James Fleet Biography
James Fleet is an English actor who works in theatre, radio, and film. He is most known for his appearances as clumsy and well-meaning Tom in the 1994 British romantic comedy film Four Weddings and a Funeral, and as the dimwitted but kind-hearted Hugo Horton in the BBC sitcom television series The Vicar of Dibley.
How old is James Fleet? – Age
He is 71 years old as of March 11, 2023. He was born in 1952 in Bilston, United Kingdom. His real name is James Edward Fleet.
James Fleet Family – Education
Fleet was born to a Scottish mother, Christine, and an English father Jim. He lived at Bilston until the age of ten, when his father died, and then went to Aberdeenshire with his mother. He attended Aberdeen University to study engineering and became a member of the university dramatic society. Later, he attended the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama in Glasgow.
James Fleet Wife – Son
Fleet resides in Sibford Gower, Oxfordshire, with his wife, actress Jane Booker, and their son, Hamish Fleet.
James Fleet Net Worth
He has an estimated net worth of $17 million.
James Fleet BBC Radio 4
From 2000 to 2006, Fleet played the painfully upright and decent Captain Brimshaw in Revolting People, a BBC Radio 4 comedy set in pre-revolutionary America. He also appeared in the radio legal sitcom Chambers, which eventually aired on television. As of 2005, he played Duncan Stonebridge MP in the topical radio satire The Party Line. He also portrayed the Captain in the BBC Radio 7 serial The Spaceship. He also plays Sir John Woodstock in the BBC Radio 4 sitcom The Castle, as well as Inspector Lestrade in the first, third, and fourth seasons of The Rivals. Fleet performed John Aubrey in Nick Warburton’s Aubrey’s Brief Lives for BBC Radio 4 Woman’s Hour in 2008.
James Fleet Career
In 1999-2001 he was the voice of “Canine” in the youngsters’ Television program Canine and Duck. Presumably his most well known job is that of Hugo in The Vicar of Dibley; he showed up in every one of the 20 episodes, broadcast somewhere in the range of 1994 and 2007. In 2004 he showed up in an episode of Ruler of the Glen. In 2005 he assumed a main part in an episode of the long-running ITV murder secret series Midsomer Murders. In 2007 he was a visitor star in one episode of the sitcom Genuine. He showed up as Frederick Dorrit in the BBC’s 2008 creation of Little Dorrit.
At the point when Armada showed up on the test show School’s Out, it was uncovered that one of his educators at Banff Foundation had written in his school report that “[James] is the most ridiculous kid I have at any point needed to instruct, out of all the moronic young men I have at any point needed to instruct,” and that he was the main understudy in his 6th structure not to have been made a consul. Regardless of his clear absence of academic capacity, he actually won the show. In 2009, Armada showed up in an appearance job in the third series of Skins.
Prior in his profession, Armada was found in a 1983 episode of Grange Slope as an educator at the eponymous school’s upmarket opponent Rodney Bennett. In 1992 he played Paul Morgan in an episode of The Bill ‘Runaway’. In 1999 he featured in the sitcom Kindly Love.
Armada showed up in Crowning ritual Road in 2010. He played a person called Robbie Sloan, an as of late delivered convict, assisting got away from detainee Tony Gordon with plotting vengeance on his ex Carla Connor. They mean to seize and kill her. Sloan baits Connor into her Hidden world production line, and holds her at gunpoint. Leaving her attached to a seat with her mouth taped shut, Sloan likewise baits Hayley Cropper into the prisoner circumstance. Sloan was ultimately shot by Gordon during an attack at the plant. In February 2011, Armada showed up as George (senior), the dad of werewolf George Sands, in Being Human.
In December 2013 the BBC circulated one of their significant shows for the Christmas season, Demise Comes to Pemberley, a three-section English TV show in light of characters made by Jane Austen in her original Pride and Bias. The principal episode was communicated on BBC One at 8.15 pm on Boxing Day 2013. It depended on the smash hit novel by P. D. James, in which the characters of Pride and Bias are engaged with another story including a homicide. Armada filled the role of Mr Bennett in the series. In September 2014, Armada showed up in the BBC Three sitcom Terrible Schooling as Richard, an ex of Rosie Gulliver.
He has most as of late showed up in an episode of ITVs second series of Plebs, as Stylax’s hustling supporter. In 2013, Armada was locked in to play Scottish student of history, the Reverend Dr. Reginald Wakefield, in seasons 1 and 2 of the Honor winning Starz transformation of Diana Gabaldon’s Foreigner, broadcast in 2014-2016. An April 2021 declaration expressed that Armada would join the cast of the second time of All Animals Extraordinary and Little in the job of Colonel Merrick.
Armada has featured in various movies. He assumed the part of Kevin’s dad in the 2000 religion film Kevin and Perry Go Huge. He assumed the parts of Lefevre in the 2004 film transformation of Ghost of the Show, John Dashwood in 1995’s Instinct and reason, and Lytton Strachey in the 2003 film Al Sur de Granada (South from Granada). In 2014, he played John Constable in the Mike Leigh film Mr Turner. In 2016, he played Sir Reginald DeCourcy in Whit Stillman’s Adoration and Kinship.
James Fleet Movies
♦ 2022 – Operation Mincemeat
♦ 2022 – The Lost King
♦ 2020 – Blithe Spirit
♦ 2019 – One Red Nose And A Wedding
♦ 2019 – Born a King
♦ 2018 – The Spy Who Dumped Me
♦ 2018 – Death on the Tyne
♦ 2017 – Love of My Life
♦ 2016 – Billionaire Boy
♦ 2016 – Love & Friendship
♦ 2016 – Revolution: New Art For A New World
♦ 2014 – Mr. Turner
♦ 2013 – Murder on the Home Front
♦ 2011 – The Decoy Bride
♦ 2009 – Micro Men
♦ 2007 – Lady Godiva: Back in the Saddle
♦ 2005 – The Phantom of the Opera
♦ 2005 – Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story
James Fleet TV Shows
♦ 2005, 2017 – Midsomer Murders
♦ 2023 – Tom Jones
♦ 2023 – Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story
♦ 2023 – Beyond Paradise
♦ 2020 – The Watch
♦ 2020 – The Pale Horse
♦ 2020 – Belgravia
♦ 2020-present – Bridgerton
♦ 2019 – Thanks for the Memories
♦ 2018 – Unforgotten
♦ 2018 – Patrick Melrose
♦ 2017 – Tracey Ullman’s Show
♦ 2017 – Urban Myths
♦ 2017 – Hospital People
♦ 2016 – Indian Summers
♦ 2016 – Houdini and Doyle
♦ 2016 – The Hollow Crown