Best British actors
Photograph: Time Out
Photograph: Time Out

50 Great British actors: the list

Explore our list of 50 Great British actors, from screen villains to action heroes and leading ladies

Tom Huddleston
Contributor: Phil de Semlyen
Advertising

Many of the greatest British actors have reputations that kind of precede them. While making 1976s Marathon Man, the great American method actor Dustin Hoffman told his equally great co-star, legendary British thesp Laurence Olivier, that he had stayed awake for 72 straight hours to prepare for a scene in which his character had been up for three solid days. My dear boy, Olivier is said to have repied, why don't you try acting? 

However, in spite of what this possibly apocryphal anecdote would have you believe, there is no one British style’ of acting. To prove the point, here are our picks for the greatest British acting talent of all-time: they’re a dazzling varied company of sleek leading ladies and men, naturalistic character actors, and one or two delightfully hammy scene-stealers. And they’re all unforgettable in their own way.

RECOMMENDED:

🇬🇧 The 100 best British films
😂 The 100 best comedy movies
💥 The 101 best action movies

1. Daniel Day-Lewis

The dictionary definition of the term ‘serious actor’, classically trained Londoner Daniel Day-Lewis rose to prominence in the late 1980s in films like My Beautiful Laundrette and My Left Foot, for which he won his first of three Best Actor Oscars. Since then, he’s worked with just about every major director on the planet, from Martin Scorsese (The Age of Innocence, Gangs of New York) to Michael Mann (Last of the Mohicans), from Paul Thomas Anderson (There Will Be Blood, Phantom Thread) to Steven Spielberg (Lincoln). He was knighted in 2014 and retired from acting in 2017 – only to announce his un-retirement seven years later.

Years active: 1980 to now

Key films: My Left Foot, Lincoln, Phantom Thread

2. Alec Guinness

Arguably the greatest of all British screen actors, Alec Guinness exploded onto the screen playing eight different members of the aristocratic Dashwood family in the satirical Kind Hearts and Coronets. But he always resented the fact that his best-known role was as Obi-Wan Kenobi in the original Star Wars trilogy.

Years active: 1930s to 1990s

Key films: The Bridge on the River Kwai, Kind Hearts and Coronets, Lawrence of Arabia, Star Wars

Advertising

3. Anthony Hopkins

The son of a Port Talbot baker, Anthony Hopkins’s career has moved from the Shakespearean stage to serious cinematic drama to the hammiest Hollywood blockbusters. But he’ll forever be remembered at the teeth-sucking psychopath Hannibal Lecter in the Oscar-winning The Silence of the Lambs.

Years active: 1960s to now

Key films: The Silence of the Lambs, The Lion in Winter, The Elephant Man, The Father

4. Christian Bale

A child star at 13 in Steven Spielberg’s soaring war story Empire of the Sun, Christian Bale’s career seemed to be petering out before he was perfectly cast as the preening, murderous anti-hero of American Psycho. The lead role in Christopher Nolan’s Dark Knight trilogy has made him a huge international star.

Years active: 1980s to now

Key films: Empire of the Sun, American Psycho, Batman Begins

Advertising

5. Maggie Smith

The Great Dame of British film, Maggie Smith essayed a steady rise through the 1960s before hitting the big time with her Oscar-nominated title performance in 1969’s The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. Her notable roles since are too many to mention, but modern audiences probably know her best as the austere Mother Superior in Sister Act, the acid-tongued Lady Trentham in Gosford Park (and the strikingly similar Lady Crawley in TV’s Downton Abbey) and the kindly Professor McGonagall in the Harry Potter series.

Years active: 1956 to 2023

Key films: The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, A Room With a View, Sister Act, Gosford Park

6. Julie Christie

Is there a sadder sight in cinema than the finale of Billy Liar, as the train carries Julie Christie away from the sad-sack title character to a life of adventure? Among the most glamorous figures on London’s Sixties scene - which is really saying something - Christie’s flawless face would dominate our nation’s cinema screens in the likes of Doctor Zhivago and The Go-Between, while roles in McCabe and Mrs Miller and Don’t Look Now proved that she’s a phenomenal talent, too.

Years active: 1957 to 2017

Key films: Billy Liar, Doctor Zhivago, McCabe and Mrs Miller, Don’t Look Now

Advertising

7. Gary Oldman

One of a gang of young British actors who rose to prominence in the post-punk years, Gary Oldman got his break playing Sex Pistols legend Sid Vicious. Three decades later he’s still a force to be reckoned with, even in nice-guy roles in the Batman and Harry Potter franchises. The excoriating Nil By Mouth proved he was a fine director, too, while Darkest Hour pocketed him an Oscar.

Years active: 1980s to now

Key films: DraculaSid & NancyTinker Tailor Soldier Spy

8. Ian McKellen

A breathtaking Shakespearean actor, a lifelong gay-rights campaigner and a true rags-to-riches success story, Burnley-born Ian McKellen seemed to gain a new lease of life when he was cast as the kindly wizard Gandalf in the Lord of the Rings movies.

Years active: 1960s to now

Key films: The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, Richard IIIX-Men, Gods and Monsters

Advertising

9. Deborah Kerr

A six-time Academy Award nominee (and the first Scot ever to be nominated for an acting Oscar!), Glasgow-born Deborah Kerr first impressed British audiences with three distinct roles in Powell & Pressburger’s The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp. But Hollywood soon came calling, and by the 1950s she was a global star, rolling in the surf with Burt Lancaster in From Here to Eternity, crooning to Yul Brynner in The King and I and swooning with Cary Grant in An Affair to Remember.

Years active: 1937 – 1986

Key films: The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp, Black Narcissus, From Here to Eternity, The Innocents

10. Helen Mirren

Helen Mirren stands apart as the only performer to have completed both the American and British ‘triple crowns’ of acting: an Oscar, Tony and Emmy stateside, plus BAFTA film and TV awards in addition to an Olivier in the UK. Everyone remembers Mirren for brilliantly portraying the late Elizabeth II in Stephen Frears 2006 biopic The Queen, but her stellar CV includes everything from the classic 1980 gangster flick The Long Good Friday to the Fast & Furious movies. She really does have the range.

Years active: 1964 to now

Key films: The Long Good Friday, Gosford Park, The Queen, Eye in the Sky

Advertising

11. Olivia Colman

It’s depressingly rare for an actress to find a bounty of great roles in their forties. Happily, Olivia Colman has had just that. From her fabulously capricious, gouty queen in The Favourite, to an altogether more reserved monarch in The Crown, to her gut-punch dementia drama The Father and motherhood memoir The Lost Daughter, the roles keep getting better – and so does she. The awards will keep coming too, which is fine by us. Her acceptance speeches are magnificent.   

Years active:
 2000 to now

Key films: Tyrannosaur, The Favourite, The Lost Daughter

12. Sir John Gielgud

One of Britain’s most iconic Shakespearean actors, John Gielgud never quite seemed at home on the big screen. Nonetheless, his rambling, ever-fascinating screen career ranged from the disastrous ‘erotic epic’ Caligula to prestigious supporting roles in hits like Arthur (for which he won an Oscar) and Gandhi.

Years active: 1920s to 1990s

Key films: ArthurGandhi, Caligula

Advertising

13. Dirk Bogarde

Impossible to pin down, Dirk Bogarde played everything from dashing romantic leads in the hugely popular, comically risqué Doctor series to the scheming working-class valet in The Servant. As the conflicted barrister in Victim, he became the first major British actor to play a gay character on screen.

Years active: 1940s to 1980s

Key films: A Bridge Too FarDoctor in the House, Victim, The Servant

14. Cary Grant

He may have possessed the tangled mid-Atlantic vowels of an American impersonating a Brit, but Cary Grant was actually born working class in Bristol, and began performing around the age of 10. Louche, debonair, brilliantly funny and just occasionally rather unsettling, Grant’s roles as a Hollywood leading man are too numerous to list, but the films he made with Alfred Hitchcock – Suspicion, Notorious and North By Northwest – are among the most notable.

Years active: 1922 – 1986

Key films: His Girl Friday, The Philadelphia Story, Notorious North By Northwest

Advertising

15. Judi Dench

A committed stage and screen performer for over three decades before she finally scored her first Oscar nomination as Queen Victoria in Mrs Brown, Judi Dench is now a world-famous national treasure, thanks in large part to her role as MI6 chief M in the recent James Bond films.

Years active: 1950s to now

Key films: PhilomenaMrs Brown, Skyfall, Notes on a Scandal

16. Ben Kingsley

Born Krishna Bhanji in 1940s Yorkshire, Ben Kingsley became a figurehead of serious, highbrow British cinema in the wake of Gandhi and Schindler’s List – which made his swearing, sneering turn as the terrifying gangster Don Logan in Sexy Beast all the more startling.

Years active: 1960s to now

Key films: Gandhi, Schindler’s List, Sexy Beast

Advertising

17. Jeremy Irons

A classically trained British actor who rose to fame in ITV’s stately Brideshead Revisited, Jeremy Irons is one of an elite band of actors to win the ‘triple crown’: an Oscar (for Reversal of Fortune), an Emmy (for the TV miniseries Elizabeth I) and a Tony (for Broadway smash The Good Thing).

Years active: 1970s to now

Key films: Eragon, The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Dead Ringers, Die Hard With a Vengeance

18. Bob Hoskins

A lifelong grafter who found unexpected fame as the private-dick anti-hero of cartoon smash Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Hoskins never forgot his roots and continued to appear in tiny indie movies like Shane Meadows’s magical A Room For Romeo Brass until his untimely death in 2014.

Years active: 1970s to 2010s

Key films: Who Framed Roger Rabbit, A Room for Romeo BrassThe Long Good Friday

Advertising

19. Sean Connery

From Glasgow milkman to one of the biggest British actors in the known universe, Sean Connery succeeded through sheer determination and bolshiness. Still the fans’ favourite James Bond, he exuded predatory sexiness in the role – but balanced such flashy blockbusters with ‘serious’ performances in the likes of The Hill and Hitchcock’s Marnie.

Years active: 1950s to 2010s

Key films: The Untouchables, Dr No, Marnie, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade

20. Tilda Swinton

Perhaps the most unpredictable and challenging British actors of them all, Tilda Swinton shattered expectations when she played the male lead in Sally Potter’s time-hopping Orlando. That fierce, determined sense of experimentation can be felt in every film she makes, from tiny avant-garde indies to major Hollywood blockbusters.

Years active: 1980s to now

Key films: Only Lovers Left Alive, Orlando, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, I Am Love

Advertising

21. Riz Ahmed

Actor, writer, rapper and activist, Londoner Riz Ahmed seemed to arrive fully-formed with leading roles in the likes of indie drama Shifty and masterful black comedy Four Lions. But it was his twitchy, awards-worthy turn opposite Jake Gyllenhaal in Nightcrawler that saw him break through, leading to roles in major Hollywood movies including Jason Bourne and Rogue One, and the chance to co-write, produce and star in the terrific Mogul Mowgli

Years active: 2006 to now

Key films: Four Lions, Nightcrawler, Mogul MowgliSound of Metal

22. Michael Caine

Arguably London’s most famous son, Bermondsey-born Caine’s career exploded in the ’60s when he became the face of working-class Britain in the likes of Zulu and Alfie. In his middle years, he seemed to swerve towards cheeky-chappie self-parody, before his work with director Christopher Nolan secured a remarkable late-in-life comeback.

Years active: 1950s to now

Key films: Zulu, Get Carter, The Dark Knight

Advertising

23. Daniel Kaluuya

Born in Camden Town and raised in the star-factory that was Channel 4’s Skins, Daniel Kaluuya rocketed to the A-list following his Oscar-nominated leading role in the subversive horror-comedy Get Out. A hair-raising turn as the villain in Steve McQueen’s Widows and a re-team with Peele for sci-fi oddity Nope confirmed his star status, while The Kitchen proved he could direct, too.

Years active: 2007 to now

Key films: Get Out, Widows, Nope

Advertising

25. Kate Winslet

When your international breakthrough is co-starring in literally the biggest movie ever, it’s usually only downhill from there. But Winslet wisely countered the career-overwhelming enormity of Titanic by deliberately going small: re-establishing herself as a period piece staple (she’d previously won a BAFTA for 1995’s Sense and Sensibility); challenging herself with roles in the likes of Revolutionary Road, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and The Reader, for which she earned an Oscar; and only occasionally appearing in other blockbusters, like the Avatar sequels. Her greatest achievement, though, may be her turn as a tough, troubled small-town American police detective in the HBO miniseries Mare of Easttown – an astonishing performance she completely disappears into, not with make-up but a very specific regional Pennsylvania accent. 

Years active: 1990s to now

Key films: Titanic, Heavenly Creatures, Revolutionary Road

26. Julie Walters

How many performers score an Oscar nomination – and a Bafta win – for their very first big-screen role? Educating Rita made Julie Walters a star, but she’s just as much at home in goofy TV comedy roles alongside her old pal Victoria Wood.

Years active: 1970s to now

Key films: One Chance, Educating Rita, Billy Elliot, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone

Advertising

27. Dev Patel

Another product of the Channel 4 star-school known as Skins, Harrow boy Dev Patel rocketed to international fame with the lead in Danny Boyle’s Best Picture-winning Slumdog Millionaire. Eight years and a lead role on TV’s The Newsroom later, he climbed to even greater heights with impressive turns in Lion, The Personal History of David Copperfield and The Green Knight, before proving himself as both an unexpected action star and a talented first-time director with the thunderous political fight-flick Monkey Man.

Years active: 2006 to now

Key films: Slumdog Millionaire, Lion, Monkey Man

28. Terence Stamp

Kneel before Stamp! Having scored an Oscar nomination with his very first movie role - in 1962’s Billy Budd – Terence Stamp would become a familiar face on the Swinging London scene thanks to films like The Collector and Poor Cow. But it was his roles as the psychotic General Zod in Superman II and the flamboyant Bernadette in Priscilla, Queen of the Desert that ensured his place in the pantheon.

Years active: 1960 to now

Key films: Poor Cow, Superman II, The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, The Limey

Advertising

29. Charles Dance

Too often typecast as the frosty, austere villain in the likes of Last Action Hero, The Imitation Game and TV’s Game of Thrones, former RSC star Charles Dance proved he could also play the wounded nice-guy in the underrated Alien 3.

Years active: 1970s to now

Key films: Ali G Indahouse, Alien 3, The Last Action Hero, Gosford Park

30. Emma Thompson

Starting out as a Cambridge comic alongside the likes of Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie, Emma Thompson became part of the acting elite following buttoned-down roles in The Remains of the Day and Sense and Sensibility – for which she also won a screenwriting Oscar.

Years active: 1980s to now

Key films: The Remains of the Day, Sense and Sensibility, Nanny McPhee

Advertising

31. Paddy Considine

Terrifying, pathetic and hilarious in equal measure, Paddy Considine’s debut as the child-man Morell in Shane Meadows’s A Room for Romeo Brass was a statement of intent – one he fulfilled in spades in Dead Man’s Shoes a few years later. Considine has gone on to bigger things – appearing in My Summer of Love, Hot Fuzz and The Bourne Ultimatum; writing and directing two features of his own; playing the ailing King in HBO’s House of the Dragon – but he’s never abandoned his Staffordshire roots. 

Years active: 1999 to now

Key films: A Room for Romeo Brass, Dead Man’s Shoes, Journeyman

Advertising

33. Patrick Stewart

A veteran of countless stage and screen productions, the original sexy baldie Patrick Stewart had a late breakthrough at age 47 when he captained the USS Enterprise in Star Trek: The Next Generation. He now juggles X-Men appearances with a global campaign for women’s rights.

Years active: 1960s to now

Key films: X-Men: Days of Future Past, Dune, Star Trek: First Contact

34. Hugh Grant

A hardworking actor for many years, Hugh Grant found unprecedented fame as the floppy-haired hero of mega-hit Four Weddings and a Funeral – then almost threw it all away in a parked car on Sunset Boulevard. Still, sharp performances in Paddington 2 and Florence Foster Jenkins – and during the press hacking enquiry – show he’s still got fire in his belly.

Years active: 1980s to now

Key films: Four Weddings and a Funeral, Notting Hill, Cloud Atlas, Paddington 2

Advertising

35. Benedict Cumberbatch

There are few actors who can communicate genius-level abstraction with as much believability as Benedict Cumberbatch. The Londoner has IQ-ed up everything from the BBC’s Sherlock and The Current War to The Imitation Game and Doctor Strange. But his range extends far beyond playing brainboxes, as his visceral turn in Jane Campion’s The Power of the Dog amply demonstrates. He’s magnetic as the dissolute Patrick Melrose in Showtime’s limited series, too. Like Sherlock himself, there’s not much he can’t wrap his head around.

Years active:
 2002 to now

Key films: The Imitation Game, Doctor Strange, The Power of the Dog

36. John Boyega

Anyone who witnessed first-timer John Boyega’s commanding performance in homegrown horror-comedy Attack the Block knew that a star had been forged - including director JJ Abrams, who tapped Peckham’s finest for a lead role in Star Wars: The Force Awakens. From there, Boyega’s star has only risen, with a diverse slate of movies from Woman King to They Cloned Tyrone, and a self-produced Block sequel on the horizon.

Years active: 2011 to now

Key films: Attack the Block, Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens, They Cloned Tyrone

Advertising

37. Marianne Jean-Baptiste

Camberwells Marianne Jean-Baptiste broke through with an unforgettable, Oscar-nominated performance in Mike Leigh’s extraordinary 1995 family drama Secrets & Lies. She was equally heartbreaking as grieving mother and campaigner Doreen Lawrence in Paul Greengrass’s harrowing 1999 TV movie The Murder of Stephen Lawrence. A longtime role on classy police drama Without a Trace (2002-2009) followed, but Jean-Baptiste is back in movie awards season contention this year for Hard Truths, another collaboration with Leigh in which she gives an absolutely shattering performance. 

Years active: 1991 to now

Key films: 
Secrets & Lies, In Fabric, Hard Truths

38. Colin Firth

He looks like your archetypal thespian toff, but there’s a subtle warmth and charm to Colin Firth that many of his contemporaries lack. Who else could have made the remote pre-war monarch George VI not just approachable, but downright cuddly – without losing his royal cool.

Years active: 1980s to now

Key films: Bridget Jones’s Diary, A Single Man, The King’s Speech

Advertising

39. Idris Elba

The London-born thesp (and sometime DJ) made his international breakthrough with a decidedly un-British role: as Baltimore drug lord Stringer Bell on HBO’s epochal crime drama The Wire. Since then, he’s personified calm authority on screen, whether fighting kaiju in Pacific Rim, portraying Nelson Mandela (and earning a Golden Globe nomination) in Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom or representing the other side of the law as DCI John Luther in another acclaimed series, Luther. He’s also the only person on this list to also have their name appear on a Coachella line-up poster. He really can do it all – and he would have made a great James Bond if they’d gotten around to casting him earlier. 


Years active: 1990s to now

Key films: Mandela: Long Walk to FreedomPacific Rim, Beasts of No Nation

Advertising

41. Oliver Reed

It’s sad that Oliver Reed is now best remembered as a hopeless alcoholic gruesomely appearing on TV chat shows. In his day, Reed was nothing less than a powerhouse, his performances in the likes of Women in Love and The Devils bringing a new, raw intensity to British acting.

Years active: 1950s to 1990s

Key films: Oliver!, Gladiator, Women in Love, The Devils

42. Naomie Harris

So much more than just the new Miss Moneypenny, Naomie Harris’s three-decade career has seen her battling zombies in ‘28 Days Later’, steering speedboats in ‘Miami Vice’ and putting in a thunderous turn as crusading wife Winnie in 2013’s revolutionary biopic ‘Mandela’.


Years active: 1980s to now

Key films: ‘Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom’, ‘28 Days Later’,

Advertising

43. Thandiwe Newton

With a wildly diverse CV ranging from TV roles (ER, Rogue) to Hollywood mega-blockbusters (Mission: Impossible 2, 2012) to hefty, serious dramas (Crash, Half of a Yellow Sun), London-born Thandiwe Newton has talent to burn.

Years active: 1990s to now

Key films: Mission: Impossible 2, Flirting, Half of a Yellow Sun

44. Liam Neeson

What a long, strange trip it’s been for the Oscar-nominated Belfast native. Initially establishing himself as a serious-minded stage actor with an Arthurian presence – one of his first major screen roles was as Gawain in John Boorman’s Excalibur – over the last decade he’s effectively become the British Bruce Willis, appearing in a seemingly unending stream of shoot-’em-up action flicks where he plays a stoical dad with a certain set of skills who takes justice into his own hands. And y’know what? He’s damn good at that too.  

Years active: 1970s to now

Key films: Batman Begins, Schindler’s List, Michael Collins, Taken

Advertising

45. Malcolm McDowell

The sneering face of youthful rebellion in anti-establishment classics like If... and A Clockwork Orange, Malcolm McDowell settled too easily into villain-for-hire roles – though appearances in TV’s Our Friends in the North and superior British crime flick Gangster No 1 proved he was still a dominating screen presence.

Years active: 1960s to now

Key films: A Clockwork Orange, If...Gangster No 1

46. Anya Taylor-Joy

Born in Miami but raised in London, Anya Taylor-Joy made a striking big screen debut as a puritan girl seduced by the dark side in Robert Eggers’s clammy historical horror The Witch. Fulfilling that early promise with roles in Last Night in Soho, Emma; and Furiosa, she’s still perhaps best known for her phenomenal performance as the chess prodigy in Netflix miniseries The Queen’s Gambit

Years active: 2015–now

Key films: The Witch, Last Night in Soho, Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga

Advertising

47. Tom Hiddleston

It’s hard to remember a speedier rise to fame than Tom Hiddleston’s: from his microbudget British debut Unrelated to the lead villain in Marvel blockbuster Thor in just four years. It’s been a fast track onto the Hollywood A-list that happily hasn’t taken him too far from the West End stage or passion projects like Ben Wheatley’s stiletto-sharp High-Rise. It doesn’t hurt that he’s a damn fine actor, and a thoroughly nice chap to boot.

Years active: 2000s to now

Key films: Only Lovers Left Alive, Avengers Assemble, Archipelago, High Rise, Loki

48. Angela Lansbury

Anyone who thinks of Angela Lansbury as just the fusty old biddy of TV’s Murder She Wrote should check out her scheming, petrifying turn as the treacherous matriarch in cold-war thriller The Manchurian Candidate – proof of her remarkable range.

Years active: 1940s to now

Key films: Bedknobs and Broomsticks, National Velvet, The Manchurian Candidate, Nanny McPhee

Advertising

49. Jude Law

Dismissed as a pretty boy early in his career, Jude Law has time and again proven his acting chops, whether it’s as the frosty American aristocrat in The Talented Mr Ripley, the gruff Glaswegian submarine captain in Black Sea or just having a ball as Dr Watson in Guy Ritchie’s Sherlock Holmes flicks.

Years active: 1990s to now

Key films: Sherlock HolmesThe Talented Mr Ripley, Cold Mountain

50. David Niven

One of the most dashing British actors of the post-war period, David Niven’s pencil moustache and debonair dress sense have become legendary. But he always had a nod and a wink for the audience too, especially in self-parodying roles like the jewel thief in The Pink Panther.

Years active: 1930s to 1980s

Key films: The Guns of NavaroneBonjour Tristesse, The Pink Panther

Recommended
    More on Time In
      You may also like
      You may also like
      Advertising