James Daniel Wilson

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

James Daniel Wilson is an English actor and writer in various media including lip sync translations of foreign films into English.

Films James has written for include

voice-overs
.

Theatre credits include the inaugural production of Home at the National Theatre of Scotland in conjunction with Frantic Assembly[1] and the role of Giles Ralston in the West End production of The Mousetrap. James worked with Kali Theatre Company on the site-specific piece My Daughter's Trial.[2] The show played to sell-out audiences in the old courtroom above Browns Restaurants on St Martin's Lane, London.

James's voice can be heard in the feature-length animated films

Gnomeo and Juliet and Minions
.

His computer game credits include the voices of Nowe in Drakengard 2, Xavier in Rule of Rose, and Horace in The Last Story.[3]

James regularly records for

Dorling Kindersley as a Lucasfilm-approved voice. He has recorded a number of DK Readers including Star Wars
The Clone Wars - Jedi in Training, Forces of Darkness and Jedi Heroes, and continues to record new titles.

James has also recorded a number of unabridged

Herbie Brennan's The Ruler of the Realm and Faerie Lord, F. E. Higgins' The Eyeball Collector, The Bone Magician and The Black Book of Secrets, which received the Merit award at the CBI Book of the Year Awards, Matt Haig's The Runaway Troll and Shadow Forest, Janet Foxley's Muncle Trogg and the role of Cooper in Mike Gayle
's The Life and Soul of the Party.

For years, James played Paul, one of the new generation of

The School, as Max,[5] and in Doctor Who, as Brian, in The Rapture.[6]

References

  1. ^ Home at The NTS
  2. ^ Chaudri, Jabine (April 2013). "My Daughter's Trial". Kali Theatre Company. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  3. ^ "James Daniel Wilson (visual voices guide)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved 29 September 2023.
  4. ^ Big Finish Press Release Archived 10 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Sapphire and Steel - The School
  6. ^ "6. The Rapture: Synopsis". Retrieved 31 August 2014.

External links