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// quick facts : Date of birth : 28 August 1968; Glasgow, Scotland, UK Height 5' 7" - Attended the Royal Scottish Academy of Music & Drama and graduated with a Diploma in Dramatic Arts. Sister: Margaret Parents: William and Mary (deceased) |
Billy
Boyd is recognizable to international audiences
as The Lord of the Rings trilogy's comic and
courageous hobbit Peregrin "Pippin"
Took. He is also one of Scotland's most prolific
theater actors, a skilled musician, and a
talented singer. Since graduating from the Royal
Scottish Academy of Music and Drama with a
diploma in Dramatic Arts, Boyd starred in
countless stage productions throughout the United
Kingdom. He plays drums, bass, and guitar, and
sings baritone and tenor. Boyd was discussing his
latest play at Scotland's celebrated Traverse
Theater, when he heard that he landed a coveted
and career-changing role in The Lord of the Rings
trilogy: one more great accomplishment in an
already brilliant career.
Boyd was born in 1968 in Glasgow, Scotland, where
he still lives today. He adored escaping to the
movies as a child. After multiple viewings of
George Lucas' Star Wars, Boyd reasoned that if he
could not truly be a Jedi Knight, he might as
well be an actor. At ten years old, he played the
Artful Dodger in his school's version of Oliver
Twist and was hooked. Through high school, he
performed in amateur productions at the local art
center and in annual Christmas shows. Yet, a
cynical school guidance counselor coerced Boyd to
temporarily abandon his ambition. After
graduation, he became an apprentice bookbinder at
a publishing house. Boyd bound books for six
years, making good friends with his colleagues
and spending his nights singing with a band on
the Glasgow pub circuit. When he realized that he
desired a change, he applied to acting school.
Boyd's audition tape marked the first time he
acted in six years; nevertheless he was accepted
into a selective three-year, acting-intensive
diploma program at the Royal Scottish Academy of
Music and Drama for the upcoming semester. In his
first term, he learned to perfect his voice and
movement. In his second, he performed in
Shakespeare, Chekov, comedies, musicals, and even
pantomimes. He earned walk-on roles on several
television shows, and even a speaking part on
Scotland's Taggart. Shortly before graduation,
St. Andrews Repertory hired Boyd for their
production of The Slab Boys, and to play the
title role in The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole. He
has acted steadily ever since, performing in
several Shakespearean and various modern plays,
including the U.K. tour of Irvine Welsh's
Trainspotting. He added four BBC Radio programs
to his credit, and appeared in his first
mainstream film, Jason Connery's Urban Ghost
Story (1998). He also displayed his singing and
drumming talents in the cult musical Julie and
the Cadillacs (1999), in which he played the
Scottish drummer of an English band during the
'60s.
In the fall of 1998, Boyd auditioned for The Lord
of the Rings trilogy, New Line Cinema's massive
three-film screen adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien's
books. After meeting with director Peter Jackson,
Boyd defeated over a hundred actors for the major
role of Pippin Took and flew to New Zealand for
the trilogy's 18-month shoot. Pippin is as brave
as he is foolish, and as stout-hearted as he is
afraid. The character appears in all three films
-- The Fellowship of the Ring (2001), The Two
Towers (2002), The Return of the King (2003) --
making Boyd an instant celebrity.
After completing The Lord of the Rings, Boyd
quickly rejoined the theater. Only one month
before the press junkets began for the trilogy's
first installment, he performed in the Traverse
Theater's rock & roll production The Ballad
of Crazy Paola. Besides being named as one of
Scotland's most eligible males, Boyd completed a
comedy screenplay with fellow hobbit Dominic
Monaghan, and launched his official website. ~
Aubry Anne D'Arminio, All Movie Guide