David Meyer

[5][6] The Shakespeare scholar and author Stephen M. Buhler states that director Coronado had "done a wildly experimental film essay on Hamlet in 1976, stressing the internal divisions and sexual conflicts within the title character and the language he employs: two actors, Anthony and David Meyer.[9] David Meyer also played the character of Henry Ingram in the Philip Mackie BBC television mini series An Englishman's Castle alongside actors such as Kenneth More and Nigel Havers.[13] Meyer played the assassin Mischka, a circus performer with a talent for knife throwing alongside his twin brother (Grischka) in the 1983 James Bond film Octopussy.[18] In 1989, Meyer reunited with director Derek Jarman, playing a minor role as a businessman in his 1989 film War Requiem in a cast which included Laurence Olivier, Tilda Swinton and Sean Bean.[23] In 1997, Meyer portrayed a Gestapo man opposite Clive Owen and Ian McKellen in Sean Mathias's British-Japanese drama film Bent, based on the 1979 play of the same name by Martin Sherman.
David Meyer (disambiguation)WatfordOctopussyHamletFerdinandIsaac NewtonShakespeare's GlobeThe Woman in the MoonSam Wanamaker PlayhouseRoyal Shakespeare CompanyA Midsummer Night's DreamAldwych TheatreLindsay KempBroadwayBiltmore TheatreKevin BillingtonICA TheatreThe TimesLaertesWilliam ShatnerThe Third WalkerCape Breton Islandswitched at birthCanadian Film Award29th Canadian Film AwardsPhilip MackieAn Englishman's CastleKenneth MoreNigel HaversPeter BullDerek JarmanThe TempestPeter GreenawayThe Draughtsman's ContractPeter BrookEveryman TheatreLiverpoolWar RequiemLaurence OlivierTilda SwintonSean BeanDavid MoylanJoseph MerrickThe Elephant ManBoulevard TheatreThe StageInspector MorseClive OwenIan McKellenSean Mathiasdrama filmof the same nameMartin Shermanthe persecutionhomosexualsNazi GermanyErnst RöhmNight of the Long KnivesRichard JonesPagliacciLondon ColiseumRoyal SocietyNaturePhilip BallBen WhishawLondon SpyEntertaining Mr SloaneDrama-Logue AwardParsifalThe BillInternet Broadway DatabaseCinema CanadaThe Globe and MailThe GuardianBritish Film Institute