal alongside Elizabeth Moss. The story follows Dr. Laing and his unique community at Kingsley Hall, East London during the 1960's. The film completed production the past Fall of 2015 and is set to release in 2016.
Tennant is most recently known for his role as detective 'Alec Hardy,' on the critically acclaimed BBC crime series Broadchurch. Tennant 's character was brought to the small town of Broadchurch to investigate the murder of an 11-year-old local boy. In its second season, Broadchurch was nominated and won several awards, including the 2014 BAFTA TV Award for "Best Drama Series." Season 3 of the series will begin filming this summer.
Tennant is most recognizable for his portrayal as the 10th Doctor on the widely beloved series Doctor Who. The BBC science fiction series itself has become a pop culture fixture and a fifty-year cult favorite. It depicts the adventures of the time traveling humanoid alien Doctor as he defends himself against foes and protects whole civilizations and people in need. In November 2013, and 2015 as part of Doctor Who?'?s 50th Anniversary celebrations, Tennant's Doctor was voted "The UK's Favourite Doctor" in a survey held by the Radio Times magazine. For his part in the show, Tennant won three TV Quick Awards, three SFX Awards, four National Television Awards, and two BAFTA awards, among numerous other nominations over the course of his four-year Doctor tenure.
Since then, Tennant has gone on to star in a series of prodigious film roles. In April 2012, he played the lead in a one-off drama entitled The Minor Character for Sky Arts. Between April and June of the same year, he played the lead role of 'Jean-François Mercier' in the BBC Four mini-series Spies of Warsaw. In 2010, he starred as a widowed father in the British dramaSingle Father, which followed his character 'Dave' as he struggled to raise five children after the death of his partner. For this role, he was nominated as "Best Actor" at the Royal Television Society Programme Awards. Among his other accolades was a 2009 Critics Choice Award for "Best Shakespearean Performance" for his titular role in the Royal Shakespeare Company production of Hamlet.
In 2005, the National Video Archive of Performance recorded Tennant as 'Jimmy Porter' in the Theatre Royal play Look Back in Anger for the Victoria and Albert Museum Theatre Collection. Further solidifying his place as one of the UK's elite, Tennant made an appearance in the popular J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter series as 'Barty Crouch Jr.' in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire in the same year. Also in 2005, Tennant portrayed the younger 'Casanova' in the British television comedy drama serial Casanova.
In 1996, at 25-years-old, Tennant joined the RSC as Touchstone in As You Like It and went on to play Jack Lane in The Herbal Bed, the leading role in Romeo and Juliet, and Antipholus of Syracuse in The Comedy of Errors (for which he received a nomination in the 2000 Ian Charleson awards for Best Classical Actor under 30). He returned to the RSC to play Berowne in Love's Labour's Lost and a much acclaimed Hamlet in 2008 which the BBC made into a TV film version starring Tennant in 2009. It was also the subject of a recent documentary as part of the BBC's Shakespeare Unlocked series in 2012.Videos