Peter Capaldi

Peter Capaldi net worth is $10 Million. Also know about Peter Capaldi bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship and more …

Peter Capaldi Wiki Biography

Peter Dougan Capaldi (born 14 April 1958) is a Scottish actor, film director and writer. He has played numerous roles in film and television, and is best known for being the twelfth and current actor to play the lead role in the long-running BBC One science-fiction series Doctor Who, and for the role of Malcolm Tucker, a spin doctor in the BBC comedy series The Thick of It and its film spinoff In the Loop. In 1994, he won the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film for his short film Franz Kafka’s It’s a Wonderful Life. IMDB Wikipedia $10 million 1958 1958-4-14 6′ (1.83 m) Actor April 14 Aries Dangerous Liaisons (1988) Director Elaine Collins Glasgow In the Loop (2009) Peter Capaldi Peter Capaldi Net Worth Scotland The Fifth Estate (2013) UK World War Z (2013) Writer

Peter Capaldi Quick Info

Full Name Peter Capaldi
Net Worth $10 Million
Date Of Birth April 14, 1958
Place Of Birth Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Height 6′ (1.83 m)
Profession Actor, Director, Writer
Education Glasgow School of Art
Spouse Elaine Collins
Children Cecily Capaldi
Parents Gerald John Capaldi, Nancy Capaldi
IMDB http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0134922
Awards Academy Award for Best Short Film (Live Action), British Academy Television Award for Best Male Performance in a Comedy Programme, BAFTA Award for Best Short Film, Chlotrudis Award for Best Cast, Chlotrudis Award for Best Supporting Actor, British Comedy Award for the Best TV Comedy Actor
Nominations British Academy Television Award for Best Supporting Actor, British Academy Television Award for Best Comedy Performance, British Academy Television Award for Comedy and Comedy Entertainment Programme, British Independent Film Award for Best Actor, New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Support…
Movies In the Loop, World War Z, Local Hero, The Fifth Estate, Dangerous Liaisons, The Lair of the White Worm, Paddington, Franz Kafka’s It’s a Wonderful Life, Maleficent, Strictly Sinatra, The Greatest Store in the World, Turtle Diary, House of 9, Modigliani, Shooting Fish, The Suspicions of Mr Whicher, B…
TV Shows Doctor Who, The Thick of It, The Musketeers, The Hour, Neverwhere, Fortysomething, Chandler & Co, Accused, The Devil’s Whore, Midnight Man, The Nativity, The Crow Road, Trawlermen, Aftersun

Peter Capaldi Trademarks

  1. Pointing with index finger
  2. Expressive hands
  3. Prominent angry eyebrows which he has called “attack eyebrows”
  4. Intense angry stare
  5. Thin frame
  6. Gravelly voice with a faint Scottish accent

Peter Capaldi Quotes

  • [Speaking to a young Doctor Who (2005) fan at 2016 Dallas Comic-Con] You’ve got to be nice to your Mum. You’ve got to be kind to people. You’ve got to work hard, and make the very best of the gifts that you have, of your talents, and take them out into the world. You’re a clever, and bright, and creative person. That’s the most important thing to take forward; to take forward that belief in yourself, and a belief of how valuable it is to bring creativity into the world.
  • [on Doctor Who] It has to slip between the epic and the domestic. The great trick of Doctor Who is that he’ll be at the edge of the galaxy watching stars being born, but he’ll drop you off in the mall outside KFC.
  • My adolescence was a kind of motorway pile-up. I wish I had known that one day the geek would inherit the Earth.
  • Patrick Troughton is one of the most extraordinary actors, just his delicacy, his ability to jump from being irate to being kindly and clownish.
  • I love the last episode of Frontier in Space (Doctor Who: Frontier in Space: Episode Six (1973)). Isn’t that one of the great Doctor Who (1963) episodes ever? Because you’ve got everything in that.
  • I could sit and watch Jon Pertwee do anything. I could just sit and watch him read the telephone book. He’s such authority and if you’re in trouble you want those doors to swing open and Jon Pertwee to come storming in with a flap of his cape.
  • [on Doctor Who: The Ark in Space: Part One (1975)] I love The Ark in Space. I think The Ark in Space is great because I love Tom Baker, his hair is just like the most wildest hair ever. I think later on as you watch the rest of his time as Doctor Who (1963) I think he started to get a perm or something, he looks more like Harpo Marx towards the end of his run. But in his first season he’s just got this absolute mess of bohemian hair, what would you call it, a Tom-fro, a Doc-fro? He’s got a big Doc-fro. And also his speech in that about human beings, he just takes grasp of the role of Doctor Who (1963) in that season, in that story, so completely.
  • If you put me in a real TARDIS, I dread to think what would happen to the universe.
  • The Ladykillers (1955), the movie, is one of those rare things that’s an almost perfect movie but it’s just full of all this great stuff that you can’t leave alone. It’s very, very stylish, it has this almost ghoulish quality about it.
  • [on his performance in Local Hero (1983)] I don’t think I had any capacity to act. I think I was just a bit of a… twat.
  • [in 1974] Jon Pertwee’s Doctor of the frock coat and gadgets has gone. But that character was but one of the facets of this eternal time lord, the greatest science fiction character ever created. There is an infinite number of further faces and natures to choose from. Tom Baker must select one and play it to the best of his ability. It is this infinite number of characters that ensures Doctor Who (1963)’s future. For, like time, Doctor Who (1963) will go on forever.
  • Doctor Who (2005), like time, cannot stand still. It must always move and change.
  • Planet of the Spiders (Doctor Who: Planet of the Spiders: Part One (1974)) proved once again the scope and quality of the popular Doctor Who (1963). All involved must be congratulated on producing a classic story leading excellently to the metamorphosis from Jon Pertwee’s Doctor to Tom Baker’s. The storyline was powerful, introducing exciting chase sequences, mysterious ceremonies and chilling monsters. The acting was first-class, particularly Jon Pertwee’s performance when the Doctor faced his greatest fear, the Great One! And of course the visual images of senior visual effects designer, Bernard Wilkie, were wonderful to watch.
  • [on playing an older Doctor] Whereas with Matt and David before me there was this romantic thing going on, we don’t do that. We have something else which I really like. There’s not another relationship you can compare it to. It’s not like uncle and niece. He is not a grandfather figure. But because Jenna’s so wonderful, we’ve found something that’s different, and yet it works.
  • [on Doctor Who (2005)] The things I’ve always adored are still there. That relationship between light and dark, the domestic and the epic. There’s a feeling you could step from a supermarket car park on Earth into the Andromeda Nebula or whatever.
  • The nice thing about Doctor Who is, whatever people say, you know someone somewhere loves you. And they always will. The more everyone else hates you, the more that person will say, “He’s my Doctor”.
  • There’s almost a Grimms’ fairy tales element to the show. The Doctor appears and takes people deep into the forest where there are monsters, but he delivers them back safely at the end. That’s very, very attractive. Plus I love monsters. Everyone does! Any shows with monsters in them work.
  • I grew up in the Sixties with Doctor Who (1963) and The Beatles and Sunday Night at the London Palladium and school milk and bronchitis. All that stuff. It’s part of my DNA. When I had my first proper TARDIS scene there was a nice props guy telling me how to work the console. Secretly I was thinking, “I know how to work the TARDIS! I’ve known for a long time – probably longer than you”.
  • When you’re a child, you just want to be whichever Doctor is on TV, whether that’s William Hartnell, Patrick Troughton, Jon Pertwee or Tom Baker.
  • I’ve been influenced by the entire history of Doctor Who (1963) and by every actor who’s played Doctor Who (1963), and everybody who’s worked on the show and made those episodes. I wouldn’t be here doing this if it hadn’t been for the twelve actors who brilliantly played the part, often in times when it wasn’t as easy to be Doctor Who (1963) or as welcome to be Doctor Who (1963) as it is now. So really I stand on their shoulders.
  • Scottish men of a certain age have a black response to almost everything as a measure of how sophisticated they are. I have a very long fuse that eventually explodes after building up a nice head of steam, although it’s only happened three times – usually at work when someone takes me for granted.
  • STG and the Ramshorn Theatre are a vital part of Glasgow’s rich cultural history. To abandon them now is to abandon not only our past, but our future.
  • The biggest thing I have realised was that you have to choose your collaborators very carefully, and that not everybody can like you. The process of filmmaking is so difficult, there’s no point in doing it unless you can do it the way you want.
  • The difference between movies and TV is that in TV you have to have a trauma every week, but that event may not be the biggest event in the characters’ lives.
  • The only time I’ve tried to make plans, the cosmic sledgehammer has intervened and something else has happened. You just have to wait and see what comes your way, so that’s what I do.
  • What annoys me about it is that your fate is always in somebody else’s hands. It’s always up to somebody else to decide whether or not they want you in their show and so the majority of actors have to play out a waiting game. The constant fear is that it could all end tomorrow.
  • What I’ve learnt being an actor is that you’ve got to be lucky. I got less lucky, and nobody was interested. If a part came up, it would be for the main corpse’s friend’s brother who was having problems with his marriage.
  • When I was acting, I was always asking abut the mechanics of filmmaking. I decided I would learn what everyone on set was doing, so I would feel less threatened.
  • What you’re doing is acting with yourself. Well, I’m my favourite actor, so in a way it’s quite straightforward for me.
  • At 17 years old, STG took me under its wing and shared its resources and wisdom with me, even allowing me to take part in a show at the Edinburgh Festival. Without STG and the Ramshorn Theatre, I would not have found access to the world of drama that I later made my profession.
  • Even though I am a lifelong Doctor Who (1963) fan, I’ve not played him since I was nine. I downloaded old scripts and practised those in front of the mirror.
  • I don’t want to find myself at the age of 60 waiting by the telephone for someone else to decide if I am capable of being in what might be a crummy TV production.
  • I hated improvisation because in my early days as an actor, improvisation meant somebody had just come down from Oxford and they were doing a play above a pub in Kentish Town, and the biggest ego would win.
  • I’ve been really terrible in a lot of things because I learned by making mistakes. That makes you a different kind of actor, because you have to figure out for yourself what you do.
  • My childhood growing up in that part of Glasgow always sounds like some kind of sub-Catherine Cookson novel of earthy working-class immigrant life, which to some extent it was, but it wasn’t really as colourful that.
  • One of the very, very exciting things I have found here in L.A. is that no one talks to you about being Scottish. Whereas, if you are in London and you are trying to put films together and be a film-maker, there is a kind of unspoken sense that, if you are Scottish, you have something to overcome or else you cannot really do that project.
  • Real heroes are all around us and uncelebrated.
  • The Americans just have a great sort of wit about them.
  • I don’t like parties. There was never a party I was at where I didn’t wish I was somewhere else.
  • I haven’t played Doctor Who (1963) since I was 9 on the playground.
  • I love people where, at the end of the day, they’ll pick up a paintbrush and paint clouds. They can physically make things.
  • I never really think of acting and directing as being separate; they are just different expressions of the same thing.
  • I suppose I just like being arty. That’s all. Arty.
  • I’m not an extravagant man. The fact that I can have a coffee out whenever I want still makes me feel grateful.
  • I’m pretty good for an old geek.
  • It’s weathered many a storm, but the British film industry is, thankfully, still afloat.
  • A girl once came to my beery flat in Kensal Green, opened the blinds and cooked me breakfast. I married her.
  • Hollywood producers aren’t going to say, ‘Get me that swearing, grey-haired, headless chicken. We need him for our new High School Musical (2006) movie!’
  • I can’t imagine I’ll be the new George Clooney. That’s not really in the cards.
  • I destroyed all my geek stuff because I didn’t want to be a geek, and I regret it to this day. Consumed in the geek bonfire of the vanities was a collection of autographs and letters from Peter Cushing, Spike Milligan and Frankie Howerd, the first Doctor Whos, actual astronauts and many more. I wish I’d known that one day the geek would inherit the Earth.
  • The big reason that Doctor Who (2005) is still with us is because of every single viewer who ever turned on to watch this show, at any age, at any time in its history and in their history and who took it into their heart — because Doctor Who (2005) belongs to all of us. Everyone made Doctor Who.
  • Being asked to play the Doctor is an amazing privilege. Like the Doctor himself I find myself in a state of utter terror and delight. I can’t wait to get started.

Peter Capaldi Important Facts

  • Huge fan of David Bowie.
  • Special rings were designed for his roles in The Musketeers and Doctor Who in order to hide his own wedding ring, which he doesn’t like to take off.
  • He was seriously considering giving up acting when he was cast as Malcolm Tucker in ‘The Thick Of It (2005)’.
  • Is a huge fan of the HBO show Game of Thrones (2011). In Season 9 of Doctor Who (2005) he worked alongside Maisie Williams, who plays Arya Stark.
  • Was offered the chance to audition for the Eighth Doctor in _Doctor Who (1996) (TV) (1996)_ but turned it down as he felt he was unlikely to get it. The part eventually went to Paul McGann.
  • On The All New Alexei Sayle Show (1994), Peter Calpaldi played intoxicated time traveler Doug Hatton in the re-occurring sketch ‘Drunk in Time’.
  • Long before World War Z (2013), Capaldi was considered for a another zombie film-he was favored to play Rawlings in Lifeforce (1985).
  • He became an actor because of his love of Doctor Who (1963) and the hope that he would one day get to appear on the show.
  • When he was 15, he sent a letter to ”Doctor Who” magazine in tribute to Roger Delgado who played The Master in the original Doctor Who (1963) series.
  • He auditioned for a place in the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts (RADA) but was rejected.
  • Like David Tennant, he was a lifelong Doctor Who (1963) fan before he got to play the role.
  • His paternal grandfather, Giovanni Batiste Capaldi, was Italian, born in Picinisco, Frosinone, Lazio, Italy. The rest of Peter’s ancestry is Scottish and Irish.
  • He is only the third actor to play the Doctor who has been older than the actor he replaced in the role. The others were Jon Pertwee, who was a year older than Patrick Troughton, and Colin Baker, who was eight years older than Peter Davison. Capaldi is tied with the First Doctor, William Hartnell, to be the oldest actors cast in the role-both were age 55 when cast.
  • Capaldi is the third Scottish actor to play the role of the Doctor in the TV series, following Sylvester McCoy, who played the Seventh Doctor, and David Tennant, who played the Tenth Doctor.
  • He is the second actor to play the Doctor who also played a previous role in the show. The first was Colin Baker.
  • He is the only Oscar winner to play the Doctor, although not for acting-for best live-action short film.
  • He is the first actor to play the Doctor in the revamped Doctor Who (2005) to be born before the original series first premiered.
  • Played a character called “W.H.O. Doctor” in World War Z (2013) before being cast in the lead role for Doctor Who (2005).
  • He had been to an audition in the morning where he felt that he was made “to jump through hoops” for a small role by people he had worked with before. This frustrating audition gave him the mind-set at the next audition on that day, for the role of Malcolm Tucker in The Thick of It (2005). Armando Iannucci found him perfect for the role.
  • He is a patron of the Association for International Cancer Research and of a Scottish children’s charity, the Aberlour Child Care Trust.
  • Was the lead singer of a punk rock band, Dreamboys, which included Craig Ferguson as the drummer and Temple Clark as the bassist.

Peter Capaldi Filmography

Title Year Status Character Role
Paddington 2 2017 filming Mr Curry Actor
Doctor Who 2008-2017 TV Series The Doctor
Caecilius
Actor
Children in Need 2016 TV Series The Doctor Actor
Class 2016 TV Series The Doctor Actor
Lego Dimensions 2015 Video Game The Twelfth Doctor (voice) Actor
Paddington 2014 Mr Curry Actor
Shetland 2014 TV Series Weather Reporter Actor
The Musketeers 2014 TV Series Cardinal Richelieu Actor
The Fifth Estate 2013 Alan Rusbridger Actor
World War Z 2013 W.H.O. Doctor Actor
The Hour 2012 TV Series Randall Brown Actor
The Thick of It 2005-2012 TV Series Malcolm Tucker Actor
Big Fat Gypsy Gangster 2011 Therapist Actor
The Penguins of Madagascar 2011 TV Series Uncle Nigel Actor
The Field of Blood 2011 TV Series Dr. Pete Actor
The Suspicions of Mr Whicher: The Murder at Road Hill House 2011 TV Movie Samuel Kent Actor
The Nativity 2010 TV Mini-Series Balthazar Actor
Getting On 2009-2010 TV Series Peter Healy Actor
Accused 2010 TV Series Frank Ryland Actor
Bistro 2010 Short Max Actor
Bloody Foreigners 2010 TV Series Narrator Actor
10 Minute Tales 2009 TV Series The Man Actor
Torchwood 2009 TV Series John Frobisher Actor
In the Loop 2009 Malcolm Tucker Actor
The Devil’s Whore 2008 TV Mini-Series King Charles I Actor
Glendogie Bogey 2008 TV Movie Jeff Wylie (voice) Actor
Midnight Man 2008 TV Mini-Series Trevor Actor
Skins 2007-2008 TV Series Mark Jenkins Actor
Cold Blood 2008 TV Series documentary Narrator Actor
Magicians 2007 Mike Francis Actor
Fallen Angel 2007 TV Mini-Series Henry Appleton Actor
Coming Up 2007 TV Series Joe Actor
Waking the Dead 2007 TV Series Lucien Calvin Actor
Aftersun 2006 TV Movie Jim Actor
Midsomer Murders 2006 TV Series Laurence Barker Actor
Donovan 2006 TV Series Dr. Angus Baldwin Actor
Pinochet’s Last Stand 2006 TV Movie Andy McEntee Actor
The Best Man 2005 Priest Actor
Wild Country 2005 Father Steve Actor
House of 9 2005 Max Roy Actor
The Afternoon Play 2005 TV Series Billy Shannon Actor
Peep Show 2004 TV Series Professor Alistair MacLeish Actor
Salvage 2004 Short James Mulwray Actor
Foyle’s War 2004 TV Series Raymond Carter Actor
Modigliani 2004 Jean Cocteau (as Peter Capadli) Actor
Niceland (Population. 1.000.002) 2004 John Actor
My Family 2004 TV Series Colin Judd Actor
Passer By 2004 TV Movie Defence Barrister Actor
Sea of Souls 2004 TV Series Gordon Fleming Actor
Judge John Deed 2003 TV Series Alan Roxborough, M.P. Actor
Shotgun Dave Rides East 2003 Short Rob Actor
Fortysomething 2003 TV Series Dr. Ronnie Pilfrey Actor
In Deep 2003 TV Series Jeremy Church Actor
Unconditional Love 2003 TV Movie DI Terry Machin Actor
Solid Geometry 2002 TV Short David Hunter Actor
Max 2002/I David Cohn Actor
Mrs Caldicot’s Cabbage War 2002 Derek Actor
High Stakes 2001 TV Series Michael Calderwood Actor
Hotel! 2001 TV Movie Hilton Gilfoyle Actor
The Greatest Store in the World 1999 TV Movie Mr. Whiskers Actor
Psychos 1999 TV Mini-Series Mark Collins Actor
What Rats Won’t Do 1998 Tony Actor
The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling 1997 TV Mini-Series Lord Fellamar Actor
Shooting Fish 1997 Mr. Gilzean Actor
Bean 1997 Gareth Actor
Smilla’s Sense of Snow 1997 Birgo Lander Actor
Giving Tongue 1996 TV Movie Duncan Fielding Actor
Lost for Words 1996 TV Short Actor
The Treasure Seekers 1996 TV Movie Jellicoe Actor
The Vicar of Dibley 1994-1996 TV Series Tristan Campbell Actor
The Crow Road 1996 TV Mini-Series Rory McHoan Actor
Neverwhere 1996 TV Mini-Series Islington Actor
Delta Wave 1996 TV Series short Dinsdale Draco Actor
Runway One 1995 TV Movie Mick Galligan Actor
The All New Alexei Sayle Show 1994-1995 TV Series Doug Hatton in ‘Drunk in Time’ / Various Characters Actor
Captives 1994 Simon Actor
Chandler & Co 1994 TV Series Larry Blakeson Actor
Prime Suspect 3 1993 TV Mini-Series Vera Reynolds Actor
Stay Lucky 1993 TV Series Robin Actor
The Comic Strip Presents… 1993 TV Series John Actor
Micky Love 1993 TV Movie David Critchley Actor
Soft Top Hard Shoulder 1993 Gavin Bellini Actor
The Secret Agent 1992 TV Series Mr. Vladimir Actor
Early Travellers in North America 1992 TV Series Robert Louis Stevenson Actor
Mr. Wakefield’s Crusade 1992 TV Series Luke Wakefield Actor
The Cloning of Joanna May 1992 TV Movie Isaac Actor
Titmuss Regained 1991 TV Mini-Series Ken Cracken Actor
Selling Hitler 1991 TV Mini-Series Thomas Walde Actor
Screen Two 1991 TV Series Bruce Coldfield Actor
Agatha Christie’s Poirot 1991 TV Series Claude Langton Actor
December Bride 1991 Young Sorleyson Actor
Ruth Rendell Mysteries 1990 TV Series Zeno Vedast Actor
Chain 1990 TV Mini-Series Robert McRae Actor
Dramarama 1989 TV Series The British Ambassador Actor
Dream Baby 1989 TV Movie Willie Actor
Shadow of the Noose 1989 TV Mini-Series Robert Wood Actor
Rab C. Nesbitt 1988 TV Series Preacher Actor
Dangerous Liaisons 1988 Azolan Actor
The Lair of the White Worm 1988 Angus Flint Actor
The Love Child 1988 Dillon Actor
God’s Chosen Car Park 1986 TV Movie Everard Actor
C.A.T.S. Eyes 1986 TV Series Caldicott Actor
John and Yoko: A Love Story 1985 TV Movie George Harrison Actor
Travelling Man 1985 TV Series John Actor
Minder 1985 TV Series Ozzie Actor
Turtle Diary 1985 Assistant Keeper Actor
The Personal Touch 1985 TV Movie Dominic Actor
Crown Court 1984 TV Series Eamonn Donnelly Actor
Local Hero 1983 Oldsen Actor
Living Apart Together 1982 Joe Actor
The Cricklewood Greats 2012 TV Movie Director
Getting On 2009-2010 TV Series 9 episodes Director
Strictly Sinatra 2001 Director
Franz Kafka’s It’s a Wonderful Life 1993 Short Director
Doctor Who 2014-2015 TV Series performer – 6 episodes Soundtrack
Neverwhere 1996 TV Mini-Series performer – 1 episode Soundtrack
The Cricklewood Greats 2012 TV Movie written by Writer
A Portrait of Scotland 2009 TV Movie documentary Writer
Strictly Sinatra 2001 Writer
Soft Top Hard Shoulder 1993 writer Writer
Franz Kafka’s It’s a Wonderful Life 1993 Short writer Writer
Doctor Who: Earth Conquest – The World Tour 2014 TV Movie documentary with special thanks to Thanks
Isolation 2005 thanks Thanks
Prison, My Parents & Me 2016 TV Movie documentary Himself – Narrator (voice) Self
Richard E. Grant on Ealing Comedies 2016 TV Mini-Series documentary Himself Self
Doctor Who: The Fan Show 2015-2016 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Aliens: The Big Think 2016 TV Movie documentary Himself – Narrator Self
Horizon 1998-2016 TV Series documentary Himself – Narrator Self
Lorraine 2016 TV Series Himself Self
The Graham Norton Show 2014-2015 TV Series Himself / Himself – Guest Self
Doctor Who Extra 2014-2015 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Larry King Now 2015 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Conan 2015 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Pobol y Cwm at 40 2014 TV Movie documentary Himself (uncredited) Self
Pride of Britain Awards 2014 TV Special Himself Self
Blue Peter 2014 TV Series Himself Self
Doctor Who: Earth Conquest – The World Tour 2014 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Doctor Who: The Ultimate Companion 2014 TV Movie Himself – The Twelfth Doctor / The Doctor Self
Oprah Makes Garfield Cartoons 2014 Short Himself (voice) Self
Imagine 2013 TV Series documentary Himself – Presenter Self
World War Z: Production 2013 Video documentary short Himself Self
Doctor Who Live: The Next Doctor 2013 TV Movie Himself Self
Newsround 2013 TV Series Himself Self
Inside the Mind of Leonardo 2013 TV Movie documentary Leonardo Da Vinci Self
Sunday Brunch 2013 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Punk Britannia 2012 TV Series documentary Narrator Self
The Cricklewood Greats 2012 TV Movie Himself – presenter / Leslie Grangely Self
Black Drop 2012 Documentary short voice Self
Sunday AM 2011 TV Series Himself Self
Natural World 2011 TV Series documentary Narrator Self
Breakfast 2001-2011 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Artworks Scotland 2005-2011 TV Series documentary Narrator / Himself Self
The British Academy Television Awards 2010 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Live from Studio Five 2010 TV Series Himself Self
Jools’s Hootenanny 2009 TV Series Himself Self
The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson 2009 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
A Portrait of Scotland 2009 TV Movie documentary Himself – Presenter Self
The One Show 2009 TV Series Himself Self
This Morning 2009 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The Paul O’Grady Show 2009 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Movie Connections 2009 TV Series documentary Himself Self
The Perfect TV Detective 2008 TV Movie documentary Himself – Narrator (voice) Self
Behind the Tricks: Making ‘Magicians’ 2007 Video documentary short Himself Self
The Martians and Us 2006 TV Series documentary Narrator Self
Trawlermen 2006 TV Series documentary Narrator Self
The British Soap Awards 2006 2006 TV Special Presenter Self
Have I Got News for You 2006 TV Series Himself Self
From Hollywood to Borehamwood 2003 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Bookmark 1998 TV Series James Boswell Self
Reputations 1997 TV Series documentary Himself – Narrator Self
The 67th Annual Academy Awards 1995 TV Special Himself – Winner: Best Live Action Short Film Self
SSDT – Anno 2060 2017 TV Series Agent Rikard Archive Footage
The Big Fat Quiz of the Year 2014 TV Movie The Doctor (uncredited) Archive Footage
TV’s Nastiest Villains 2014 TV Movie documentary Malcolm Tucker Archive Footage
Doctor Who Live: The Afterparty 2013 TV Movie documentary The Doctor (uncredited) Archive Footage
The Culture Show 2013 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
Stick 10: Remake of the Ultimates 2013 Short Ben’s Mind Archive Footage
The Big Fat Quiz of the Year 2012 TV Movie Malcolm Tucker (uncredited) Archive Footage
Doctor Who Greatest Moments 2009 TV Mini-Series documentary Lucius Caecillus Ivcundus Archive Footage
My Family 2009 TV Series Colin Judd Archive Footage
The Story of Dibley 2007 TV Movie documentary Tristan Campbell (uncredited) Archive Footage

Peter Capaldi Awards

Year Award Ceremony Nomination Movie Category
2016 BTVA People’s Choice Voice Acting Award Behind the Voice Actors Awards Best Vocal Ensemble in a Video Game Lego Dimensions (2015) Won
2016 BTVA Video Game Voice Acting Award Behind the Voice Actors Awards Best Vocal Ensemble in a Video Game Lego Dimensions (2015) Won
2014 Royal Television Society Scotland Award Royal Television Society Scotland Awards Special Award For outstanding contribution to television Won
2012 British Comedy Award British Comedy Awards Best TV Comedy Actor The Thick of It (2005) Won
2010 BAFTA TV Award BAFTA Awards Best Male Performance in a Comedy Role The Thick of It (2005) Won
2010 British Comedy Award British Comedy Awards Best TV Comedy Actor The Thick of It (2005) Won
2010 Broadcasting Press Guild Award Broadcasting Press Guild Awards Best Actor The Thick of It (2005) Won
2010 Chlotrudis Award Chlotrudis Awards Best Supporting Actor In the Loop (2009) Won
2009 BAFTA Scotland Award BAFTA Awards, Scotland Best Acting Performance in Film In the Loop (2009) Won
1995 Oscar Academy Awards, USA Best Short Film, Live Action Franz Kafka’s It’s a Wonderful Life (1993) Won
1994 BAFTA Film Award BAFTA Awards Best Short Film Franz Kafka’s It’s a Wonderful Life (1993) Won
1994 Audience Award Angers European First Film Festival Short Film Franz Kafka’s It’s a Wonderful Life (1993) Won
1993 BAFTA Scotland Award BAFTA Awards, Scotland Best Actor – Film Soft Top Hard Shoulder (1993) Won
1993 BAFTA Scotland Award BAFTA Awards, Scotland Best Short Film Franz Kafka’s It’s a Wonderful Life (1993) Won
2016 BTVA People’s Choice Voice Acting Award Behind the Voice Actors Awards Best Vocal Ensemble in a Video Game Lego Dimensions (2015) Nominated
2016 BTVA Video Game Voice Acting Award Behind the Voice Actors Awards Best Vocal Ensemble in a Video Game Lego Dimensions (2015) Nominated
2014 Royal Television Society Scotland Award Royal Television Society Scotland Awards Special Award For outstanding contribution to television Nominated
2012 British Comedy Award British Comedy Awards Best TV Comedy Actor The Thick of It (2005) Nominated
2010 BAFTA TV Award BAFTA Awards Best Male Performance in a Comedy Role The Thick of It (2005) Nominated
2010 British Comedy Award British Comedy Awards Best TV Comedy Actor The Thick of It (2005) Nominated
2010 Broadcasting Press Guild Award Broadcasting Press Guild Awards Best Actor The Thick of It (2005) Nominated
2010 Chlotrudis Award Chlotrudis Awards Best Supporting Actor In the Loop (2009) Nominated
2009 BAFTA Scotland Award BAFTA Awards, Scotland Best Acting Performance in Film In the Loop (2009) Nominated
1995 Oscar Academy Awards, USA Best Short Film, Live Action Franz Kafka’s It’s a Wonderful Life (1993) Nominated
1994 BAFTA Film Award BAFTA Awards Best Short Film Franz Kafka’s It’s a Wonderful Life (1993) Nominated
1994 Audience Award Angers European First Film Festival Short Film Franz Kafka’s It’s a Wonderful Life (1993) Nominated
1993 BAFTA Scotland Award BAFTA Awards, Scotland Best Actor – Film Soft Top Hard Shoulder (1993) Nominated
1993 BAFTA Scotland Award BAFTA Awards, Scotland Best Short Film Franz Kafka’s It’s a Wonderful Life (1993) Nominated