He appeared as Professor Marcus in the stage play The Ladykillers. He won a BAFTA Scotland award for Outstanding Contribution to Film & Television. Capaldi wrote a rock album titled St. Christopher. He is married to actress Elaine Collins and the pair have a child together.
Capaldi displayed an early talent for performance by putting on a puppet show in primary school. While in high school, he was a member of the Antonine Players theatre group, who performed at the Fort Theatre in Bishopbriggs. As an art student, he was the lead singer and guitarist in a punk rock band called the Dreamboys, whose drummer was future comedian Craig Ferguson.[12][13][14] The pair also performed a cabaret act together as Bing & Dean Hitler[15] and wrote an alternative pantomime of Sleeping Beauty.[16][17]
The first few years of Capaldi's acting career were marked by sporadic appearances, beginning in a 1974 performance of the play An Inspector Calls; his first onscreen appearance occurred in 1981 as Joe Edwards in the Charles Gormley film Living Apart Together.[18][19] Starting in 1983, Capaldi received many more roles, appearing in diverse mediums as movies, television, and theatre; he appeared as Beatles member John Lennon in a performance of John, Paul, George, Ringo ... and Bert at the Young Vic,[20] and the same year had a significant role in the film Local Hero as Danny Oldsen.[18]
Capaldi got his first starring role on television as Luke Wakefield, a strange man who imagines he has witnessed a crime, in the BBC drama series Mr Wakefield's Crusade in 1992.[29] He also featured prominently as the spy chief Mr. Vladimir in the drama miniseries The Secret Agent, also in 1992,[30] and the protagnist's nemesis Dr. Ronnie Pilfrey in the comedy-drama Fortysomething in 2003.[31] He has been part of the regular cast on many shows: the protagonist's uncle Rory in the television adaptation of Ian Banks's The Crow Road,[29] and the angel Islington in Neil Gaiman's BBC Two gothic fantasy serial Neverwhere, both in 1996.[32] His minor and guest roles have included: a TV producer named Tristan Campbell in two episodes of the sitcom The Vicar of Dibley in 1994,[33] and an appearance as a university professor in the sitcom Peep Show in 2004.[34]
He auditioned for the role of Benjamin Sisko in the sci-fi series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine in 1992, though he lost the role to Avery Brooks.[35] He was invited, in 1995, to audition for the role of the Eighth Doctor for the Doctor Whotelevision movie, though he declined stating: "I didn't go. I loved the show so much, and I didn't think I would get it, and I didn't want to just be part of a big cull of actors."[10]
These years saw Capaldi performing in various radio shows and audiobooks, with major roles including the German filmmaker and author Wim Wenders in Emotion Pictures, airing on BBC Radio 3 in 1996;[44] and Chief Petty Officer Grieves in the BBC Radio 7 (now BBC Radio 4 Extra) comedy series Our Brave Boys between 2002 and 2005.[45]
Before taking over the lead role in Doctor Who, Capaldi was best known for playing spin doctorMalcolm Tucker in the Armando Iannucci-written BBC sitcom The Thick of It, which he played from 2005 to 2012. Tucker is said to be largely, if loosely, based upon Tony Blair's right-hand man Alastair Campbell, although Capaldi has said that he based his performance more on Hollywood power players, such as the often abrasive Harvey Weinstein.[46] A film spin-off from The Thick of It titled In the Loop was released in 2009. Capaldi reprised his role for the movie.[47]
Other major roles during these years included: Dr Pete in the Scottish crime-drama series The Field of Blood in 2011, for which he received a BAFTA Scotland nomination in the TV actor category,[55] though he was beaten by his co-star Jayd Johnson;[56] and Randall Brown on the BBC Two drama The Hour in 2012, receiving a BAFTA nomination for the role.[57]
Capaldi wrote and presented A Portrait of Scotland, a documentary detailing 500 years' history of Scottish portrait painting in 2009;[66] and in 2012, Capaldi and Tony Roche co-wrote, directed and performed in The Cricklewood Greats, a mockumentary about a fictitious film studio, which tracks real developments and trends throughout the history of British cinema.[67] Capaldi voiced various roles during this period, all on BBC Radio 4, with the major roles including Alistair in the 2005–2006 situational comedy Baggage,[68] the Armourer in an adaption of Dr. No in 2008,[69] and one of the presenter Jim Tweedledee in the 2009–2010 satirical comedy The News at Bedtime.[70]
These years saw the rise of Capaldi to worldwide fame with his casting in the role of the Twelfth Doctor in the BBC science-fiction series Doctor Who, becoming the oldest actor since the first incarnation to star as the Doctor and the third oldest to portray the character, at the age of 56;[71] Capaldi stated that he had to seriously consider the increased level of visibility that would come with the part.[72] He had portrayed characters in Doctor Who before he was cast as the Doctor: Lobus Caecilius in the Doctor Who episode "The Fires of Pompeii". The following year he played civil servant John Frobisher in the third series of the Doctor Whospin-off, Torchwood.[73][74]
In August 2013 during a special event titled Doctor Who Live: The Next Doctor, Capaldi was revealed as the next Doctor, succeeding Matt Smith in the role,[80][81] and made his first appearance as the Doctor in cameos in the 2013 specials, first in the 50th anniversary special, "The Day of the Doctor", then the 2013 Christmas special, "The Time of the Doctor", taking over the role at the end of the episode.[82] Capaldi made his first regular in Doctor Who in the episode "Deep Breath" later that year, leading 40 episodes, consisting of three series and four specials during the next four years.[83] In 2015 he voiced the Doctor in crossover video game Lego Dimensions[84] In 2016, Capaldi reprised his role as the Twelfth Doctor in the Doctor Who spin-off programme Class, written by young-adult author Patrick Ness.[85]
Besides Doctor Who, he appeared as Paddington Bear's neighbour Mr Curry in the family comedy film Paddington in 2015 and reprised the role two years later film's sequel Paddington 2,[86] and as King Kinloch in Maleficent in deleted scenes.[87] He also appeared as himself in various short films and documentaries.[88][89]
On 30 January 2017, in an interview with BBC Radio 2, Capaldi confirmed that the tenth series would be his last.[90] His final episode was the Christmas special, "Twice Upon a Time", in which he was succeeded by actress Jodie Whittaker.[91][92] His performance as the Doctor was widely praised; with his Doctor being characterised as one who started out rude and grumpy, with a short fuse, but who grew and mellowed over time, into the perfect embodiment of kindness and love.[93][94]
Starting 2022 and 2024, he has been starring in the TV series The Devil's Hour and the Apple TV+ crime thriller series Criminal Record respectively, the latter of which he also produces.[104][105] Capaldi said that he was a fan of crime shows, but that often there is not much character development over the course of the show; therefore, they created a show where the plot changes the character and has a real impact on their life. As such, the show was characterised by Scott Roxborough of The Hollywood Reporter as "more interested in contemplating issues such as those of race, gender and other institutional disorders, in an ever increasing, politically polarized Britain."[78]
In addition, Capaldi made his return to theatre and directing: stage acting in a revival of Constellations in 2021, acting against Sheila Atim;[106] and directed a pilot for a TV series titled They F**k You Up, though it remained unsold, in 2022.[107]
Capaldi married Elaine Collins in Strathblane near his home city of Glasgow in 1991.[108] Together they have a daughter, and two grandchildren born in 2021 and 2023.[109][110] Capaldi and Collins live together in Muswell Hill, London.[111] Singer-songwriter Lewis Capaldi is his distant cousin,[112] and the two have worked together on one of the video versions of Lewis' "Someone You Loved". It was made in partnership with the charity organisation Live Life Give Life, in order to raise awareness for the issue of organ donation.[113]
In 2015, Capaldi alongside Cate Blanchett, Patrick Stewart, and Colin Firth supported the United Nations' refugee agency UNHCR to help raise awareness about the global refugee crisis.[115] He subsequently appeared with them and others in the video "What They Took With Them", which saw the actors reading a poem, inspired by primary accounts of refugees and part of UNHCR's #WithRefugees campaign, and which included a petition to governments to expand asylum and to provide further shelter, integrating job opportunities, and education.[116]
In October 2022, he voiced his support for Scottish independence. He told The Daily Telegraph: "It used not to be something I was particularly drawn to. I've lived in London for most of my life, and always loved Cardiff and Manchester and Belfast. But after the relentlessness of the past 12 years, everything we have been put through, it might just be time to go home and be a part of that."[117] Capaldi holds dual citizenship; following Brexit, he acquired Italian citizenship by descent through his paternal grandfather who hailed from Picinisco.[118]