Career
Fletcher trained at the Anna Scher Theatre. His first film part was as Baby Face in '' Bugsy Malone'' (1976). He made his stage début the following year in a production of ''A Midsummer Night's Dream''. As a youth actor he was regularly featured in British productions in the early 1980s, including '' The Long Good Friday'', '' The Elephant Man'' and '' The Bounty''. In 1987 Fletcher was cast in '' Lionheart''. As an adult he appeared on television as the rebellious teenager Spike Thomson in '' Press Gang'' and in '' Murder Most Horrid'' (1991) with Dawn French. He has also starred in the films '' Caravaggio'' (1986), '' The Rachel Papers'' (1989), '' Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels'' (1998), '' Layer Cake'' (2004), AffirmFilm's '' Solomon'' as Rehoboam and Universal's '' Doom''. He appeared as Puck in Britten's '' A Midsummer Night's Dream'' in 1981 at Glyndebourne Opera and on their autumn tour, and then again in 1990 in an Opera London production at Sadler's Wells, subsequently recorded by Virgin Classics. On television Fletcher has appeared in the major HBO drama, '' Band of Brothers'' and in a supporting role in the BBC One historical drama '' The Virgin Queen'' (US PBS 2005, UK 2006). He also appeared in Kylie Minogue's music video for " Some Kind of Bliss" (1997). He starred on BBC One in a series based on Imogen Edwards-Jones's book '' Hotel Babylon'' that ran for four series before being cancelled in 2009. He also appeared in " The Booby and the Beast", an episode in the second series of the BBC's series '' Robin Hood'' and in the 2008 radio series '' The Way We Live Right Now''. He appeared in the '' Bo' Selecta!'' spinoff ''A Bear's Tail'' as The Scriptwriter. He played a brief role in the BBC series '' New Tricks'', in the episode "Final Curtain", as an actor named Tommy Jackson. In 2009, he also appeared in ''Misfits'' as Nathan Young's dad, reprising the role in 2010 for the second series. Fletcher has been the voice for McDonald's television adverts and (feigning a US accent) is the narrator of '' The Game'' audio book written by Neil Strauss. He also narrated the Five series ''Airforce Afghanistan'', as well as the ''Chop Shop: London Garage'' series on the Discovery Channel. In 1993, he was the voice of Prince Cinders in the short animated comedy of the same name. Also in 1993, he was the uncredited UNIT soldier narrator of the ''UNIT Recruiting Film'' – a five-minute spoof piece that preceded a BBC1 repeat of the sixth and final episode of '' Doctor Who'' story '' Planet of the Daleks''. In 2014 he narrated the BBC1 show ''Del Boys and Dealers''. In 1998, Fletcher featured on the song "Here Comes the Flood" from the album '' Fin de Siecle'' by The Divine Comedy.Directing
Fletcher's debut as a director was for a script he co-wrote, '' Wild Bill'', which was released on 20 March 2012. His second film as director is a musical film by Stephen Greenhorn, '' Sunshine on Leith'' based around the popular Proclaimers songs which were released on 4 October 2013. In 2015, he directed the feature film '' Eddie the Eagle''. In December 2017, Fletcher was announced as Bryan Singer's replacement director on the Queen biopic '' Bohemian Rhapsody''. The film was released in November 2018. While Fletcher had helped finish the film, Singer received sole directing credit and he received executive producer credit. Fletcher directed the 2019 biopic '' Rocketman'' about the life and music of Elton John. In February 2020, he signed on to direct a reboot of '' The Saint'' for Paramount Pictures. He also directed the Apple TV+ feature film ''Ghosted'', which was released in April 2023.Personal life
Fletcher was born in Enfield, the youngest of three boys, in north London, and grew up with his brothers in Woodford Green and Palmers Green; his parents were teachers. In 1997, he married Lithuanian film and theatre director Dalia Ibelhauptaitė in Westminster. His best man was fellow actor Alan Rickman. Dexter's brothers were also actors; Graham Fletcher-Cook and Steve Fletcher. Fletcher is a dual British and Lithuanian citizen, having been granted Lithuanian citizenship in recognition of his work promoting Lithuanian cultural affairs.Filmography
Acting credits
Filmmaking credits
References
Bibliography
* Holmstrom, John. ''The Moving Picture Boy: An International Encyclopaedia from 1895 to 1995''. Norwich, Michael Russell, 1996, pp. 358–360.External links
*