
Age: 68
male
Peter Dougan Capaldi (born April 14, 1958) is a Scottish actor, writer and director. He portrayed the twelfth incarnation of the Doctor in Doctor Who and Malcolm Tucker the spin doctor in The Thick of It, for which he has received four British Academy Television Award nominations, winning Best Male Comedy Performance in 2010. When he reprised the role in In the Loop, Capaldi was honoured with several film critic award nominations for Best Supporting Actor. In 2012, Capaldi wrote (with Tony Roche), directed and performed in The Cricklewood Greats, an affectionate spoof documentary about a fictitious film studio, which tracks real developments and trends throughout the history of British cinema. Film roles include Oldsen in Local Hero, Angus Flint in Ken Russell's The Lair of the White Worm, and Mr Curry in Paddington and its sequel, Paddington 2. As a director, Capaldi won the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film and the BAFTA Award for Best Short Film for his short film Franz Kafka's It's a Wonderful Life. He went on to write and direct the drama film Strictly Sinatra and helmed two series of sitcom Getting On.

Peter Capaldi

Lord Fermor
for Lord Fermor in The Picture of Dorian Gray
Suggested by nickienicks

In a high-fashion, neon-drenched 1890s London, young Dorian Gray (Noah Jupe) arrives as a blank canvas of staggering beauty. When the obsessive artist Basil Hallward (Bill Skarsgård) captures Dorian’s likeness in a transformative masterwork, the portrait becomes more than art - it becomes a vessel. Influence comes in the form of Lord Henry Wotton (Robert Pattinson), a decadently cynical aristocrat who seduces Dorian with a poisonous philosophy: that the only things worth living for are youth, pleasure, and the senses. Terrified by the inevitable rot of time, Dorian utters a fateful wish: he would give his soul if the painting would age while he remains forever young. The bargain is struck. As Dorian descends into a world of secret opium dens, broken hearts, and casual cruelty, his face remains an angelic mask of innocence. However, behind a locked door, the hidden canvas begins to change. With every sin, the painted figure twists, bloating with the physical manifestations of Dorian’s moral decay. The tragedy begins with Sibyl Vane (Ariana Greenblatt), a young actress whose genuine love is discarded by Dorian as "unartistic," leading to a spiral of vengeance from her brother James (Pedro Sol Victorino). As decades pass, Dorian becomes a phantom of the London night, leaving a trail of ruined lives like Adrian Singleton (Aidan Gallagher) and the blackmailed chemist Alan Campbell (Alex Wolff). Directed by Emerald Fennell, this remake is a visceral exploration of the male gaze, narcissism, and the high price of aesthetic perfection. While London’s elite whispers about Dorian’s "miraculous" youth, the portrait becomes a grotesque record of a soul beyond saving. The film culminates in a final, bloody confrontation between the man and the masterpiece, proving that while art is immortal, the conscience is a debt that eventually demands payment in full.