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Liam Cunningham

Irish actor (born 1961) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Liam Cunningham
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Liam Cunningham (born 2 June 1961) is an Irish actor. He is known for playing Davos Seaworth in the HBO epic-fantasy series Game of Thrones.[1]

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Cunningham has been nominated for the London Film Critics' Circle Award, the British Independent Film Award, has won two Irish Film & Television Awards, and shared a BAFTA with Michael Fassbender, for their crime-drama short film Pitch Black Heist. His film roles include War of the Buttons (1994), A Little Princess (1995), Jude (1996), Dog Soldiers (2002), The Crooked Man (2003), The Wind That Shakes the Barley (2006), Hunger (2008), The Escapist (2008), The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor (2008), Good Vibrations (2013), Let Us Prey (2014) and The Childhood of a Leader (2015). In 2020, he was listed at number 36 on The Irish Times list of Ireland's greatest film actors.[2]

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Early life

Cunningham was born in East Wall, which is an inner city area of the Northside of Dublin.[3] He grew up in Kilmore West with his three sisters and a brother. Cunningham left secondary school at 15 and pursued a career as an electrician.[4] In the 1980s, Cunningham moved to Zimbabwe for three years where he maintained electrical equipment at a safari park and trained Zimbabwean electricians.[5][6] After returning to Ireland, Cunningham became dissatisfied with his work as an electrician and decided to pursue his interest in acting. He attended acting classes and began to work in local theatre, including the Royal Shakespeare Company. He appeared in a production of Studs at The Tricycle Theatre in Kilburn, London.[7]

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Career

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Cunningham at the Game of Thrones exhibition in May 2013

Cunningham's debut film role came in Into the West (1992), where he played a police officer. His on-screen acting continued with roles in War of the Buttons (1994), and A Little Princess (1995),[8][9] before making his role as Phillotson in Jude (1996).[10] He continued with character roles in Falling for a Dancer (TV, 1998), RKO 281 (1999), Shooting the Past (TV, 1999), When the Sky Falls (2000) and Stranded (2002). Cunningham came to international prominence with his role as Captain Ryan in the critically acclaimed, independent horror film, Dog Soldiers (2002).[11]

Cunningham starred in well-received films such as The Wind That Shakes the Barley (2006) which won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival; Hunger; The Escapist (both 2008); The Guard; and Black Butterflies (both 2011). He also had roles in many high budget British and American films including The League of Gentlemen's Apocalypse (2005), The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor (2008), Harry Brown (2009), Clash of the Titans, Centurion (both 2010).[12] On television, he appeared as President Richard Tate in the BBC programme Outcasts.[13] Cunningham was producer Philip Segal’s first choice to portray the Eighth Doctor in the TV movie of Doctor Who (1996), but was vetoed by Fox executives.[14][15]

In 2012, Cunningham joined the main cast for the second season of HBO's Game of Thrones portraying former smuggler Davos Seaworth,[16] and in 2013 he starred in The Numbers Station alongside John Cusack.[17] He was also cast in season 5 of the BBC series Merlin as a sorcerer.[18] He featured in the music video for "High Hopes" by Irish alternative rock band Kodaline from their EP The High Hopes.[19] In April 2013, he appeared in the seventh series of the BBC One series Doctor Who in the episode "Cold War", where he played Captain Zhukov, the commander of a Russian submarine in 1983 facing one of the Ice Warriors.[20] In 2015, he played the father in Brady Corbet's directorial debut film, The Childhood of a Leader.[21]

In February 2020, it was announced that Cunningham would voice Man-At-Arms in the Netflix animated series Masters of the Universe: Revelation.[22]

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Personal life

Cunningham lives in Dublin with his wife Colette, with whom he has three children.[23]

Political views and activism

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In 2025, Cunningham expressed his belief that high-profile individuals in society have a responsibility to speak out on significant political issues.[24] However, Cunningham also noted he felt it was the role of elected politicians to fix problems in society, not celebrities.[24]

Cunningham is opposed to private healthcare. In 2020, he stated "I don't have private health insurance. I never have had it because nobody should. It would be very easy to start a national health system here. Just make it illegal for TDs to have private health insurance, and we'd have a fucking great health service here very quickly".[25]

Cunningham endorsed the Trotskyist political alliance Solidarity–People Before Profit in the 2020 Irish general election.[26]

In 2020 Cunningham criticised the Irish government's housing policy, stating "The government are a bunch of fucking idiots who can't even plan to allow young people to afford their own houses".[25] In 2022, Cunningham joined the "Raise the Roof" campaign, led by a coalition of left-wing Irish political parties and trade unions, which called on the government to act faster on housing.[27]

In 2024, Cunningham stated he had been involved in pro-Palestinian campaigns for "30 to 40 years".[28] In 2015, Cunningham was one of over 100 artists who signed a letter to The Guardian announcing support for a cultural boycott of Israel.[29] In 2023, he was one of over two thousand to sign an Artists for Palestine letter calling for a ceasefire and accusing western governments of "not only tolerating war crimes but aiding and abetting them."[30]

In June 2025, several outlets[which?] erroneously reported that Cunningham had joined the June 2025 Gaza Freedom Flotilla aboard the humanitarian aid ship Madleen, which departed from Sicily en route to the Gaza Strip; however, he was not onboard.[31][32] It was also in June 2025 that Cunningham appeared at a People before Profit press event and criticised the Irish Government’s approach to the Gaza conflict, arguing that economic priorities are being placed ahead of humanitarian concerns. Cunningham called for stronger action, including passing the Occupied Territories Bill with meaningful provisions, and ending trade with Israel.[33] While at the event, Cunningham also endorsed a campaign which called on the Irish government to retain the policies of Irish neutrality and the triple lock policy for its defence forces.[34]

In August 2025, it was announced that Cunningham was due to take part in the Global Sumud Flotilla, which is planned to be the largest civilian-led attempt to break the Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip and to set sail between August and September 2025.[35][36]

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Filmography

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Liam Cunningham at DIFF 2024

Film

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Television

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Music videos

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Awards and nominations

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References

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