William Gaminara (born 1956) is a British actor, screenwriter and playwright, probably best known for playing pathologist Professor Leo Dalton on the television series Silent Witness, from 2002 to 2013. His plays include According to Hoyle, The Three Lions and The Nightingales.
Gaminara had a minor role in the 1986 film Comrades, directed by Bill Douglas.[1] His early television credits include Dr Andrew Bower in Casualty (1989–92) and Will Newman in Attachments (2000–02).[2][3]
His most notable television role was Professor Leo Dalton in the BBC crime drama series Silent Witness. He played Dalton from 2002 until 2013, and reprised the role in 2017 in the final episode of series 20. The role was at first subsidiary to Sam Ryan, played by Amanda Burton, but when Burton left the series and Gaminara's character Dalton headed the laboratory, the drama evolved into a three-hander between Dalton, Harry Cunningham (Tom Ward) and Nikki Alexander (Emilia Fox).[4]
After leaving Silent Witness, Gaminara appeared in several theatrical roles. In 2014, he played the photojournalist Paul Watson in Dan O'Brien's The Body of an American, a two-hander with Damien Molony. Gaminara describes the play as a "challenging and unconventional script which makes challenging and unconventional demands of an actor".[1]Lyn Gardner, writing in The Guardian, describes the acting as "knockout", with the "muscular quality of a contest" whilst being "scrupulously generous"; she highlights the way in which the two actors each embody a large number of characters and are required to swap between roles abruptly.[5] The production was also praised by Dominic Maxwell in The Times for "superb" acting on the part of both leads.[6]
The following year, he played the lead character, Pastor Paul, in Lucas Hnath's The Christians at the Traverse Theatre during the Edinburgh Festival, giving a "superbly controlled performance", which "nails the slow, measured but warmly faux-colloquial rhetoric of the American church", according to a review in The Independent.[7] Gardner, in The Guardian, describes Gaminara as "suggesting both the charisma and the arrogance" of his character,[8] and Dominic Maxwell, in a review for The Times, considers that Gaminara "propels it all with conviction".[9] Also in 2015, Gaminara took the supporting role of General Groves in the premiere of Tom Morton-Smith's Oppenheimer by the Royal Shakespeare Company at The Swan in Stratford-upon-Avon. Michael Billington, in a 5-star review for The Guardian, highlights "outstanding performances" from Gaminara among others,[10] as does Kate Kellaway, in a later Guardian review.[11]
Gaminara's first play, Back Up the Hearse and Smell the Flowers (1992), about water-purifier salesmen, is influenced by David Mamet's Glengarry Glen Ross.[19][20]Michael Billington, in a review of a 1992 production at Hampstead Theatre for The Guardian, praises its encapsulation of the "guile, bluster and conviction" of a "perfect pitch" but criticises its "heavy-handed tendency to moralise".[19] The director Dominic Dromgoole describes it as "smoothly accomplished, but unambitious".[21]
His second play, According to Hoyle (1995), takes a comedic approach to male identity and the relationships between men using the setting of a poker game.[21][22][23] Dromgoole describes it as "quite wonderful", but overshadowed by the success of Dealer's Choice, a play on the same topic by Patrick Marber, which came out at almost the same time.[21]Lyn Gardner, in a review of a 1995 production at Hampstead Theatre for The Guardian, describes it as a "feisty, sharply entertaining comedy" with a "rather nifty construction" employing interleaved timelines, and praises the "whiplash severity" of its dialogue.[24]Benedict Nightingale, in a review for The Times, writes that Gaminara has a "gift for funny dialogue" and considers the play's conclusion to demonstrate the independence of his viewpoint.[20] During this period Gaminara also wrote episodes for the television series This Life (1997) and The Lakes (1999),[2] as well as the screenplay for the BBC adaptation of Rachel Morris's novel, Ella and the Mothers (2002).[2][25]
His play The Three Lions was performed at the Pleasance Courtyard at the Edinburgh Festival in 2013, produced by Philip Wilson. A comedy about the unsuccessful English bid for the 2018 World Cup, it brings together David Beckham (Sean Browne), David Cameron (Dugald Bruce-Lockhart) and Prince William (Tom Davey).[26][27][28] Lucinda Everett, writing in The Daily Telegraph, describes it as a "gleefully irreverent glimpse 'behind the scenes'" with a "zingy script".[28] A reviewer for The Independent writes that the "neat script combines light satire with good, old-fashioned farce".[29]
In 2018, his comedy–drama The Nightingales was produced at the New Theatre in Cardiff, directed by Christopher Luscombe and starring Ruth Jones. Jones, an acquaintance of Gaminara's, describes the play as "gripping" and "really funny", saying that Gaminara has a "wonderful ear for naturalistic dialogue" and "has tuned in with such insight to human nature and the ways we behave in groups and also how we relate to each other and what we choose to reveal about ourselves."[30] Sam Marlowe, in a critical review for The Times of a production at the Theatre Royal, Bath, describes the play as "an inconsequential, darkish comedy" with "cardboard" characters and dialogue reminiscent of a "dated sitcom".[31]
Personal life
Gaminara is married to Kate Lock, also an actor; they have two sons.[32]
^Robert Hampson (1 January 2017). Sites of death in some recent British fiction. New Formations (89/90): 212–29
^Lyn Gardner (27 January 2014). Review: Theatre: The Body of an American: Gate, London 4/5. The Guardian, p. 27
^Dominic Maxwell (22 January 2014). Flashes of the whole picture; The great acting keeps you going in an unfocused play about war photography. The Times, p. 48
^Lyn Gardner (10 August 2015). Edinburgh festival review: The Christians – a doctrinal drama with little real fervour; Traverse, Edinburgh: Lucas Hnath's play probes the divisions opened among a religious community by their leader's epiphany, but lacks the right emotional intensity. The Guardian
^Dominic Maxwell (19 August 2015). Happy to be converted; The church takes centre stage in this exciting drama, says Dominic Maxwell. The Times, p. 11
^Michael Billington (23 January 2015). Oppenheimer five-star review – father of atomic bomb becomes tragic hero at RSC; The Swan, Stratford-upon-Avon: Tom Morton-Smith's massively impressive play explores the moral chain reactions before and after the bombing of Hiroshima. The Guardian
^Kate Kellaway (1 February 2015). Oppenheimer review – an ache for humanity; Swan theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon: The RSC succeed in making an epic, albeit a remote one, out of this tale of the boffin behind the atomic bomb. The Guardian
^Christopher Hart (8 May 2016). Bathed in glory; this exhilarating Chichester Ibsen is a savagely articulate success, says Christopher Hart. The Sunday Times, p. 20
^Susannah Clapp (8 May 2016) An Enemy of the People review – all society on a stage; Chichester Festival theatre: Hugh Bonneville as a whistleblower driven by sibling rivalry shows how Ibsen's play switches emphasis with every staging. The Observer
^Ann Treneman (5 May 2016). A political morality tale for thinking modern voters. The Times, p. 25
^Fiona Mountford (8 September 2013). Barmy goings-on with Beckham. Evening Standard, 14725223
^Prince William lampooned in Edinburgh play; A farce, due to premiere at the Edinburgh Festival on Saturday, sees the Duke of Cambridge subjected to a four-letter tirade from David Cameron, swap trousers with Boris Johnson and talk tattoos with David Beckham. The Daily Telegraph (31 July 2013)
^ abLucinda Everett (2 August 2013). What happened in that room? Daily Telegraph, p. 24
^Ruth Jones (16 November 2018). 'I was expecting to decline but fell in love with this play' Ruth Jones is taking to the stage for the first time in more than a decade to play the title role in a brand new play. As it tours to Cardiff, we ask the Stella and Gavin & Stacey star some questions about The Nightingales and performing in her home city. Western Mail, p. 2
^Sam Marlowe (8 November 2018). The Nightingales; Theatre. The Times, p. 11
Mark Ravenhill. "Plays about men: Mark Ravenhill, Kevin Elyot, William Gaminara". In State of Play: Playwrights on Playwriting (David Edgar, ed.), pp. 48–51 (Faber; 1999)