David Tennant
- Original name:
- David John McDonald
- Born:
- April 18, 1971, Bathgate, West Lothian, Scotland (age 53)
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David Tennant (born April 18, 1971, Bathgate, West Lothian, Scotland) is a Scottish stage and screen actor perhaps best known for his portrayal of the Tenth Doctor in Doctor Who, the British science-fiction television series. Apart from the show, Tennant has enjoyed a prolific career with more than 100 TV, film, stage, and voice-over credits to his name.
Early life and education
Tennant was born David John McDonald in Bathgate, West Lothian, Scotland, and grew up in Ralston, Renfrewshire, near Paisley, an industrial town in the Scottish lowlands. He was the youngest of three children, which included his brother, Blair McDonald, and his sister, Karen McDonald. Their mother, Helen McDonald, was a founding member of Accord Hospice, and their father, Alexander McDonald, was a local Presbyterian minister. He later achieved national prominence when he served as the moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland from 1997 to 1998.
David McDonald had an interest in acting early on and became one of the youngest (age 16) students to be admitted to the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland (formerly the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama), Glasgow. During his training McDonald changed his name upon joining the actors’ union, choosing the surname of Neil Tennant, singer of the 1980s pop duo Pet Shop Boys.
Early roles onstage and onscreen
Following his graduation in 1991, David Tennant performed in several productions with the 7:84 Theatre Company, a group that aimed to tell the stories of working-class life and history. Tennant later relocated to London and joined the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) in 1996. His roles from that year included Touchstone, the court fool, in As You Like It and Alexander Hamilton, the first secretary of the treasury of the United States, in The General from America. During this period Tennant also starred in the RSC’s 1998 revival of The Real Inspector Hound, a comedy by Tom Stoppard; a 2000 production of Romeo and Juliet; and a 2002 production of Kenneth Lonergan’s Lobby Hero. For the latter, he garnered his first Laurence Oliver award for best actor.
Complementing his work in theater, Tennant also appeared onscreen throughout the 1990s in a number of miniseries or short-lived television series. Notable projects included a small part in Jude (1996), an adaptation of Thomas Hardy’s Jude the Obscure, and a supporting role as Ginger Littlejohn in Bright Young Things (2003), Stephen Fry’s adaptation of the Evelyn Waugh novel Vile Bodies. In 2004 Tennant began to attract attention after landing a lead role in the BBC musical drama Blackpool. The following year he won acclaim for his performance as the title character in Casanova, a BBC miniseries loosely based on Giacomo Casanova’s Histoire de ma vie (History of My Life).
Doctor Who, other work from the late 2000s, and personal life
Tennant’s big career break came in 2005 when he assumed the title character role in Doctor Who, the long-running and popular series. The show follows the adventures of the Doctor, an extraterrestrial from the fictional planet Gallifrey who travels across time and space. Doctor Who initially ran from 1963 to 1989 with a number of actors portraying the main character as he regenerates into new iterations. The series was rebooted in 2005 with Christopher Eccleston in the lead role. Eccleston left the series at the end of its first season, and Tennant was cast as the 10th actor to play the Doctor. In polls fans have proclaimed him the best Doctor. Tennant stepped down from Doctor Who in 2010, passing the baton to English actor Matt Smith, who became the Eleventh Doctor. Tennant later reprised the role in such TV specials as those marking the series’s 50th and 60th anniversaries, in 2013 and 2023, respectively.
While playing the Tenth Doctor, Tennant also continued to perform onstage. In 2008 he starred in two RSC productions, taking the role of Hamlet opposite Patrick Stewart’s Claudius and playing Berowne in Love’s Labour’s Lost. He also had roles in the film adaptation (2005) of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, the World War II drama Glorious 39 (2009), and St Trinian’s 2: The Legend of Fritton’s Gold (2009). In 2011 Tennant played a coach in United, a drama about the 1958 plane crash that killed eight of Manchester United’s football (soccer) players; a groom-to-be questioning his choices in the rom-com The Decoy Bride; and a vampire hunter in Fright Night. That year he also married British actress Georgia Moffett, whom he had met on the set of Doctor Who. She is the daughter of British actor Peter Davison, who had been the fifth actor to play the Doctor. Tennant and his wife went on to have four children, Olive (born 2011), Wilfred (born 2013), Doris (born 2015), and Birdie (born 2019). He also adopted her son, Ty, from a previous relationship.
Broadchurch and other work from the 2010s
In 2013 Tennant found his next success starring alongside Olivia Colman in the TV series Broadchurch. The pair played two detectives investigating the murder of an 11-year-old boy in a seaside town. The show became a cultural phenomenon in the United Kingdom, generating significant audiences each week and buzz among journalists and other cultural commentators. The first season enjoyed similar success in the United States, and a subsequent American adaptation, Gracepoint (2014), starred Tennant as the lead detective investigating a murder in a beach resort town in California. The adaptation proved to be less popular with both audiences and critics and was canceled after one season. Tennant returned to Broadchurch with Colman for the series’ second and third seasons (2015 and 2017, respectively).
Tennant’s other onscreen roles from this period included a barrister (lawyer) representing a murderer in the miniseries The Escape Artist (2013), for which he won a BAFTA Scotland Award for best actor; the mind-controlling villain in Netflix’s Marvel series, Jessica Jones (2015–19); and John Knox, a leader of the Scottish Reformation, in the film Mary Queen of Scots (2018). Meanwhile, onstage he played Benedick to Catherine Tate’s Beatrice in a Wyndham’s Theatre production of Much Ado About Nothing (2011) and the title role in an RSC production of Richard II that won rave reviews when it was performed in the United Kingdom (2013) and in the United States (2016).
Work from the late 2010s and early 2020s
About the turn of the 2020s Tennant took on the roles of Simon, the father of a child with learning disabilities, in the British comedy drama series There She Goes (2018–23); and the demon Crowley opposite Welsh actor Michael Sheen’s angel Aziraphale in the Amazon series Good Omens (2019–), adapted by Neil Gaiman, and based on his and Terry Pratchett’s 1990 novel. Filming of the latter’s third and final season was halted in 2024 after several women accused Gaiman of sexual assault. Tennant also starred as the title character in Des (2020), a three-part TV series that examines the Scottish serial killer Dennis Nilsen. For his performance, Tennant won an International Emmy Award for best actor. His onstage performances as a professor sliding toward Nazism in Good (2022) and as Macbeth (2023 and 2024) opposite Cush Jumbo’s Lady Macbeth garnered him two more Olivier nominations for best actor. In 2024 Tennant starred in the streaming series Rivals (2024), which is set in the cutthroat world of British television in 1986.
Voice-over work
In addition to the stage and screen, since the early 21st century, Tennant has lent his voice to a number of projects, including video games and podcast series as well as such animated series as Doctor Who: The Infinite Quest (2007), Doctor Who: Dreamland (2009), Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2015–16), and DuckTales (2017–21). He has voiced a viking in the How to Train Your Dragon animated movies and TV series, Charles Darwin in the animated movie The Pirates! Band of Misfits (2012), and an ancient droid in the Star Wars spin-off series Star Wars: The Clone Wars (2012) and Ahsoka (2023). Tennant also narrated the documentary Lachlan Macquarie: The Father of Australia (2011); the British sitcom Twenty Twelve (2011–12), about the team organizing the 2012 Olympics in London, and the show’s follow-up W1A (2014–24), satirizing the management at the BBC; and a 2014 episode on penguins in the long-running documentary series Nature.