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Josh O'Connor


Josh O'Connor
O'Connor in 2025
Joshua Mathias O'Connor (1990-05-20) 20 May 1990Southampton, England
Bristol Old Vic Theatre School (BA)
Actor
2012–present
John Bunting (grandfather)Madeleine Bunting (aunt)

Joshua Mathias O'Connor (born 20 May 1990) is an English actor. From 2016 to 2019 he had a major role portraying Larry Durrell in ITV's The Durrells. He had his breakthrough playing the lead role of a closeted sheep farmer in Francis Lee's romantic drama God's Own Country (2017), for which he won the BIFA Award for Best Actor.

O'Connor gained wider recognition for his portrayal of Charles, Prince of Wales, in the Netflix drama series The Crown (2019–2020), winning the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series for the role. He has since starred in the period drama Emma (2020), the crime drama La chimera (2023), the romantic sports film Challengers (2024), heist drama The Mastermind (2025), and murder mystery Wake Up Dead Man (2025).

O'Connor was born to John, a teacher, and Emily, a midwife. He grew up in Newbury until he was five, when his family moved to Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, where he was brought up. He is the middle son in a family of three boys. He grew up Catholic.

O'Connor's grandfather was sculptor John Bunting, his grandmother was a ceramicist, and his maternal aunt is British writer and commentator Madeleine Bunting. His ancestry is Irish, English, Scottish and, through his matrilineal great-grandmother, Ashkenazi and Sephardi Jewish.

He wanted to be a professional artist when he was younger, but he did not think he was good enough, so he switched to rugby and then discovered acting. His first major role was at age seven as the scarecrow in a school production of The Wizard of Oz, followed by a minor role in a school production of Bugsy Malone. O'Connor went to a private co-ed school, St Edward's School, Cheltenham, during the week and spent a lot of time on weekends at the Axiom, a local arts centre. He grew up in a Labour-supporting household, but he traces his political awakening to the arts centre's closure when he was eleven, feeling the deep sense of loss in the community. He is proud to have grown up outside London, in a town with a strong tradition of regional theatre.

The production of Bugsy Malone at St Edward's also featured his classmate Tahliah Barnett, who later became a singer under the stage name FKA Twigs. O'Connor has cited his school's drama programme as having helped him live with his dyslexia for many years, especially when preparing for his GCSEs. He then trained at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, from which he graduated in 2011, and then moved to London. During his third year of theatre school, he signed with an agent.

O'Connor in 2015

In 2012, O'Connor first appeared on television as Charlie Stephenson in Lewis and on film as a zombie in The Eschatrilogy: Book of the Dead. In 2013, he appeared in Doctor Who as Piotr, in The Magnificent Eleven as Andy, in Law & Order: UK as Rob Fellows, in The Wiper Times as Dodd and in London Irish as James.

On stage in 2013, he was cast as Ben Fowles in his first professional play, Farragut North by Beau Willimon at the Southwark Playhouse. The Independent remarked: "O’Connor delivers a comic gem of a performance." This led to a role as young returning soldier Hugh in Peter Gill's 2014 play Versailles at the Donmar Warehouse in Covent Garden, London.

In the same year, he played Max in Hide and Seek, James in Peaky Blinders and PC Bobby Grace in Ripper Street. After a year and a half of auditioning, he landed the role of a Bullingdon toff named Ed in The Riot Club (2014), Lone Scherfig's adaptation of Laura Wade's play Posh, appearing alongside up-and-coming British actors Sam Claflin, Douglas Booth, Max Irons, Freddie Fox, Ben Schnetzer and Olly Alexander.

In 2015, he played Leo Beresford in Father Brown, a ballroom palace guard in Cinderella and Charlie in the short film Holding on for a Good Time. He starred opposite his then-girlfriend Hannah Murray in Bridgend, Jeppe Rønde's dark, fictional portrayal of a real town in Wales with an alarmingly high teen suicide rate. O'Connor played Rich in the biographical drama film The Program about the cyclist Lance Armstrong, directed by Stephen Frears.

He also played in the Royal Shakespeare Company's production of Thomas Dekker's The Shoemaker's Holiday as Rowland Lacy and Tom Morton-Smith's Oppenheimer as Luis Alvarez at the Swan Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon. The following year, he took over the role of Donaghy in Florence Foster Jenkins, starring Meryl Streep and Hugh Grant, and starred as Donald in the short film Best Man. From 2016 to 2019, he played the role of Lawrence "Larry" Durrell in the ITV comedy-drama The Durrells.

In 2017, he starred as the young sheep farmer Johnny Saxby in the British drama film God's Own Country directed by Francis Lee. In preparation for his role, he worked with a Yorkshire farmer, labouring in the fields in between takes to learn the proper techniques and get the right physicality, and eventually birthed over 150 lambs. The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival to critical acclaim. For his performance, he received multiple recognitions including the British Independent Film Award for Best Actor and the Empire Award for Best Male Newcomer, and was nominated for the BAFTA Rising Star Award.

In 2018, O'Connor starred as Peter in the segment The Colour of His Hair in Boys on film 18: Heroes, and starred alongside Laia Costa in Harry Wootliff's directorial debut Only You, which premiered in competition at the London Film Festival. For his performance, he received his second British Independent Film Award for Best Actor. In 2019, he portrayed Marius Pontmercy in the British television adaptation of Victor Hugo's Les Misérables. He also starred as Jamie in Hope Gap, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, earning the Best Actor award at the Barcelona-Sant Jordi International Film Festival. It had a limited release in theaters, before dropping digitally in May 2020.

In the same year, O'Connor began portraying Charles, Prince of Wales, in Season 3 of the Netflix historical drama The Crown (2019), starring alongside Olivia Colman, Tobias Menzies and Helena Bonham Carter. In 2020, he was nominated for a British Academy Television Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role, while the cast won the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series. He revealed that the role did not initially interest him and that he had to be persuaded to audition. Creator Peter Morgan asked him to read a scene in which Charles compares himself to a character in Saul Bellow's 1944 novel Dangling Man, in which the character waits to be drafted into war because the war will give his life meaning. It was the "aimlessness and purposelessness of Charles's life as heir to the throne" that ultimately sparked O'Connor's interest in the character.

O'Connor at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival

He reprised the role for Season 4 of The Crown, and admitted that his character is "horrible" in that season. Still, he said he understood the source of Charles' discontent, saying that it all boils down to the fact that Charles has spent his entire life being overlooked. O'Connor's performance received universal acclaim and earned him the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series, the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Television Series Drama, and the Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Actor in a Drama Series, in addition to nominations for the British Academy Television Award for Best Actor and the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama Series. The cast also won its second Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series. He described the culmination of his journey as Prince Charles as "the experience of a lifetime."

O'Connor also played Mr. Elton in the period comedy-drama film Emma based on Jane Austen's 1815 novel of the same name. In 2021, he portrayed Romeo in the Royal National Theatre's television film adaptation of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. He also played Paul Sheringham in Mothering Sunday, which explores class divides and postwar survivor's guilt in 1924, starring alongside Olivia Colman and Colin Firth. In the same year, it was announced that he would be working with Francis Lee again on a horror film with themes of "class and queerness". O'Connor was seen in the drama film Lee, starring Kate Winslet, which is set during World War II and directed by Ellen Kuras. That film premiered at the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival. O'Connor also starred opposite Zendaya and Mike Faist in Challengers, directed by Luca Guadagnino. Initially due to premiere at the 80th Venice International Film Festival, the film was postponed and released in 2024, due to the 2023 writers' and actors' strike.

In 2024, it was announced that O'Connor had joined the cast of Wake Up Dead Man, the third installment of the Knives Out film series directed by Rian Johnson. The film was released on December 12, 2025. O'Connor also joined the cast of Disclosure Day, directed by Steven Spielberg, in November 2024, set to be released in the summer of 2026. O'Connor also starred opposite Paul Mescal in The History of Sound, a World War I love story film directed by Oliver Hermanus. It premiered at the 78th Cannes Film Festival and was released in September 2025 at the United States.

Francis Lee, director of God's Own Country, has described O'Connor as "one of those rare actors that is a real shape-shifter". O'Connor experimented with method acting for his role in God's Own Country. He described his experience for Interview magazine:

I had my own book of senses—paintings and drawings that I'd done and ideas I had. From there, I worked physically with Francis about how this guy would look. By the end of the film I was so skinny; I was gaunt. It was horrific. I was in character the whole way through. It was really lonely and hard. I don't think I'd do it again. You isolate yourself from all your friends.

The Crown creator Peter Morgan has compared O'Connor to former Barcelona midfielder Andrés Iniesta, a footballer with massive but unobtrusive skill. "I was drawn to his sensitivity and the fact that he was complex but likable," Morgan said on casting O'Connor as Prince Charles. Olivia Colman praised him for the tenderness he displayed on-screen, as well as his ability to inhabit the role: "Fragility, sparkle, strength, doubt: It’s all there in a second. Every scene we had together became my favorite scene."

O'Connor created the Waterlogged initiative to raise funds for Mind, a mental health charity working across England and Wales. Inspired by his mother who swam 60 times in her 60th year and by Roger Deakin's Waterlog, he attempted 30 swims around the UK and Ireland in his 30th year. In January 2020, he and Olivia Colman visited the Stars Appeal, which aims to enhance the patient experience at the Salisbury District Hospital. In December 2020, he and Emma Corrin offered their company for tea as part of a series of prize draws in support for War Child UK's Torn From Home appeal.

In March 2021, he starred in Loewe's campaign shot in the Baja California desert for the Eye/Loewe/Nature collection made with sustainable thinking and recycling ethos. It pledged 15 euros of every sale to Fundación Global Nature, a charity for the protection of wildlife species in danger of extinction.

O'Connor lived in a Victorian house in Shoreditch and briefly relocated to New York for "a spell" with his former partner before moving back to Gloucestershire in 2023, where he bought a house near the town of Stroud. In his spare time, O'Connor enjoys reading, drawing, camping, swimming, embroidering, making ceramics and gardening. As of 2025, he is dating the Irish actress Alison Oliver.

O'Connor is a supporter of the Labour Party, campaigned for Jeremy Corbyn in the 2019 general election, and has described himself as a "liberal left-winger". He said of his views on the monarchy: "I'm a republican, although not in any kind of fist-waving, campaigning way. I was always mostly uninterested in them." In an interview with The New York Times in 2020 he said: "I think [Queen Elizabeth II] is an extraordinary woman. Time after time, lots of men have failed, and this one woman in power has been consistent and remained dutiful and generally apolitical. In that sense, I have huge respect for her — and for Charles [who] is another level of someone who's literally been waiting his entire life for this moment that still hasn't come."

In September 2025, O'Connor signed an open pledge with Film Workers for Palestine pledging not to work with Israeli film institutions "that are implicated in genocide and apartheid against the Palestinian people."

Column 1Column 2
Denotes films that have not yet been released
YearTitleRoleNotesRef.
2012The Eschatrilogy: Book of the DeadZombie
2013The Magnificent ElevenAndy
2014Hide and SeekMax
The Riot ClubEd
2015BridgendJamie
CinderellaBallroom Palace Guard
The ProgramRich
2016Florence Foster JenkinsDonaghy
2017God's Own CountryJohnny Saxby
2018Only YouJake
2019Hope GapJamie
2020EmmaMr. Elton
2021Mothering SundayPaul Sheringham
2022AishaConor Healy
2023La chimeraArthur
LeeAntony Penrose
Bonus TrackJonnoAlso story writer
2024ChallengersPatrick Zweig
2025RebuildingThomas "Dusty" Fraser Jr.
The History of SoundDavid White
The MastermindJames Blaine "J.B." Mooney
Wake Up Dead ManRev. Jud Duplenticy
2026Disclosure Day †Daniel KellnerPost-production
TBAJack of Spades †TBAPost-production
TBAThe Three Incestuous Sisters †KyoFilming
YearTitleRoleNotesRef.
2012LewisCharlie StephensonEpisode: "Generation of Vipers"
2013Doctor WhoPiotrEpisode: "Cold War"
Law & Order: UKRob FellowsEpisode: "Dependent"
The Wipers TimesDoddTelevision film
London IrishJamesEpisode: "1.1"
2014Peaky BlindersJames3 episodes
Ripper StreetPC Bobby Grace8 episodes
2015Father BrownLeo BeresfordEpisode: "The Curse of Amenhotep"
2016–2019The DurrellsLawrence Durrell26 episodes
2019Les MisérablesMarius Pontmercy3 episodes
2019–2020The CrownCharles, Prince of WalesMain role (Seasons 3–4);13 episodes
2021Romeo and JulietRomeoFilmed version of the 2021 play
2025Saturday Night LiveHimself (host)Episode "Josh O'Connor/Lily Allen"
YearTitleRoleDirectorPlaywrightTheatreRef.
2013Farragut NorthBen FowlesGuy UnsworthBeau WillimonSouthwark Playhouse
2014VersaillesHugh SkidmorePeter GillPeter GillDonmar Warehouse
2015The Shoemaker's HolidayRowland LacyPhilip BreenThomas DekkerSwan Theatre
OppenheimerLuis Walter AlvarezAngus JacksonTom Morton-SmithSwan Theatre, Vaudeville Theatre
2021Romeo and JulietRomeoSimon GodwinWilliam ShakespeareFilmed at the Royal National Theatre
AwardYearCategoryNominated workResultRef.
2026Best Supporting Actor - Comedy or MusicalWake Up Dead ManNominated
2024Best ActorChallengersNominated
2020Best ActorHope GapWon
2018BAFTA Rising Star Award—.mw-parser-output .sr-only{border:0;clip:rect(0,0,0,0);clip-path:polygon(0px 0px,0px 0px,0px 0px);height:1px;margin:-1px;overflow:hidden;padding:0;position:absolute;width:1px;white-space:nowrap}N/aNominated
2020Best Supporting ActorThe CrownNominated
2021Best ActorNominated
2017Best ActorGod's Own CountryWon
2019Only YouWon
2017Best ActorGod's Own CountryWon
2018Nominated
Breakthrough of the Year—N/aNominated
2018Best Male NewcomerGod's Own CountryWon
2023European ActorLa chimeraNominated
2024Best Actor in a Leading RoleNominated
2021Best Actor in a Drama SeriesThe CrownWon
2021Best Actor – Television Series DramaWon
2025Outstanding Lead PerformanceThe MastermindNominated
2021Best Actor in a Streaming Series, DramaThe CrownWon
2018British/Irish Actor of the YearGod's Own CountryNominated
2024British/Irish Performer of the YearLa chimeraNominated
2021Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama SeriesThe CrownWon
2021Best Supporting Actor – Series, Miniseries or Television FilmNominated
2020Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble Cast in a Drama SeriesWon
2021Won
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama SeriesNominated
2017Best ActorGod's Own CountryWon
  • Josh O'Connor at IMDb
  • Josh O'Connor on Instagram
  • Josh O'Connor at Rotten Tomatoes
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