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Adam O'Brian is a Actor British born on 21 august 1989 at Swansea (United-kingdom)

Adam O'Brian

Adam O'Brian
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Nationality United-kingdom
Birth 21 august 1989 (35 years) at Swansea (United-kingdom)

Adam O'Brian (born 21 August 1989) is a Welsh stage and screen actor.

Biography

Early life
Born in Swansea, O'Brian was raised in Minehead, Somerset before leaving to study acting in London and Cardiff.


Early career
O’Brian began training as an actor at the National Youth Theatre in 2006. He appeared in several National Youth Theatre productions including performances at the National Centre for the Performing Arts (China), the Beijing National Stadium, Soho Theatre, the Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance, and Buckingham Palace.

O’Brian completed his acting training at the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama, graduating in 2010.

Whilst still training at drama school O’Brian performed at Shakespeare's Globe as part of the Sam Wanamaker Festival 2010.


Acting career
O’Brian’s professional career began at Theatre by the Lake when he appeared in the 2010 repertory season as Tom Wingfield in The Glass Menagerie, Laurence in Shining City and Nicholas in What the Butler Saw. He returned to Theatre by the Lake in 2012 to appear as Pony William in David Harrower’s Knives in Hens.

In 2012 O’Brian starred as Frederic Bourdin in Bart Layton’s multi-award winning film The Imposter. The film premiered in competition at the Sundance Film Festival, and went on to win awards at several film festivals later that year, including the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, the Miami International Film Festival and the Zurich Film Festival. It was selected as part of the 'Festval Favourites' category at SXSW in Texas, and was nominated for five Cinema Eye Honors, including one for Best Film. It was nominated for three London Film Critics Circle Awards, including one for Best Film, and went on to win the award for Documentary of the Year. It was nominated for six British Independent Film Awards, including Best Film and Best Director, and went on to win the award for Best Documentary. It was nominated for a Critic's Choice Movie Award, and for a South Bank Sky Arts Award for Best Film. It was listed as one of the 'Top Ten Best Films of 2012' by several publications including Total Film and Time Out New York. It was shortlisted for an Academy Award for Best Documentary, and after being nominated for two BAFTA's including one for Best Documentary, it went on to win the award for Outstanding Debut by a British Director or Producer. In an interview with DIY-TV, BAFTA winning director Bart Layton described O'Brian's contribution to the film in these terms- 'He's a really brilliant and clever, very highly trained young actor... he's done a brilliant job... he was able to mimic Frédéric so perfectly... he nailed it.'

O’Brian has toured with the English Touring Theatre, appearing as Billy in Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing in 2012, a joint production with the West Yorkshire Playhouse.


Writing and Directing
O'Brian has worked as an actor, writer and director for Poleroid Theatre, he has also written for Undeb Theatre, and performed his own writing at the Royal Court Theatre as part of the RWCMD Actors Showcase.

Usually with

Simon Chinn
Simon Chinn
(1 films)
Bart Layton
Bart Layton
(1 films)
Source : Wikidata

Filmography of Adam O'Brian (1 films)

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Actor

The Imposter, 1h39
Directed by Bart Layton
Origin United-kingdom
Genres Drama, Thriller, Documentary, Crime
Themes Documentary films about law, Documentaire sur une personnalité
Actors Adam O'Brian
Rating74% 3.748363.748363.748363.748363.74836
Bourdin, who turned out to have a long record of impersonating various children, real or imaginary, embellished his claim to be Nicholas Barclay by alleging that he had been kidnapped for purposes of sexual abuse by Mexican, European, and U.S. military personnel and transported from Texas to Spain. His impersonation fooled several officials in Spain and the U.S., and he was apparently accepted by many of Barclay's family members, even though he was seven years older than Barclay, spoke with a French accent, and had brown eyes and dark hair rather than Barclay's blue eyes and blonde hair. The impersonation was eventually unearthed as a result of the suspicions of a private investigator, Charles (Charlie) Parker, and an FBI agent, Nancy Fisher. Bourdin subsequently made a full confession, and in the film he elaborates on the various stages in his impersonation.