Bruce Payne


Bruce Martyn Payne is an English actor, producer, screenwriter, film director and theatre director. Payne is best known for portraying villains, such as Charles Rane in Passenger 57, Jacob Kell in ', and Damodar in Dungeons & Dragons and '.
Payne trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London and was identified, in the late 1980s, with the "Brit Pack" of rising young British actors.

Early life

Payne developed an interest for acting at an early age. In an interview with Impact magazine in 2001, Payne claimed that a crocodile from the play Peter Pan shouted that it would eat his brother and then proceeded to run up stage.
At the age of 14, he was diagnosed with a slight form of spina bifida, which by age 16 required surgery to rectify. Payne was hospitalised for 6 months following the operation.
Payne continued school studies, despite a contact with a talent scout during that time. After his graduation, he enrolled in the National Youth Theatre for two seasons. Payne has described this experience as "Four hundred kids thrown together to work on 7 plays." In addition, he was occupied with the Edinburgh Festival Fringe for one season. He then auditioned for several fringe acting companies, but was told he was too young and lacked experience. However, in 1979, he was admitted to the "prestigious" RADA acting programme. Before being accepted at RADA, Payne worked as a joiner, a salesman, and a landscape gardener. Payne graduated from RADA in 1981 with seven major prizes for acting, comedy and physical presence.
Payne was part of a 'new wave' of actors to emerge from the academy. Others included Jonathan Pryce, Juliet Stevenson, Alan Rickman, Anton Lesser, Kenneth Branagh, and Fiona Shaw. In 1980 the Principal of RADA, Hugh Cruttwell, selected a scene from an adaptation of William Shakespeare's Macbeth, which Payne co-wrote with Paul McGann, to be performed in front of Queen Elizabeth II, in one of her rare visits to the academy. Payne directed the scene in which he and McGann acted. Payne played Macbeth and wielded a baseball bat on stage instead of a sword. Kenneth Branagh performed a soliloquy from Hamlet at the same event.

Acting career

1980s

Payne's first television role was in the Tales Out of School series. Payne played a PE teacher who 'comes across as more head bully than responsible adult during his classes'. His first major film role came in Privates on Parade in which he played the singing and dancing Flight Sergeant Kevin Cartwright.
In 1983, he appeared in Michael Mann's horror film The Keep as an unnamed border guard. That same year, Steven Berkoff cast him in his production of West at the Donmar Warehouse. Payne played Les, a member of an East End London gang intent on gaining revenge against the rival Hoxton Mob for the slaying of one of their number. Richard Corliss of TIME stated that Payne bestowed "a frighteningly dynamic performance" in the play.
In 1985, Payne was cast as a "committed", "butch snooker manager" known as "The One" in director Alan Clarke's snooker musical Billy the Kid and the Green Baize Vampire. Michael Brooke stated that Payne gave the "stand-out performance" in the film. and MS London stated that Payne 'is a charismatic presence, with a capable voice, who is perfectly cast as The One'.
In 1986, both Payne and Berkoff appeared in Julien Temple's musical Absolute Beginners. Payne played a psychotic "pompous and pathetic racist" named Flikker, who participated in the 1958 Notting Hill race riots. One reviewer argued that Payne was "the only actor to walk off Absolute Beginners with his reputation not only intact but enhanced" and that his portrayal of Flikker "was a headbutt of reality in a fantasmagoria of overkill." One critic stated that Payne gave a "meaty, saving-grace performance" in the film. The film journalist and editor, Ann Lloyd, selected Payne as the most promising newcomer of 1987 for his role in the film. In the same year Payne appeared in the film Solarbabies, along with fellow British performer Alexei Sayle, as filthy bounty hunters named Dogger and Malice. Payne said of his and Sayle's performances in Vogue that "the old image of an English arch-villain – Boris Karloff, that sort of thing" is turned "upside down. We're just a couple of soaks".
In 1988, Payne appeared as Eddy in the Steven Berkoff-directed play, Greek, at the Wyndham's Theatre. Martin Hoyle, writing for The Independent, stated that Payne's "Eddy is vital, intelligent and physically disciplined in the best Berkoff style". Charles Osbourne, writing for The Daily Telegraph, stated that Payne brought "a cheerful zest to the role of Eddy".
A reviewer for The Listener stated that Payne "impresses throughout" the play. Another reviewer stated that "Payne gives a powerful performance as Eddy, the crusader out to defeat the horror of society" only "to find that he is part of the horror".
In 1989, he was cast in For Queen and Country as a 'drug kingpin' named Colin.
Payne and other young British actors who were becoming established film actors, such as Tim Roth, Gary Oldman, Colin Firth, and Paul McGann, were dubbed the 'Brit Pack'. Payne's performances endeared him to Warner Bros., who considered "Bruce Payne as Bruce Wayne" on their "one liner" press marketing PR campaign for the first of Tim Burton's Batman films. Ultimately, Michael Keaton got the role. Payne has commented, "Warner were fascinated by the similarity" between his name and that of Bruce Wayne. Payne has said that "they drew up a very short shortlist and there I was on it. Obviously, I lost out in the end to Michael Keaton".
In the same year Payne appeared as Doctor Burton in the dramatic film Zwei Frauen The film was nominated for Outstanding Feature Film at the German Film Awards.

1990s

In 1990 Payne appeared in the music video for Neil Young's song Over and Over, directed by Julien Temple, as a Stanley Kowalski esque character.
In 1991, Payne was cast as the Devil in Switch. Payne was described as a "delightfully wicked Satan" by Film Review. The Providence Journal described him as a "slick devil".
In 1992, Payne was cast in his best-known role, opposite Wesley Snipes, as a "notorious terrorist and hijacker", with a steely, demonic nerve, named Charles Rane, in Passenger 57. Marcus Trower of Empire stated that Payne was "a brilliantly disconcerting madman. With his flowing blond Jesus locks, armour-piercing stare and casual sadism, he makes Hannibal Lecter look like a social worker – and like Anthony Hopkins' serial killer, part of the man's menace is in the apparent contradiction between his articulate, well-spoken English and his off-hand brutality." The Radio Times stated that Payne and Snipes both gave "charismatic turns" in the film. The New York Times stated that Payne brought a 'tongue-in-cheek humor to the psychopathic fiend'. A reviewer for People magazine stated that "Bruce Payne steals the plane—and the movie". In an article for the Waterloo Region Record, Jamie Portman described Payne as a "suave and cultivated English actor" playing "a suave and cultivated killer named Charles Rane" and suggested that a "key reason director Kevin Hooks chose him for the role was that he wanted a villain with as much magnetism as the hero". Payne was described as "icily perfect as the villainous Rane" in the Worcester Telegram & Gazette. Julius Marshall stated that Payne was "ideal for his role: charming, dangerous – the kind of evil genius you love to hate". The Star Tribune stated that 'Bruce Payne makes a splendid psychopath, consistently stealing scenes from the likes of Wesley Snipes and Elizabeth Hurley throughout Passenger 57'.
In 1993, Payne played a "charismatic" werewolf named Adam Garou in Full Eclipse. Joseph Savitski, who reviewed the film for Beyond Hollywood, stated, "Payne is masterful as Detective Garou, a seductive and evil villain with arrogance and confidence to spare. When he's on screen, Payne demands the attention of the audience, and you're hard pressed to resist his performance. Payne is also the perfect adversary, the kind you're supposed to hate, but who has the charisma to draw you in nonetheless".
In 1995, Payne played a "rogue FBI agent" named Karl Savak in director Kurt Wimmer's One Tough Bastard. One reviewer described Savak as one of the most 'entertaining movie villains in low budget action flick history' and noted that 'so awesome is Karl Savak that some lunatic has created a Facebook page in his honor'. Another reviewer stated that 'Bruce Payne, with his Whitesnake hair and nose ring is slimeball perfection as the villain'.
In 1998, he played Jurgen, a first-class and charismatic operative in season two of La Femme Nikita.

2000s

In 2000, Payne portrayed the villain Jacob Kell in ', the third sequel to the original Highlander film. One reviewer said of Highlander: Endgame, "the one in the cast that seems to be having the most fun is Bruce Payne. Traditionally, Highlander villains give performances that go completely over-the-top and well into the stratosphere. Payne contrarily gives a performance where he enunciates every syllable with relish and dramatic weight, resulting in a performance that is entirely captivating whenever he is on screen."
Salon.com's reviewer wrote that " playing Kell as a cockney thug with triple crucifixes embedded in the heels of his Doc Martens, Payne is more fun than either of the stars". A reviewer for Trash City stated that "Endgame is pretty good, largely thanks to Bruce Payne's efforts as the bad guy, who is right up there with Clancy Brown's original decapitator", the Kurgan. Marke Andrews, writing for The Vancouver Sun, stated that Payne provided the "focal point" in the film and that he dived "into his role with gusto". Andrews also stated that Payne's 'facial expressions rival Jim Carrey's in The Mask
. Cherriece Wright, who reviewed the film for The Dispatch, stated that it contained "brilliant performances by Christopher Lambert and Bruce Payne". Wright stated that Payne "delivers a great performance as Jacob Kell blending smoothly the malicious vindictiveness of the embittered immortal with a sarcastic wit that provides needed humor".
In the same year, Payne played Damodar in
Dungeons & Dragons, henchman of the malevolent Profion. Although the film was critically panned, Payne's performance was reviewed favourably. One reviewer said that "Bruce Payne as Profion's nefarious assistant in his power-hungry schemes was the stand-out performance of all the actors in the film. Payne has a true lock on how to play a character that is menacing even without any show of power. His portrayal of Damodar calls to mind Doug Bradley's portrayal of Pinhead in the Hellraiser films, so coldly, coolly arrogant and confident is his character. Above and beyond the grade I give to this film, Payne has earned himself an A+ in my gradebook." Another reviewer stated that Payne's performance proved that he is "one of Hollywood's more reliable villains".
Branden Chowen, who reviewed the film for
Indie Pulse, stated that "the standout in the film is the man who returns for the sequel: Bruce Payne. His character is written to be one-note throughout, but Payne still manages to create an excellent villain. Once the audience gets past his blue lipstick, which is no small feat, Payne is a formidable and passionate force". The Charlotte Observer stated that "menacing Bruce Payne gives the film's one potent performance". Abbie Bernstein for Audio Video Revolution declared that Payne was "enjoyably evil as the secondary baddie in charge of capturing the rebels"
In 2004, Payne appeared as the "snarling" Neighbour, who "dabbles" in producing kinky virtual games in the dystopian horror mystery
Paranoia 1.0. The film was nominated in the best film category at the Sitges - Catalan International Film Festival and at the Sundance Film Festival, and won the best film award at the Malaga International Week of Fantastic Cinema. John Fallon stated that as the Neighbour, Payne "laid on the charisma and the macho-ness thick".
In 2005, Payne returned to the role of Damodar in
. Payne was the only member of the original cast in the sequel.
In 2006, he helped to launch the National Youth Theatre's 50th-anniversary programme along with Sir Ian McKellen, Timothy Spall, Diana Quick, Paula Wilcox, Jonathan Wrather, newsreader Krishnan Guru-Murthy, and
Little Britain'''s Matt Lucas and David Walliams.

2010s

In 2011, Payne appeared in the horror film Prowl as a "blatantly untrustworthy" "hillbilly truck driver" named Bernard in the film. Matt Withers, who reviewed the film for JoBlo.com, stated that "Bruce Payne shows up as a trucker in a throwaway role that he makes anything but". Payne also appeared in Carmen's Kiss.
In 2012, Payne voiced a demon in the found-footage horror film Greystone Park.
In 2013, Payne appeared in the Warner Bros. action film Getaway. Payne also appeared in the action film Vendetta as a sinister Whitehall Mandarin named Mr. Rooker. One reviewer of the film gave it eight out of ten and stated that Payne 'nearly steals the movie with a plum role as the icy head of British black ops'. In addition, Payne portrayed Auschwitz camp Commandant Rudolf Hoess, in a 'superciliously evil' manner, in the French film Victor Young Perez, which concerns the life of the Tunisian Jew flyweight boxer Victor Perez.
In 2015, Payne played Winston, a religious fanatic, in the horror film Re-Kill.
In 2018 Payne appeared in the Anthology film London Unplugged, which premiered at the East End Film Festival.

2020s

Payne played the main antagonist in , which is due to be released in 2020. Payne has also been cast as Frank Warren in Michael-The Michael Watson Story, a biopic of boxer Michael Watson.

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleDirectorNotes
1982Privates on ParadeFlight Sergeant Kevin CartwrightMichael BlakemoreBased on the Peter Nichols play Privates on Parade
1983The KeepBorder Guard #2Michael MannBased on F. Paul Wilson's 1981 novel The Keep
1984Oxford BluesPeter HowlesRobert BorisA remake of the 1938 film A Yank at Oxford
1985Billy the Kid and the Green Baize VampireT.O. Alan ClarkeLoosely based on the rivalry between the snooker players Ray Reardon and Jimmy White
1986Absolute BeginnersFlikkerJulien TempleBased on Colin MacInnes 1959 novel Absolute Beginners
1986Smart MoneyLawrance MacNieceBernard Rose
1986SolarbabiesDoggerAlan Johnson
1986CapriceJackJoanna HoggShort Film
1988The Fruit Machine or WonderlandEchoPhilip SavilleSpeaks not a word of dialogue as the film's primary nemesis
1989For Queen and CountryColinMartin Stellman
1989Zwei Frauen or Silence Like GlassDoctor BurtonCarl Schenkel
1991PyratesLiamNoah Stern
1991'R.B HarkerHope PerelloLoosely based on The Howling novels by Gary Brandner
1991SwitchThe DevilBlake EdwardsBased on George Axelrod's play Goodbye Charlie
1992Passenger 57Charles RaneKevin Hooks
1993Full EclipseAdam GarouAnthony Hickox
1994The Cisco KidGeneral Martin DupreLuis ValdezBased on the character created by O. Henry in his 1907 short story The Caballero's Way
1994NecronomiconEdward De LapoerChristophe GansPart 1 The Drowned. Loosely based on H. P. Lovecraft's short story The Rats in the Walls
1995One Tough Bastard or One Man's JusticeKarl SavakKurt Wimmer
1995'Gordon PruettPaul Levine
1996KounterfeitFrankieJohn Mallory Asher
1997No Contest II or Face the EvilJack TerryPaul Lynch
1997RavagerCooper WayneJames D. Deck
1999SweepersDoctor Cecil HopperKeoni Waxman
1999'The Warlock / Phillip CovingtonEric Freiser
2000'Jacob KellDoug AarniokoskiBased on characters created by Gregory Widen
2000Dungeons & DragonsDamodarCourtney SolomonBased on the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game
2001'Mr. BlueFrederick Feitshans IVA spoof of the James Bond films
2001RipperMarshall KaneJohn Eyres
2002Steal or RidersLieutenant MacgruderGerard Pires
2003Newton's LawDadPete AnticoShort Film
2003Hellborn or Asylum of the DamnedDr. McCortPhilip J. Jones
2004Paranoia 1.0 or One Point OThe NeighbourJeff Renfroe and Marteinn Thorsson
2005'DamodarGerry LivelyBased on the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game
2007MessagesDoctor Robert GoldingDavid Fairman
2008BrothelThief/DeathAmy Waddell
2010Dance StarHarrySteven M. SmithShort film
2011ProwlBernardPatrik Syversen
2011Carmen's KissMichaelDavid FairmanAn adaptation of the Georges Bizet opera Carmen
2012Greystone Park or The Asylum TapesDemonSean StoneVoice role
2013GetawayDistinguished ManCourtney Solomon
2013VendettaMr RookerStephen Reynolds
2013Victor Young PerezRudolf HoessJacques OuanicheBased on the life of Victor Perez
2014Tales of the SupernaturalFather DoyleSteven M. Smith
2014Final CommandKaneRoss PeacockShort film
2014AsylumLieutenant SharpTodor Chapkanov
2015Age of KillPrime Minister James NewmontNeil Jones
2015Re-KillWinstonValeri Milev
2015The Antwerp DollsRay FerrinoJake Reid
2015RipperJack the RipperJames CampbellShort film
2016BreakdownPeter GraingerJonnie Malachi
2016ShoppingNickLayke AndersonShort film
2016In the MorningJamesTom KinnerslyShort film
2017The RizenAdminMatt Mitchell
2018London UnpluggedNickLayke AndersonAnthology film
2019Acid Pit StopJacobJason Wright
2020'Lord KalPiergiuseppe Zaia
2020Election NightDominic DrummondNeil MonaghanPost Production
2020Rendel 2: Cycle of RevengeEdward CoxJesse HaajaFilming
2020Give Them WingsDr MarkumSean CroninPreproduction
2020Dark RoomDr LeonardVincenzo FranceschiniPreproduction
2020Cold in the NorthMartinNeil JonesPreproduction
2020Codename: AdaptBruce Payne and Ranjeet S. MarwaPreproduction
2020Romeo + JulietLord CapuletRanjeet S. MarwaBased on the play Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare, Preproduction
2020Stop and Smell the RosesHankBrian SkeetPreproduction
2020DisorientatedMateoBrian SkeetPreproduction
2020Natas CorpFredrik HillerPreproduction
2020Michael-The Michael Watson StoryFrank WarrenSean CroninPreproduction
2020BharalSterlingJake ReidPreproduction
2020Made OrdinaryDr AnderssonChristian KoteyPreproduction
2020Creators: The PresentLord KalPiergiuseppe ZaiaPreproduction
2020Razor BastardAdrien BlackstoneRanjeet S. MarwaPreproduction
2020ReflectionsWillChris DavidShort Film. Pre Production

YearTitleDirectorNotes
1997LowballDemian Lichtenstein
2018The Boy Who Never Came Home: A True StoryRanjeet S. MarwaDocumentary
2019'Piergiuseppe Zaia
2019Creators: The PresentPiergiuseppe Zaia
2020Codename: AdaptBruce Payne and Ranjeet S. Marwa
2020Stop and Smell the RosesBrian Skeet
2020DisorientatedBrian Skeet

YearTitleDirectorNotes
2020'Piergiuseppe ZaiaAssistant Director
2021Creators: The PresentPiergiuseppe ZaiaAssistant Director
2021Codename: AdaptRanjeet S. MarwaCollaborating Director

YearTitleDirectorNotes
2018The Boy Who Never Came Home: A True StoryRanjeet S. MarwaExecutive Story Editor
2020'Piergiuseppe ZaiaStory Supervisor
2020Dark RoomVincenzo FranceschiniCo-Writer
2020A Little Boy's DiaryRanjeet S. MarwaContributing Writer
2021Codename: AdaptBruce Payne and Ranjeet S. MarwaCo-writer

TV appearances

YearTitleRoleNotes
1982Tales Out of SchoolBarrattEpisode: "Birth of a Nation"
1983Keep it in the FamilyPolicemanEpisode: "A Moving Affair"
1984WestLesTV movie adaptation of Steven Berkoff's play
1984The BillAdam MarchEpisode: "Clutching at Straws"
1984DianaSergeant GriceEpisode 7
1984The BriefSergeant Davis RMPEpisode: "People"
1985Operation JulieDC Malcolm PollardTV movie based on Dick Lee and Chris Pratt's nonfiction book Operation Julie: How the Undercover Police Team Smashed the World's Greatest Drugs Ring
1985OscarWarder MartinEpisode: "De Profundis"
1987Lost BelongingsSimon HuntEpisodes: "The American Friend" and "Lenny Leaps In"
1987The Bell-RunPaceTV movie
1987Miss MarpleMichael RafielEpisode: "Nemesis", an adaptation of Agatha Christie's 1971 novel Nemesis
1988The EqualizerGreg RiversEpisode: "Eighteen with a Bullet"
1989StoryboardGeraldEpisode: "Snakes and Ladders"
1990Yellowthread StreetNick EdenSeven episodes, series based on the Yellowthread Street novels by William Leonard Marshall
1990BergeracJakeEpisode: "The Messenger Boy"
1995Tales from the CryptSergeantEpisode: "Comes the Dawn"
1998La Femme NikitaJurgenEpisodes: "Approaching Zero", "Third Person", and "Spec Ops"
1999CleopatraCassiusTV movie adaptation of Margaret George's 1997 historical fiction novel The Memoirs of Cleopatra
2000BritannicMajor Baker, MDTV movie
2000Apocalypse Revelation DomitianTV movie
2003DragnetAlex KarpEpisode: "All That Glitters"
2003Keen EddieYellowEpisode: "Horse Heir"
2003Spooks or MI-5Mickey KahariasEpisode : "Smoke and Mirrors"
2004CharmedLeader of the OrderEpisode: "Prince Charmed"
2017Count Arthur StrongMr DuncanSeries 3 Episode: Arthur the Hat

Theatre

YearTitleRoleNotes
1978Julius CaesarJulius CaesarDirected by Michael Croft ; play by William Shakespeare
1979The Tale of Randy RobinPerformerDirected by John Godber ; play by Michael Lawrence
1980The Pillars of SocietyKarsten BernickDirected by Glyn Idris Jones ; play by Henrik Ibsen
1980The Recruiting OfficerCaptain PlumeDirected by Euan Smith ; play by George Farquhar
1980'Tis Pity She's a WhoreVasquesDirected by Adrian Noble ; play by John Ford
1980MacbethMacbethDirected by Bruce Payne ; play by William Shakespeare
1981No Names, No MedalsSAS SoldierDirected by Euan Smith ; play by Euan Smith
1981A Midsummer Night's DreamCobwebDirected by Richard Digby Day ; play by William Shakespeare
1982PIAFYves MontandDirected by Jeremy Howe ; play by Pam Gems
1982Privates on ParadeFlight sergeant Kevin CartwrightDirected by Michael Blakemore ; play by Peter Nichols
1983The Rocky Horror Picture ShowFrank-N-FurterDirected by Christopher Dunham ; play by Richard O'Brien
1983WestLesDirected by Steven Berkoff ; play by Steven Berkoff
1984AliceThe InventorDirected by Nicholas Hytner ; a musical version of Lewis Carroll's 1865 novel Alice in Wonderland
1988GreekEddy and Fortune-TellerDirected by Steven Berkoff ; play by Steven Berkoff

YearTitleNotes
1980MacbethPlay by William Shakespeare
1993GreekMark Taper Forum, Los Angeles; play by Steven Berkoff

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