Film and television career
Kingsley's first film role was a supporting turn in
Fear Is the Key, released in 1972. Kingsley continued starring in bit roles in both film and television, including a
bit part on the soap opera
Coronation Street and regular appearances as a defence counsel in the long-running British legal programme
Crown Court. He found fame only years later, starring as
Mohandas Gandhi in the
Academy Award-winning film
Gandhi in 1982, his best-known role to date. The audience also agreed with the critics, and
Gandhi was a box-office success. Kingsley won the
Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal.
Kingsley has since appeared in a variety of roles. His credits included the films
Turtle Diary,
Maurice,
Pascali's Island,
Without a Clue (as
Dr. Watson alongside
Michael Caine's Sherlock Holmes), Suspect Zero,
Bugsy--which led to an Oscar nomination for
Best Supporting Actor, Sneakers,
Dave,
Searching for Bobby Fischer,
Schindler's List,
Silas Marner,
Death and the Maiden,
Murderers Among Us: The Simon Wiesenthal Story,
Sexy Beast, for which he received another Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor, and
House of Sand and Fog, which led to yet another Oscar nomination for Best Actor. He won a
Crystal Globe award for outstanding artistic contribution to
world cinema at the
Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in 2001.
In 1997, he provided voice talent for the video game
Ceremony of Innocence. In July 2006, he received an
Emmy nomination for his performance in the made-for-TV film
Mrs. Harris, in which he played famed
cardiologist Herman Tarnower, who was murdered by his jilted lover,
Jean Harris. In 2007, Kingsley appeared as a
Polish American mobster in the
Mafia comedy You Kill Me, and was also slated to act out a Middle East oil minister to be assassinated in
War, Inc.. An
Indian Express story reported that Kingsley would appear as the "sex guru"
Osho in a film, of then-unknown title, due to be released in 2008.