Stephen Dillane Profile
| Full Name: | Stephen Dillane - Contact Stephen Dillane |
| Famous As: | Actor |
| Date of Birth: | 1957 |
| Place of Birth: | London, England, UK |
| Nationality: | British |
Stephen Dillane News
Globe and Mail - Found Nov. 8, 2008
Welcome to Sarajevo) and starring several of Britain's finest theatre actors Antony Sher, Jack Shepherd, Stephen Dillane and Dominic Cooper.
John Doyle: What evil lurks - Globe and Mail
WEEKEND PICKS: WHAT EVIL LURKS - Globe and Mail
W-Five exposes citizenship scam - London Free Press
W-Five still diggin' at 43 - Edmonton Sun
Explore AllDigitally Obsessed - Found Nov. 18, 2008
... on the award-winning book of the same name, the cast also features Emmy AwardŽ nominees Stephen Dillane (Best Supporting Actor, John Adams...
Reviewed Online - Found Nov. 17, 2008
Husband Brooks (Stephen Dillane) is quiet, cold and distant.
Cinema Blend - Found Nov. 14, 2008
Barbara makes her way up the social ladder by marrying a man on a higher rung than she, Brooks Baekeland (Stephen Dillane).
Mirror.co.uk - Found Nov. 13, 2008
She has little or no respect for her rich husband Brookes (Stephen Dillane) but loves her son Tony (Eddie Redmayne) a little too much.
Forward - Found Nov. 14, 2008
Schmidt (Stephen Dillane), a sophisticated rabbi from Lodz, will serve as the equivalent of the defense.
RainbowNetwork.com - Found Nov. 12, 2008
Director: Tom Kalin Cast: Meera Julianne Moore, Stephen Dillane and Eddie Redmayne Extras: Making of documentary Released: 10 November 2008...
RainbowNetwork.com - Found Nov. 11, 2008
Director: Tom Kalin Cast: Meera Julianne Moore, Stephen Dillane and Eddie Redmayne Extras: Making of documentary Released: 10 November 2008...
Macro World Investor - Found Nov. 7, 2008
Dominic Cooper Baumgarten ..... Stellan Skarsgard Schmidt ..... Stephen Dillane Kuhn ..... Jack Shepherd Idek ..... Blake Ritson Lieble...
Guardian Unlimited - Found Nov. 7, 2008
Julianne Moore is the obsessive, chillingly self-absorbed wife of the heir to the Bakelite fortune, played insouciantly by Stephen Dillane.












