Julius D’Silva

Represented By

Sam Day

Julius currently plays Diebner in the UK Tour of new play Farm Hall, following successful initial runs at Theatre Royal Bath and Jermyn Street Theatre.

On screen he next features in the third season of Bridgerton.

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Julius currently plays Diebner in the UK Tour of new play Farm Hall, following successful initial runs at Theatre Royal Bath and Jermyn Street Theatre.

On screen he next features in the third season of Bridgerton.

His recent theatre credits include & Juliet (Shaftesbury Theatre & Regent Theatre, Melbourne); What’s New Pussycat? (Birmingham Rep); The Producers (Manchester Royal Exchange); The Cherry Orchard (Bristol Old Vic/Manchester Royal Exchange); Strictly Ballroom (West Yorkshire Playhouse & Toronto); Made in Dagenham (Adelphi Theatre); Eternal Love, Anne Boleyn (Shakespeare’s Globe/ ETT/UK Tour); Macbeth (Shakespeare’s Globe); Oliver! (Theatre Royal Drury Lane); Aristo (Chichester Festival Theatre).

As part of the Royal Shakespeare Company’s Histories Ensemble 2006 – 2008 directed by Michael Boyd (Laurence Olivier Award for Best Company Performance, Best Revival and Best Design 2009) – Henry IV Parts 1 & 2 , Henry V, Henry VI Parts 1-3 , Richard III. Also for the RSC, Great Expectations (RSC/Cheek By Jowl), Dog In The Manger, Tamar’s Revenge, House of Desires and Pedro The Great Pretender.

Other theatre work includes The Wax King (LSW); As You Like It (BAC); The Importance of Being Earnest (Insomniac Limited); Tess Of The D’Urbevilles (Greenwich Studio); The Tempest (Edinburgh Festival); Measure For Measure (Rome); Noises Off (Gallery Productions); Vergil and Caesar (Oxford Playhouse); Bouncers (Burton Taylor Theatre); and Richard II at the Ludow Festival directed by Steven Berkoff.

Film credits include Notes On A Scandal, Full Circle and Endgame.

Television includes The Crown (Season 1 & 2); The Ten Commandments, How We Used To Live: Spanish Armada & Highlander.

For BBC Radio 4: Jude The Obscure, Wordsworth and Coleridge:The Lyrical Ballads, The Flea by John Donne, The Horse by Rana Dasgupta, and Van Gogh: The Letters.

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