Benedict Timothy Carlton Cumberbatch

Benedict Timothy Carlton Cumberbatch net worth is $30 Million. Also know about Benedict Timothy Carlton Cumberbatch bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship and more …

Benedict Timothy Carlton Cumberbatch Wiki Biography

Benedict Timothy Carlton Cumberbatch was born on the 19th July 1976, in London, England, and is a theatre, television and movie actor, widely recognized for starring as a variety of characters, including title roles in the “Sherlock” TV series, and 2016 movie “Doctor Strange” as well as for portraying Khan in “Star Trek: Into Darkness” (2013) and Alan Turing in the 2014 Oscar-winning historic drama movie “The Imitation Game”, to name a few.

Have you ever wondered how much wealth this popular English actor has accumulated so far? How rich Benedict Cumberbatch is? According to sources, it is estimated that the total of Benedict’s net worth, as of early 2018, revolves around the sum of over $30 million, and includes assets such as a $3.5 million valued property in North London’s Camden district, as well as a Tuscan-style mansion in Los Angeles, California, valued at $14.2 million, in addition to several luxury cars and motorcycles, all primarily acquired through his career as an actor across three major mediums, which has been active since 2000.

Being born to prominent actors Wanda Ventham and Timothy Carlton, it is no wonder that Cumberbatch has managed to become a successful actor himself. He attended Brambletye School in West Sussex before enrolling at one of the oldest and most respected UK boarding schools – Harrow School. Prior to continuing his education, he spent a year volunteering as an English teacher in India at a Tibetan monastery. He later enrolled at the University of Manchester, from which he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Drama before attending the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts from which he obtained Master of Arts degree in Classical Acting.

His professional acting career Cumberbatch began in 2000, as a member of Royal National Theatre as well as Royal Court and Regent’s Par Open Air, where he appeared in over a dozen classic stageplays, in a variety of roles. However, his on camera debut occurred later in 2000 when he was cast for a supporting role in an episode of “Heartbeat” TV series. These engagements helped Benedict to establish himself as a young and prominent actor, and also provided the basis for his net worth.

Throughout the 2000s, he refined his acting skills by appearing in numerous TV series as well as movies, including starring in major roles in biographical movies “Hawking” (2004) and “Painted with Words” (2010), as well as in TV series “To the Ends of the Earth” and “The Last Enemy” among plenty of others. However, Cumberbatch’s acting career was really set on a rising path in 2010 when he was cast in the title role of world’s famous detective Sherlock Holmes in BBC TV’s crime drama series “Sherlock”, subsequently  receiving four Primetime Emmy Award nominations, as well as nominations for three BAFTA and one Golden Globe Award. It is certain that all these accomplishments helped Benedict Cumberbatch to add a significant sum to the total of his net worth.

Benedict has continued to add plenty of major acting appearances to his professional portfolio, portraying various characters, often appearing as upper-class figures or highly intelligent characters. Some of his most popular appearances include roles in, apart from all those already mentioned above, Oscar-nominated movies “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy” (2011), “12 Years a Slave” and “August: Osage County” both in 2013 as well as voice acting as the notorious dragon Smaug in Peter Jackson’s epic trilogy “The Hobbit”. In addition, he also appeared in “Black Mass” (2015), and 2017 blockbusters “Thor: Ragnarok” and “The Current War” in which he portrays Thomas Edison. Doubtlessly, all these achievements have helped Benedict Cumberbatch to increase the total of his net worth by a large margin.

In his acting career, Cumberbatch has appeared in over 70 projects so far, and for his contribution to the performing arts, he was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) by Queen Elizabeth II in June 2015.

When it comes to his personal life, Cumberbatch has been married since February 2015 to colleague actress Sophie Hunter with whom he has welcomed two sons. In his spare time, besides enjoying scuba diving, snowboarding and skydiving, he is avidly involved within several charities, such as The Prince’s Trust, Motor Neurone Disease Association, and Stop the War Coalition among several others.

IMDB Wikipedia 12 Years a Slave Alan Turing August: Osage County Benedict Timothy Carlton Cumberbatch Black Mass Commander of the Order of the British Empire Doctor Strange Hawking Heartbeat Motor Neurone Disease Association Painted with Words Royal Court and Regent’s Par Open Air Royal National Theatre) Sherlock Soldier Spy Star Trek Into Darkness Stop the War Coalition Tailor The Current War The Hobbit The Imitation Game The Last Enemy The Prince’s Trust Thor: Ragnarok Tinker To the Ends of the Earth

Benedict Timothy Carlton Cumberbatch Quick Info

Full Name Benedict Cumberbatch
Net Worth $30 Million
Date Of Birth July 19, 1976
Place Of Birth London, England
Height 1.83 m
Weight 78 kg
Profession Actor, Voice Actor
Education Brambletye School, Harrow School, University of Manchester, London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts
Nationality British
Spouse Sophie Hunter
Children Christopher Carlton Cumberbatch, Hal Auden Cumberbatch
Parents Wanda Ventham, Timothy Carlton
Siblings Tracy Peacock
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/cumbercollectiveunite/
Twitter https://twitter.com/cumberbatchweb
Google+ https://plus.google.com/+BenedictCumberbatchBlogNews
Instagram https://www.instagram.com/benedictcum
IMDB http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1212722
Awards Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or a Movie, Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actor, British Independent Film Award – The Variety Award, National Television Award for TV Detective, Critics’ Choice Television Award for Best Actor in a Movie/Miniseries, Satellite Aw…
Nominations Academy Award for Best Actor, Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture – Drama, Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture, Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role, BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a …
Movies Doctor Strange, The Imitation Game, Star Trek Into Darkness, 12 Years a Slave, The Fifth Estate, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, Atonement, Black Mass, The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug, War Horse, The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies, August: Osage County, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Pengu…
TV Shows Parade’s End, The Last Enemy, Broken News, Nathan Barley, Fortysomething, Sherlock, To the Ends of the Earth, National Theatre Live, Tipping the Velvet, Into the Universe with Stephen Hawking, Stephen Hawking’s Grand Design, The Hollow Crown, Parade’s End, The Last Enemy, Broken News, Nathan Barley,…

Benedict Timothy Carlton Cumberbatch Trademarks

  1. Usually plays highly-intelligent and gifted characters
  2. Often portrays posh upper-class figures
  3. Sharp cheekbones
  4. Piercing blue-green eyes
  5. Rich baritone voice

Benedict Timothy Carlton Cumberbatch Quotes

  • Like all of these things, like a lot of art, you do the work and you let go. You understand how the thing works and then you let go of it. It should be something you breathe or you feel, not something that you force or try to control.
  • Looking for happiness is a sure way to sadness, I think. You have to take each moment as it comes.
  • [on the need for a female and then a homosexual president in the United States] You need to have a female president next, and then after that, a gay president. That’s the full journey from Obama’s legacy onwards. There’s a great Morrissey lyric from “America Is Not the World” from You Are the Quarry that goes, “In America, the land of the free, they said / And of opportunity, in a just and truthful way / But where the president is never black, female or gay, and until that day / You’ve got nothing to say to me, to help me believe.” It’s quite an old song from before Obama took office, but you’ve done black, then you need to do female, then the next, gay.
  • [on his offensive faux pas of using the term “colored actors” instead of “actors of color” in an interview] I’m devastated to have caused offence by using this outmoded terminology. I offer my sincere apologies. I make no excuse for my being an idiot and know the damage is done. I can only hope this incident will highlight the need for correct usage of terminology that is accurate and inoffensive. The most shaming aspect of this for me is that I was talking about racial inequality in the performing arts in the UK and the need for rapid improvements in our industry when I used the term. I feel the complete fool I am and while I am sorry to have offended people and to learn from my mistakes in such a public manner please be assured I have. I apologize again to anyone who I offended for this thoughtless use of inappropriate language about an issue which affects friends of mine and which I care about deeply.
  • [on The Fifth Estate (2013)] So many people I speak to say, “Oh, I really wanted to see that.” So maybe people weren’t aware of it?… I don’t know. I’m not in publicity or marketing. That’s them, I just do what I do. I was very pleased with that film and I think over time it will be seen. But I don’t offer any understanding for why that happened… I don’t regret it. You can’t wish you hadn’t done something after doing it.
  • [on the character Christopher Tietjens in Parade’s End (2012)] What makes him heroic is the idea that he stands for what he believes in with utter transparency, and to hell with the consequences of living by what he believes.
  • [on what he learned in 2014] I learnt where my home is. I learnt where my heart is, where my center is, where my now and forevermore is, and she’s called Sophie Hunter, my fiancée.
  • People forget about books. They’re always just turning on the television, but reading a good book is the most nourishing thing you can do.
  • I’m a homebody. I love to stay in at night, light a fire, have a whiskey and watch a movie or read a good book.
  • [on selfies] What a tragic waste of engagement. Enjoy the moment. Do something more worthwhile with your time, anything. Stare out the window and think about life.
  • It’s an amazing thing to find somebody you love, let alone somebody who loves you back in the same way and degree. Not everyone can do that in a lifetime. It’s a minor miracle, considering how busy Sophie (Hunter) and I are, that we met in this way. So Sophie is someone I am incredibly grateful for and very excited about.
  • People say, “This is your moment.” Well, I hate to say it, but I don’t believe in moments. I don’t believe in one-offs. I believe in something continuing and continuing, and I want to be doing this job for the next 50 years if I live that long.
  • What matters to me is the quality and the variety of the work. I’m in it for the long game. I’m interested in working in 40 years’ time, and turning round and talking to an actor on set and telling them stories about working with Judi Dench and Michael Gambon. So any talk of “man of the moment” hype, heat, whatever, I just smile wryly. It’s the same shit with “sexiest whatever” – I was around 10 years before that as an actor and no one took the same face seriously. It’s all projection.
  • [on The Imitation Game (2014)] Often, as an actor, you draw on your own experience or memories, but I really didn’t have to here. [Turing] got under my skin. It was just so pitiful. Imagining the physical weakness, the vulnerability, the exhaustion, how the hormones affected his emotional state. It was all ungovernable.
  • [on fame] You can’t imagine fame. You can only ever see it from an outsider and comment on it with the rueful wisdom of a non participant. When it happens to you, it doesn’t matter what age or how, it is a very steep learning curve. The important thing to realize in all of it is that life is short, to protect the ones you love, and not expose yourself to too much abuse or narcissistic reflection gazing and move on. If fame affords me the type of ability to do the kind of work I’m being offered, who am I to complain about the downsides. It’s all relative. And this are obviously very high class problems. The way privacy becomes an every shrinking island is inevitable but also manageable and it doesn’t necessary have to get that way.
  • [on his look] It’s the blessing of having a weird face – somewhere between an otter and something people find vaguely attractive.
  • Hollywood-style stardom was never my goal, yet it seems to be happening due to particular projects. I don’t seek. I don’t avoid. I just follow my path, doing my best.
  • [on Alan Turing’s royal pardon] The only person that should be pardoning anybody is him. Hopefully, the film will bring to the fore what an extraordinary human being he was and how appalling (his treatment by the government was). It’s a really shameful, disgraceful part of our history.
  • The only thing that may unite all forms of acting in a sense is no matter what preparation you do, no matter what transformative process you go through, you are always yourself. You are always inside your own skin – you are who you are no matter what the actions of the movement or the effect. You have to have an essential element of you, and that is also what is in the present. Once you’re in the present and you’re not worried about the wig, or the special-effects suit, or the dialogue, or the accent, or the moral responsibility, when you are lost in the moment and you’re in the present is when the stuff that’s really good comes on screen. Until that point, you’ve put in a lot of hard work to then let go, and all of us experience moments – and they’re rare in every job I find – where you feel free of any kind of self-consciousness.
  • [on The Hobbit] Growing up, my dad read it to me, and it was a real treat, a feast for a child’s imagination. He did an amazing Smaug, and hobbits, and Gandalf as well – it’s the audiobook that will never exist.
  • I’ve never been an activist, but I’ve always been politically aware. I protested against budget cuts and cuts to education. I marched against the Iraq war. All that protesting was just swept aside to pave the way for an illegal war, and the results of that war were made very, very plain by those leaked war logs.
  • The rule of law is being overrun so fast, eroding our civil liberties in a way that fundamentalists could possibly cherish. Yet there is a very real threat, for the other liberty that we could have taken away is our life, at any point, through the act of terrorism. I think intelligence services have really struggled post-Iraq with credibility, and I feel for them to a certain degree. They are trying to protect our right to exist.
  • Every time I’m seen at a bar with a girl, I get photographed. Anyone who has a computer knows my entire dating history. I get it. Paparazzi is an inescapable, immovable obstacle.
  • [on delivering a successful performance] It’s rather like a sportsman, where you hit a sweet spot and think, “Oh, that felt good.” You don’t necessarily know why it is. It’s pretty fleeting, and I guess that’s how it should be, because the minute you try to hold on to it, it’s too precious, and you start to try to reinvigorate the ghost of what you’ve done rather than keep evolving it.
  • I’ve always had an eye on longevity; I’ve got loads more goals to achieve. It’s not like I’ve completely conquered the whole thing. That’s a lifetime’s objective, not an overnight thing.
  • I don’t live beyond my means. I enjoy luxury and I enjoy the privilege of it, when I can afford it, and I’m in the situation where it’s been given to me, but I’m very conscious of what is wasteful.
  • [on being abducted in South Africa in 2005] It taught me that you come into this world as you leave it, on your own. It’s made me want to live a life slightly less ordinary.
  • [on Downton Abbey (2010), interviewed on Reader’s Digest, 16 August 2012] We’re remembering that there was a world before the First World War. We’re living in a culture now that’s revering, or having a nostalgia trip with, the beginning of the 1900s. Although Downton traded a lot on the sentiment in the last series… but we won’t talk about that series because it was, in my opinion, f***ing atrocious.
  • Worst thing about my profession? The press, obviously. Don’t write that, eh?
  • Sometimes as an actor you’re looking for the infinite. If you can hold that, if you can remember that in the chaos, [it will] anchor you and give you grace and ease.
  • I can tell you I’m a huge fan of Downton Abbey (2010) and what I said was quite, quite clearly – to most intelligent New York Times readers – a joke. [on the comments he made about Downton Abbey (2010) on the New York Times]
  • [on his Hobbit character] It was publicized that I ‘voice’ Smaug, and I thought, “Fucking hell. My voice, my motions – I worked my arse off to create that dragon!”.
  • [his would-be response to Julian Assange about movie portrayal of him] Well, somebody is going to do it, wouldn’t you rather it’s someone who has your ear, who could steer the film to a place that’s more accurate or balanced? The tabloid image of him, what he fears is going to be promoted – that weird, white-haired guy wanted for rape – is so far from what we did.
  • [his advice from co-star Meryl Streep] I asked her how she approached the multiple layers of her part. And she said, “I don’t know. I don’t have a process. It changes with every job, doesn’t it?” And I thought, “Oh, thank God, to hear her say it. This whole thing about technique or method? It’s bullshit.” People say, “Oh, you’re so precise.” But within that I work very hard to give every part a heartbeat. I learned a lot from just watching Meryl in repose. It was a bit like a Sherlock deduction actually.
  • [on his role in Star Trek Into Darkness (2013)] I don’t really believe in good and evil. I don’t really believe in heroes and villains. His reasons for what he does are quite profoundly persuasive. One man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter, and the fact that he’s a shadow self of Kirk – same coin, different sides – is what makes him interesting to play.
  • I’ve seen and swam and climbed and lived and driven and filmed. Should it all end tomorrow, I can definitely say there would be no regrets. I am very lucky, and I know it. I really have lived 5,000 times over. (May 2013)
  • [on declining to reprise his much-acclaimed role in “After the Dance” on Broadway] I’ve never really made a head-over-heart decision like that before but there’s a bit of momentum and I’d like to keep myself available for films. (September 2011)
  • [on Sherlock (2010) fan-fiction] I suppose my bodily proportions are quite flattering. I’m ripped, doing something I wouldn’t normally do with my body, or having done to it, involving Watson. So that’s as far as I’ll hit about that one, but it’s all there on the Web if you want to find it. I was amazed at the level of artistry; people have spent hours doing it. And there’s some really weird cross breeding stuff that goes on. The news got out that I was playing Smaug in “Hobbit” and suddenly there were lots of dragons with purple scarves flying around so it’s crazy, it’s crazy.
  • [on Martin Freeman playing Bilbo Baggins] It was great. I got to hang out with him, and I kept a straight face for a bit and then I started giggling because I know Martin, I don’t know Bilbo. For Martin to be sitting there playing Bilbo is amazing. He’s going to be amazing, he’s going to be fantastic in this film.
  • I’ve been very lucky at what’s happened in my career to date, but playing something as far from me as possible is an ambition of mine – anything from a mutated baddy in a comic book action thriller, to a detective. If anything, I’d like Gary Oldman’s career: he’s the perfect example of it. I’ve love to have a really broad sweep of characters – to be able to do something edgy, surprising and unfashionable. (May 2005)
  • [on his Sherlock (2010) series] It’s a rare challenge, both for the audience and an actor, to take part in something with this level of intelligence and wit. You have to really enjoy it. It’s a form of mental and physical gymnastics.
  • [on initially using his father’s stage name “Carlton”] When I started, I just assumed I couldn’t be called Benedict Cumberbatch… but then, one day, I told someone in the business what I was really called and they said, “That’s great, that’s something you can use to stand out.”.
  • [on being invited by Madonna to her London home to discuss playing Duke of Windsor (aka “Edward VIII”) in W.E. (2011)] I’d whizzed round on my bike and thought we were going to have a read-through and a chat, but she wanted a full-on dress rehearsal… So I ended up in a suit and tie with Madonna operating the camera herself.
  • It’s the standard actors’ joke – “What are you doing after this?” “Oh, if Spielberg doesn’t call then I’m going to go on holiday.” But a week after I’d said that, I got the call to say I had the job. It’s one of those moments you never forget – I just fell off my chair. Which is not a good start to the horseriding.
  • I am very flattered. I have also become a verb as in “I have cumberbatched the UK audience” apparently. Who knows, by the end of the year I might become a swear word too! It’s crazy and fun and very flattering.
  • Cumberbatch – it sounds like a fart in a bath, doesn’t it? What a fluffy old name. I can never say it on a Monday morning. When I became an actor, Mum wasn’t keen on me keeping it.
  • [on Stephen Hawking] He’s such a presence and you have to really know what you want to say to him or ask him because it takes such a huge, phenomenal effort for him to communicate with you. You think, “I really don’t want to waste this man’s time.” I was myself rather than thinking, “I’m a stupid actor; how on earth can I impress someone like this? I don’t know what to say to make me feel worthy of playing this man.”.

Benedict Timothy Carlton Cumberbatch Important Facts

  • He was awarded the CBE (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) in the 2015 Queen’s Birthday Honours List for his services to the performing arts and to charity. He is an actor in London, England.
  • On the day before filming the pilot of Sherlock (2010), his hair turned green due to the dye used to turn his hair black. Thankfully, his hair was fixed and the filming went on as planned.
  • Became a father for the first time at age 38 when his wife Sophie Hunter gave birth to their son Christopher Carlton in 2015.
  • His fragrance of choice is Eau de Monsieur by Annick Goutal.
  • Cumberbatch and Alan Turing, who he portrays in The Imitation Game (2014) are actually related in real-life. According to the family history site Ancestry, the two are 17th cousins with family relations dating back to the 14th century. Both are said to be related to John Beaufort, the first Earl of Somerset, through Cumberbatch and Turing’s respective paternal lines.
  • Benedict Cumberbatch is good friends with Eddie Redmayne. Both actors have portrayed Professor Stephen Hawking in different productions: Cumberbatch in Hawking (2004), and Redmayne in The Theory of Everything (2014). Both actors also received their first Academy Award nominations together, playing real life characters: Redmayne for his role as Stephen Hawking in The Theory of Everything (2014), and Cumberbatch for his role as Alan Turing in The Imitation Game (2014).
  • Cumberbatch married theatre director partner Sophie Hunter at the 12th century Church of St. Peter and St. Paul on the Isle of Wight followed by a reception at Mottistone Manor. [February 2015]
  • Benedict’s favorite television series include The Wire (2002), The Office (2005), The West Wing (1999), Mad Men (2007), The Sopranos (1999), Breaking Bad (2008) and The Killing (2011).
  • Benedict’s favorite movies include Ghostbusters (1984), Annie Hall (1977), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), Singin’ in the Rain (1952), Wings of Desire (1987), Bicycle Thieves (1948), Badlands (1973), Elephant (2003), The Shining (1980), Let the Right One In (2008), Zoolander (2001), Withnail & I (1987), Brief Encounter (1945), Io sono l’amore (2009), Michael Clayton (2007), A Prophet (2009), The Bourne Identity (2002), The Bourne Supremacy (2004), The Bourne Ultimatum (2007) and Inception (2010).
  • Benedict’s favorite filmmakers are Stanley Kubrick, Michael Winterbottom, Steven Soderbergh, John Hughes and Alfred Hitchcock.
  • Graced the cover of Time magazine for the second time in November 2014.
  • Traditionally announced his engagement to theatre director partner Sophie Hunter, who he has known for 17 years, in the “Forthcoming Marriages” section of The Times newspaper. He presented her with a 3.5 carat, Edwardian-inspired cushion-cut, yellow diamond ring adorned with a hundred smaller diamonds all around the head, bezel and shank. Its estimated value is $450,000. [November 2014]
  • Has an older half-sister, Tracy Tabernacle, now Tracy Peacock, from his mother’s first marriage to James Tabernacle.
  • Posted a video of himself accepting the “Ice Bucket Challenge” to raise research funds for ALS, also known as “Lou Gehrig’s Disease”. Gehrig is not the only famous person to suffer from this disease: it also affects Stephen Hawking, who Cumberbatch has played.
  • Has mostly English ancestry, with small or distant amounts (to varying degrees) of Welsh, Scottish, Cornish, French, Swiss-French, Swedish, German and Dutch. His paternal grandfather was born in Izmir, Turkey and his paternal grandmother was born in Bengal, India (both of their families were English).
  • Has played two villains named “Khan”: Khan Noonien Singh in Star Trek Into Darkness (2013), and the voice of tiger Shere Khan in Jungle Book (2018).
  • Named one of Time magazine’s 100 Most Influential People in the World. [April 2014]
  • In an interview, Julie Andrews named Cumberbatch as one of the actors she is fond of.
  • In March 2014, Cumberbatch was included in The Sunday Times’ “100 Makers of the 21st Century” list citing him as the “next Sir Laurence Olivier”.
  • As of 2015, has appeared in four films that were nominated for the Best Picture Oscar: Atonement (2007), War Horse (2011), 12 Years a Slave (2013) and The Imitation Game (2014). Of those, 12 Years a Slave (2013) is a winner in the category.
  • Four out of five films in which he appeared in 2013 received Oscar nominations: 12 Years a Slave (2013), Star Trek Into Darkness (2013), August: Osage County (2013) and The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (2013).
  • His parents Timothy Carlton and Wanda Ventham also played his character’s parents on Sherlock (2010).
  • Graced the cover of Time magazine in October 2013.
  • Known for donating his own drawings and sketches for charities and fundraisers.
  • Ranked #1 in Empire magazine’s “100 Sexiest Movie Stars” in 2013.
  • He was the cover star of The Hollywood Reporter’s “New A-List” issue in September 2013.
  • In 2013, he was ranked fifth place in the “Most Fascinating People in Britain” list of Tatler magazine, ranking higher than the Duchess of Cambridge and just below Queen Elizabeth II.
  • His voice has been creatively described by journalist Caitlin Moran as a “jaguar hiding in a cello”. According to a film critic, his voice is “so sepulchrally resonant, that it could have been synthesized from the combined timbres of Ian McKellen, Patrick Stewart and Alan Rickman holding an elocution contest down a well”. The “jaguar hiding in a cello” comparison apparently also clicked with the creative people at Jaguar Land Rover Automotive PLC. Cumberbatch voiced several commercials for Jaguar cars.
  • Fond of extreme sports like skydiving, hot-air ballooning, scuba diving and snowboarding.
  • His female fans were originally known as “Cumberbitches”, but are now known as the “CumberCollective” or “Cumberpeople”. Cumberbatch is uncomfortable with the term “Cumberbitches” because he says its non-inclusive and pejorative.
  • In 2013, he was included in Entertainment Weekly’s New Hollywood feature which listed the “Top 50 Coolest, Most Creative Entertainers Blowing Up TV, Movies, Music and Books”.
  • Has a condition called heterochromia iridis, the “groovy” mutation that his friend James McAvoy describes in X: First Class (2011). There’s a difference in coloration in his irises, each has a different combination of blue, green and gold.
  • He always wanted to pursue acting, however he entertained the idea of a law degree because of how hard his parents worked to give him an education. When he discovered that law was just as competitive, he decided to go with his passion.
  • According to ancestry.ca, he is related to famed astronaut Chris Hadfield.
  • Three of his roles have connections to Leonard Nimoy. Obviously, Nimoy originated the role of Mr. Spock. He also played Sherlock Holmes on stage, and in the 1970s, released a song called “The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins”.
  • Has numerous connections outside the franchise to fellow Star Trek cast members. He played Stephen Hawking, who had previously played himself on an episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987). He shares the role of Sherlock Holmes with both Leonard Nimoy and Christopher Plummer. Cast member Karl Urban appeared in the last two Lord of the Rings films, while Cumberbatch appears in the prequel trilogy based on The Hobbit.
  • His great-grandfather was Queen Victoria’s Consul General in Turkey and Lebanon, Henry Arnold Cumberbatch who was a member of the Order of St. Michael and St. George for his services to foreign and Commonwealth affairs.
  • His grandfather, Henry Carlton Cumberbatch, was a decorated submarine officer of both World Wars and a prominent figure of London high society.
  • Became good friends with Gary Oldman on the set of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (2011).
  • He unexpectedly got dual voice roles on The Simpsons (1989) when he visited Fox’s studio for a completely unrelated appointment. He voiced the United Kingdom’s Prime Minister (patterned from Hugh Grant’s character in Love Actually (2003)) and did an Alan Rickman impression to voice Snape for the Special Valentine Episode that aired February 2013.
  • He received one of his earliest reviews when he played Nick Bottom in Shakespeare’s comedy “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”. The review says “Cumberbatch’s ‘Bottom’ will be long remembered”.
  • Famous for his Alan Rickman impressions.
  • In 2005, he was nominated for a Laurence Olivier Award for Best Supporting Actor for playing Jørgen Tesman in Henrik Ibesen’s play entitled “Hedda Gabler”.
  • In 2012, he won a Laurence Olivier Award, London Evening Standard Award and Critics’ Circle Award for his performance in Danny Boyle’s stage production Frankenstein (2011) at the Royal National Theatre wherein he played Victor Frankenstein and his Creature in alternating nights.
  • Painted oil canvases and was a member of the rugby team while he was studying at Harrow.
  • During his gap year, before studying Drama in Manchester University, he spent some time volunteering as an English teacher at a Tibetan Buddhist Monastery in Darjeeling, India. The pupils were mostly Tibetans.
  • One of his first ever acting roles was playing Titania, Queen of the Fairies in Shakespeare’s comedy “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” when he was age 13.
  • Good friends with Jonny Lee Miller, with whom he shared the central roles of Victor Frankenstein and his Creature in Danny Boyle’s stage production Frankenstein (2011). Coincidentally, Miller was cast as Sherlock Holmes in Elementary (2012) and Cumberbatch has been playing the legendary detective in Sherlock (2010) since July 2010.
  • Lost a notable amount of weight for his role as Sherlock Holmes, his goal being to portray Holmes as a character with such high intelligence that it manifests itself in a physical, “mind-over-matter” sort of way.
  • Is a huge fan of Robert Downey Jr. with whom he shares the iconic role of Sherlock Holmes.
  • His character Sherlock Holmes’ warm relationship with Mrs. Hudson is influenced by Cumberbatch’s own real-life relationship with Una Stubbs, as she is good friends with his mother and she has seen him grow up.
  • Good friends with Keira Knightley, James McAvoy, Tom Hardy, Matthew Goode and Zachary Quinto.
  • He experienced a terrifying carjacking in South Africa while filming To the Ends of the Earth (2005). He wrote about the experience in an article for The Prince’s Trust for which he is ambassador.
  • Attended Harrow, one of the oldest, most-respected and expensive all-male boarding schools in the United Kingdom.
  • Son of actor Timothy Carlton and actress Wanda Ventham.
  • Met Professor Stephen Hawking twice before filming Hawking (2004) to prepare for the role. He then subsequently provided the voice of the physicist in “Into the Universe with Stephen Hawking” in 2010 and “Stephen Hawking’s Grand Design” in 2012 which both aired in Discovery Channel.
  • Received his Master’s degree in Classical Acting for the Professional Theatre at the prestigious London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA), United Kingdom’s oldest drama school.

Benedict Timothy Carlton Cumberbatch Filmography

Title Year Status Character Role
How the Grinch Stole Christmas 2018 announced Grinch (voice) Actor
Jungle Book 2018 post-production Shere Khan Actor
Avengers: Infinity War 2018 filming Dr. Stephen Strange Actor
Magik 2018 announced Lewis (voice) Actor
Thor: Ragnarok 2017 post-production Dr. Stephen Strange Actor
The Current War 2017 filming Thomas Edison Actor
Rogue Male announced Actor
Sherlock 2010-2017 TV Series Sherlock Holmes Actor
Doctor Strange 2016 Dr. Stephen Strange Actor
The Hollow Crown 2016 TV Series Richard III Actor
Zoolander 2 2016 All Actor
Hamlet 2015 TV Movie Hamlet – Prince of Denmark Actor
Black Mass 2015 Billy Bulger Actor
9 Kisses 2014 Short Man at Costume Party Actor
The Colbert Report 2014 TV Series Smaug Actor
The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies 2014 Smaug
Necromancer (voice)
Actor
Penguins of Madagascar 2014 Classified (voice) Actor
The Imitation Game 2014 Alan Turing Actor
Family Guy: The Quest for Stuff 2014 Video Game Benedict Cumberbatch (voice) Actor
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug 2013 Smaug
Necromancer (voice)
Actor
Fifty Years on Stage 2013 TV Movie Rosencrantz Actor
Little Favour 2013 Short Wallace Actor
August: Osage County 2013 Little Charles Aiken Actor
The Fifth Estate 2013 Julian Assange Actor
12 Years a Slave 2013 Ford Actor
Star Trek Into Darkness 2013 Khan Actor
The Simpsons 2013 TV Series Severus Snape / Prime Minister Actor
How to Behave 2012 Short Humphrey Bogart Actor
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey 2012 Necromancer Actor
Girlfriend in a Coma 2012 Documentary Dante (voice) Actor
Parade’s End 2012 TV Mini-Series Christopher Tietjens Actor
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy: Deleted Scenes 2012 Video short Peter Guillam Actor
Wreckers 2011 David Actor
War Horse 2011 Maj. Jamie Stewart Actor
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy 2011 Peter Guillam Actor
Curiosity 2011 TV Series documentary Narrator Actor
Frankenstein 2011 TV Movie The Creature
Victor Frankenstein
Actor
The Whistleblower 2010 Nick Kaufman Actor
Third Star 2010 James Actor
Painted with Words 2010 TV Movie Vincent Van Gogh Actor
Four Lions 2010 Negotiator Actor
Small Island 2009 TV Movie Bernard Actor
Creation 2009/I Joseph Hooker Actor
Burlesque Fairytales 2009 Henry Clark Actor
Agatha Christie’s Marple 2008 TV Series Luke Fitzwilliam Actor
The Last Enemy 2008 TV Mini-Series Stephen Ezard Actor
The Other Boleyn Girl 2008 William Carey Actor
Stuart: A Life Backwards 2007 TV Movie Alexander Masters Actor
Atonement 2007 Paul Marshall Actor
Inseparable 2007 Short Joe / Charlie Actor
Amazing Grace 2006 William Pitt Actor
Starter for 10 2006 Patrick Watts Actor
Broken News 2005 TV Series Will Parker Actor
To the Ends of the Earth 2005 TV Mini-Series Edmund Talbot Actor
Nathan Barley 2005 TV Series Robin Actor
Hawking 2004 TV Movie Stephen Hawking Actor
Heartbeat 1998-2004 TV Series Toby Fisher / Charles / Party Guest Actor
Dunkirk 2004 TV Movie documentary Lt Jimmy Langley Actor
Fortysomething 2003 TV Series Rory Slippery Actor
MI-5 2003 TV Series Jim North Actor
Cambridge Spies 2003 TV Mini-Series Edward Hand Actor
To Kill a King 2003 Royalist Actor
Hills Like White Elephants 2002 Short The Man Actor
Silent Witness 2002 TV Series Warren Reid Actor
Tipping the Velvet 2002 TV Mini-Series Freddy Actor
Fields of Gold 2002 TV Movie Jeremy Actor
Rogue Male producer announced Producer
Little Favour 2013 Short executive producer / producer Producer
The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon 2016 TV Series performer – 1 episode Soundtrack
August: Osage County 2013 performer: “Can’t Keep It Inside” Soundtrack
Doctor Strange 2016 facial motion capture: Dormammu – uncredited Miscellaneous
Into the Universe with Stephen Hawking 2010 TV Mini-Series documentary voice over – 1 episode Miscellaneous
Live Boxing 2016 TV Series Himself – Spectator Self
Film ’72 2014-2015 TV Series Himself – Interviewee Self
Today 2015 TV Series Himself Self
Today at Wimbledon 2015 TV Series Himself – Spectator Self
Red Nose Day 2015 TV Special Himself Self
The 87th Annual Academy Awards 2015 TV Special Himself – Presenter: Best Film Editing and Nominee: Best Actor in a Leading Role Self
The EE British Academy Film Awards 2015 TV Special documentary Himself Self
Rencontres de cinéma 2015 TV Series Himself Self
The 21st Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards 2015 TV Special Himself – Nominee Self
Tavis Smiley 2015 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
CBS This Morning 2015 TV Series Himself Self
BBC News 8pm Summary 2015 TV Series short Himself – Actor Self
Ellen: The Ellen DeGeneres Show 2015 TV Series Himself Self
72nd Golden Globe Awards 2015 TV Special Himself – Presenter / Nominee Self
E! Live from the Red Carpet 2014-2015 TV Series Himself Self
Hollywood Sessions 2014 TV Series Himself Self
The Hollywood Reporter Roundtables 2014 TV Series Himself Self
Variety Studio: Actors on Actors 2014 TV Series Himself Self
The 8th Annual CNN Heroes: An All-Star Tribute 2014 TV Movie documentary Himself – Presenter Self
Fox and Friends 2014 TV Series Himself Self
Special Look 2014 TV Series Himself Self
World Premiere 2014 TV Series Himself Self
The Daily Show 2014 TV Series Himself Self
Breakthrough Prize 2014 2014 TV Movie Himself – Presenter Self
Hollywood Film Awards 2014 TV Special Himself Self
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug – Summoning Smaug: Last of the Fire-Drakes 2014 Video documentary Himself Self
The 66th Primetime Emmy Awards 2014 TV Special Himself – Winner: Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie (credit only) Self
Good Morning America Weekend Edition 2014 TV Series Himself Self
Cristiano Ronaldo: World at His Feet 2014 Documentary Narrator (voice) Self
Unlocking Sherlock 2014 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
2014 MTV Movie Awards 2014 TV Special Himself – Nominee Self
Formula 1: BBC Sport 2014 TV Series Himself Self
2014 Laureus World Sports Awards 2014 TV Special Himself – Host Self
12 Years a Slave: A Historical Portrait 2014 Video documentary Himself Self
The 86th Annual Academy Awards 2014 TV Special Himself – Presenter: Production Design Self
Transparency: Inside the Fifth Estate 2014 Video documentary Himself Self
National Television Awards 2014 TV Special Himself Self
20th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards 2014 TV Special Himself – Presenter (uncredited) Self
Timeshift 2014 TV Series documentary Himself – Actor, Sherlock Self
Janela Indiscreta 2013 TV Series Himself Self
Conan 2013 TV Series Himself Self
Katie 2013 TV Series Himself Self
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon 2013 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The 65th Primetime Emmy Awards 2013 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or Movie Self
Jerusalem 2013 Documentary Narrator (voice) Self
Star Trek Into Darkness: Brawl by the Bay 2013 Video documentary short Himself Self
Star Trek Into Darkness: Introducing the Villain 2013 Video documentary short Himself Self
Star Trek Into Darkness: Ship to Ship 2013 Video documentary short Himself Self
Star Trek Into Darkness: The Enemy of My Enemy 2013 Video documentary short Himself Self
Star Trek into Darkness: The Voyage Begins… Again 2013 Video documentary short Himself Self
Star Trek into Darkness: Vengeance is Coming 2013 Video documentary short Himself Self
Top Gear 2013 TV Series Himself – Special Guest Self
Hawking 2013 Documentary Himself – Actor Self
Alaska y Mario 2013 TV Series Himself Self
Big Morning Buzz Live 2012-2013 TV Series Himself Self
Late Show with David Letterman 2013 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Daybreak 2013 TV Series Himself Self
Parade’s End: Featurette 2013 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
You wa nani shi ni Nippon e? 2013 TV Series Himself Self
70th Golden Globe Awards 2013 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Actor in a Mini-Series or TV-Movie Self
WWI’s Tunnels of Death: The Big Dig 2012 TV Series documentary Narrator (2012) Self
Frankenstein: A Modern Myth 2012 TV Movie documentary Himself
Frankenstein
The Monster
Self
Stephen Hawking’s Grand Design 2012 TV Mini-Series documentary Narrator Self
The 64th Primetime Emmy Awards 2012 TV Special Himself – Nominated: Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie Self
The One Show 2010-2012 TV Series Himself – Guest / Himself Self
The Real Sherlock Holmes 2012 TV Movie documentary Himself / Sherlock Holmes Self
Sherlock Uncovered 2012 TV Movie Himself / Sherlock Holmes Self
Arena 2012 TV Series documentary Himself – Interviewee / Readings Self
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy: UK Premiere Featurette 2012 Video documentary short Himself Self
MSN Exclusives 2012 TV Series Himself Self
Up Close with Carrie Keagan 2007-2011 TV Series Himself Self
The Jonathan Ross Show 2011 TV Series Himself Self
Alan Carr: Chatty Man 2011 TV Series Himself Self
Have I Got News for You 2010 TV Series Himself – Guest Presenter Self
Into the Universe with Stephen Hawking 2010 TV Mini-Series documentary Stephen Hawking Self
Wild Pacific 2009 TV Mini-Series documentary Narrator Self
Prince Charles’ Other Mistress 2008 TV Movie documentary Narrator (voice) Self
On Set: Making Boleyn 2008 Video short Himself Self
To Be a Lady 2008 Video short Himself Self
Picture This 2008 TV Series documentary Narrator Self
How Sweet the Sound: The Story of Amazing Grace 2007 Video documentary short Himself Self
BBC Look North: Yorkshire and North Midlands 2007 TV Series Himself Self
University Challenge: The Story So Far 2006 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The Man Who Predicted 9/11 2005 TV Movie documentary Narrator (voice) Self
Walk with Me 2017/I Documentary Narrator Self
Breakfast 2005-2016 TV Series Himself – Actor / Himself Self
Live with Kelly and Michael 2014-2016 TV Series Himself / Himself – The Imitation Game Self
The Late Late Show with James Corden 2016 TV Series Himself Self
Made in Hollywood 2013-2016 TV Series Himself Self
Saturday Night Live 2016 TV Series Himself – Host / Various Self
The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon 2014-2016 TV Series Himself / Detective Rory Self
WGN Morning News 2016 TV Series Himself Self
Good Morning America 2013-2016 TV Series Himself – Guest / Himself – Sherlock Self
Circus Halligalli 2016 TV Series Himself Self
The Graham Norton Show 2013-2016 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The Insider 2016 TV Series Himself Self
Entertainment Tonight 2014-2016 TV Series Himself Self
Extra 2016 TV Series Himself Self
Jimmy Kimmel Live! 2013-2016 TV Series Himself / Himself – Mean Tweets Reader / Himself – Guest Self
Naples ’44 2016 Documentary Norman Lewis (voice) Self
The South Bank Show 2016 TV Series documentary Self
Wimbledon 2015-2016 TV Series Himself – Spectator Self
Celebrity Style Story 2016 TV Series Himself Self
The Zoolander Legacy 2016 Video documentary short Himself Self
Shakespeare Live! From the RSC 2016 TV Movie Himself – Performer Self
Black Mass: Deepest Cover, Darkest Crime 2016 Video documentary short Himself Self
SSDT – Anno 2060 2017 TV Series Consulant Assenge Archive Footage
Good Morning Britain 2016 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Lorraine 2016 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Extra 2016 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon 2015 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
The Third Annual ‘On Cinema’ Oscar Special 2015 Video Himself (uncredited) Archive Footage
Entertainment Tonight 2014-2015 TV Series Himself / Himself – The Imitation Game Archive Footage
Lennon or McCartney 2014 Documentary short Himself Archive Footage
Lego the Hobbit: The Video Game 2014 Video Game Smaug
Necromancer
Archive Footage
The Graham Norton Show 2013-2014 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
The Big Fat Quiz of the Year 2012 TV Special Sherlock Holmes (uncredited) Archive Footage
Vlogbrothers 2012 TV Series documentary Sherlock Holmes Archive Footage
The Big Fat Quiz of the Year 2011 TV Special Sherlock Holmes (uncredited) Archive Footage
Almost Famous IV 2011 TV Movie documentary Heartbeat Archive Footage
Have I Got News for You 2010 TV Series Himself – Guest Presenter Archive Footage

Benedict Timothy Carlton Cumberbatch Awards

Year Award Ceremony Nomination Movie Category
2016 Audience Award SESC Film Festival, Brazil Best Foreign Actor (Melhor Ator Estrangeiro) The Imitation Game (2014) Won
2015 IFTA Award Irish Film and Television Awards Best International Actor The Imitation Game (2014) Won
2015 Ensemble Cast Award Palm Springs International Film Festival The Imitation Game (2014) Won
2014 TV Quick Award TV Quick Awards, UK Best Actor Sherlock (2010) Won
2014 Primetime Emmy Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie Sherlock (2010) Won
2014 BTVA People’s Choice Voice Acting Award Behind the Voice Actors Awards Breakthrough Voice Actor of the Year Won
2014 BTVA People’s Choice Voice Acting Award Behind the Voice Actors Awards Best Male Lead Vocal Performance in a Feature Film The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (2013) Won
2014 Variety Award British Independent Film Awards Won
2014 EuroCinema Hawai’i Award Hawaii International Film Festival Best Actor The Imitation Game (2014) Won
2014 Hollywood Film Award Hollywood Film Awards Actor of the Year The Imitation Game (2014) Won
2014 National Television Award National Television Awards, UK Radio Times – TV Detective Sherlock (2010) Won
2013 Britannia Award BAFTA/LA Britannia Awards British Artist of the Year Star Trek Into Darkness (2013) Won
2013 BFCC Award Black Film Critics Circle Awards Best Ensemble 12 Years a Slave (2013) Won
2013 Broadcasting Press Guild Award Broadcasting Press Guild Awards Best Actor Sherlock (2010) Won
2013 Capri Ensemble Cast Award Capri, Hollywood August: Osage County (2013) Won
2013 Hollywood Film Award Hollywood Film Awards Ensemble of the Year August: Osage County (2013) Won
2013 NFCS Award Nevada Film Critics Society Best Ensemble Cast August: Osage County (2013) Won
2012 TV Quick Award TV Quick Awards, UK Best Actor Sherlock (2010) Won
2012 COFCA Award Central Ohio Film Critics Association Best Ensemble Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (2011) Won
2012 Dagger Crime Thriller Awards, UK Best Leading Actor Sherlock (2010) Won
2012 Critics’ Choice TV Award Critics Choice Television Awards Best Actor in a Movie/Miniseries Sherlock (2010) Won
2012 Gold Derby TV Award Gold Derby Awards TV Movie/Mini Lead Actor Sherlock (2010) Won
2012 IGN Award IGN Summer Movie Awards Best TV Actor Sherlock (2010) Won
2012 OFTA Television Award Online Film & Television Association Best Actor in a Motion Picture or Miniseries Sherlock (2010) Won
2012 Satellite Award Satellite Awards Best Actor in a Miniseries or a Motion Picture Made for Television Sherlock (2010) Won
2011 Broadcasting Press Guild Award Broadcasting Press Guild Awards Best Actor Sherlock (2010) Won
2010 Dagger Crime Thriller Awards, UK Best Leading Actor Sherlock (2010) Won
2006 Golden Nymph Monte-Carlo TV Festival Mini-Series – Best Performance by an Actor To the Ends of the Earth (2005) Won
2004 Golden Nymph Monte-Carlo TV Festival Television Films – Best Performance by an Actor Hawking (2004) Won
2016 Audience Award SESC Film Festival, Brazil Best Foreign Actor (Melhor Ator Estrangeiro) The Imitation Game (2014) Nominated
2015 IFTA Award Irish Film and Television Awards Best International Actor The Imitation Game (2014) Nominated
2015 Ensemble Cast Award Palm Springs International Film Festival The Imitation Game (2014) Nominated
2014 TV Quick Award TV Quick Awards, UK Best Actor Sherlock (2010) Nominated
2014 Primetime Emmy Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie Sherlock (2010) Nominated
2014 BTVA People’s Choice Voice Acting Award Behind the Voice Actors Awards Breakthrough Voice Actor of the Year Nominated
2014 BTVA People’s Choice Voice Acting Award Behind the Voice Actors Awards Best Male Lead Vocal Performance in a Feature Film The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (2013) Nominated
2014 Variety Award British Independent Film Awards Nominated
2014 EuroCinema Hawai’i Award Hawaii International Film Festival Best Actor The Imitation Game (2014) Nominated
2014 Hollywood Film Award Hollywood Film Awards Actor of the Year The Imitation Game (2014) Nominated
2014 National Television Award National Television Awards, UK Radio Times – TV Detective Sherlock (2010) Nominated
2013 Britannia Award BAFTA/LA Britannia Awards British Artist of the Year Star Trek Into Darkness (2013) Nominated
2013 BFCC Award Black Film Critics Circle Awards Best Ensemble 12 Years a Slave (2013) Nominated
2013 Broadcasting Press Guild Award Broadcasting Press Guild Awards Best Actor Sherlock (2010) Nominated
2013 Capri Ensemble Cast Award Capri, Hollywood August: Osage County (2013) Nominated
2013 Hollywood Film Award Hollywood Film Awards Ensemble of the Year August: Osage County (2013) Nominated
2013 NFCS Award Nevada Film Critics Society Best Ensemble Cast August: Osage County (2013) Nominated
2012 TV Quick Award TV Quick Awards, UK Best Actor Sherlock (2010) Nominated
2012 COFCA Award Central Ohio Film Critics Association Best Ensemble Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (2011) Nominated
2012 Dagger Crime Thriller Awards, UK Best Leading Actor Sherlock (2010) Nominated
2012 Critics’ Choice TV Award Critics Choice Television Awards Best Actor in a Movie/Miniseries Sherlock (2010) Nominated
2012 Gold Derby TV Award Gold Derby Awards TV Movie/Mini Lead Actor Sherlock (2010) Nominated
2012 IGN Award IGN Summer Movie Awards Best TV Actor Sherlock (2010) Nominated
2012 OFTA Television Award Online Film & Television Association Best Actor in a Motion Picture or Miniseries Sherlock (2010) Nominated
2012 Satellite Award Satellite Awards Best Actor in a Miniseries or a Motion Picture Made for Television Sherlock (2010) Nominated
2011 Broadcasting Press Guild Award Broadcasting Press Guild Awards Best Actor Sherlock (2010) Nominated
2010 Dagger Crime Thriller Awards, UK Best Leading Actor Sherlock (2010) Nominated
2006 Golden Nymph Monte-Carlo TV Festival Mini-Series – Best Performance by an Actor To the Ends of the Earth (2005) Nominated
2004 Golden Nymph Monte-Carlo TV Festival Television Films – Best Performance by an Actor Hawking (2004) Nominated