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{{Infobox person
[[File:SDCC 2015 - Nicholas Hoult (19752716152) (cropped).jpg|thumb|upright=1|Hoult at the [[San Diego Comic Con]], 2015|alt=A young, Caucasian man with short, dark hair and facial stubble wearing a black shirt speaks into a microphone against a grey and blue background.]]
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| name = Nicholas Hoult
| honorific_suffix =
| image = SDCC 2015 - Nicholas Hoult (19752716152) (cropped).jpg
| image_size =
| alt = A young, Caucasian man with short, dark hair and facial stubble wearing a black shirt speaks into a microphone against a grey and blue background.
| caption = Hoult at the [[San Diego Comic Con]], 2015
| native_name =
| native_name_lang =
| birth_name = Nicholas Caradoc Hoult
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1989|12|7|df=y}}
| birth_place = [[Wokingham]], [[Berkshire]], England
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| nationality = British
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| alma_mater = [[Sylvia Young Theatre School]]
| occupation = [[Acting|Actor]]
| years_active = 1996–present
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| relatives = [[Anna Neagle]] (great-aunt)
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'''Nicholas Caradoc Hoult''' (born 7 December 1989 in [[Wokingham, Berkshire]]) is an English actor. Drawn to acting from a young age, he appeared in Wokingham-based theatre productions as a child. He made his screen debut at the age of seven in the 1996 film ''[[Intimate Relations (1996 film)|Intimate Relations]]'', and appeared in several television programmes between 1998 and 2001. Hoult's breakthrough role was Marcus Brewer in the 2002 comedy drama film ''[[About a Boy (film)|About a Boy]]'', for which he was nominated for the [[Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Young Performer]]. Although he initially wanted to study [[English studies|English]], Hoult chose to pursue a career in acting and briefly attended the [[Sylvia Young Theatre School]].
'''Nicholas Caradoc Hoult''' (born 7 December 1989 in [[Wokingham, Berkshire]]) is an English actor. Drawn to acting from a young age, he appeared in Wokingham-based theatre productions as a child. He made his screen debut at the age of seven in the 1996 film ''[[Intimate Relations (1996 film)|Intimate Relations]]'', and appeared in several television programmes between 1998 and 2001. Hoult's breakthrough role was Marcus Brewer in the 2002 comedy drama film ''[[About a Boy (film)|About a Boy]]'', for which he was nominated for the [[Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Young Performer]]. Although he initially wanted to study [[English studies|English]], Hoult chose to pursue a career in acting and briefly attended the [[Sylvia Young Theatre School]].

Revision as of 16:38, 12 May 2018

Nicholas Hoult
A young, Caucasian man with short, dark hair and facial stubble wearing a black shirt speaks into a microphone against a grey and blue background.
Hoult at the San Diego Comic Con, 2015
Born
Nicholas Caradoc Hoult

(1989-12-07) 7 December 1989 (age 34)
NationalityBritish
Alma materSylvia Young Theatre School
OccupationActor
Years active1996–present
Children1
RelativesAnna Neagle (great-aunt)

Nicholas Caradoc Hoult (born 7 December 1989 in Wokingham, Berkshire) is an English actor. Drawn to acting from a young age, he appeared in Wokingham-based theatre productions as a child. He made his screen debut at the age of seven in the 1996 film Intimate Relations, and appeared in several television programmes between 1998 and 2001. Hoult's breakthrough role was Marcus Brewer in the 2002 comedy drama film About a Boy, for which he was nominated for the Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Young Performer. Although he initially wanted to study English, Hoult chose to pursue a career in acting and briefly attended the Sylvia Young Theatre School.

Hoult received wide recognition for his portrayal of Tony Stonem in the E4 teenage-drama series Skins. Although dismissive of his character, he garnered praise and a nomination for Golden Nymph Award for his performance. His transition to adult roles began with the 2009 drama film A Single Man, for which he earned a BAFTA Rising Star Award. Hoult's role in the 2010 fantasy adventure film Clash of the Titans was also well received. He was cast as the mutant Beast in Matthew Vaughn's 2011 superhero film X-Men: First Class, a role he reprised in later installments of the series; as of 2018, his role in the $747 million-grossing X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014)—his second production in the franchise—has been his greatest commercial success to date.

Hoult's continued associations with big-budget productions have yielded varying results. He played Jack in the 2013 film Jack the Giant Slayer, which was a box office bomb, while the 2015 film Mad Max: Fury Road in which he played Nux was a blockbuster. Hoult has recently turned to starring roles—mostly in independent films—including three of his 2017 roles; the romantic drama Newness and the biographical films Rebel in the Rye and The Current War, in which he played J. D. Salinger and Nikola Tesla, respectively. Outside film, he voiced Elliot in Lionhead Studios' 2010 action role-playing game Fable III, appeared in theatrical productions including the 2009 West End play New Boy, and is involved in philanthropy, supporting such charitable organisations as Teenage Cancer Trust and Christian Aid.

Early life

A brown brick building in a city street with a sign that says "Sylvia Young Theatre School". In the foreground in a Ford Sierra car; in the background is some multi-coloured bunting.
Hoult briefly attended the Sylvia Young Theatre School

Hoult was born in Wokingham, Berkshire, to piano teacher Glenis (née Brown) and British Airways pilot Roger Hoult. In a January 2013 episode of the twelfth series of The Graham Norton Show, Nicholas revealed that his middle name is Caradoc (pronounced /ka.rɑː'dɔk/), a Welsh name that translates to "The Beloved One".[1] His great-aunt was Dame Anna Neagle, a stage and film actor active in the 1930s and 1940s. He has three siblings: an elder brother James, who is a United States-based biology student; and two sisters, Rosanna and Clarista, both of whom are television actors.[2][3] Hoult spent most of his childhood at his family's residence in Sindlesham, an estate village in the borough of Wokingham.[4] His older siblings were interested in acting and dancing from an early age, taking classes and attending auditions. As a child, he began accompanying them and developed his own interest in acting. He discussed his childhood and his relationship with his siblings in a 2011 interview with The Guardian saying, "[we were] pretty outdoorsy normal kids running around in the garden and making tree houses ... it was very normal".[5]

During Hoult's childhood, his father was regularly working away from home and his brother was away attending school. As a result, he spent most of his time with his mother and sisters; he said being raised by women might have helped him "steer clear of some pitfalls that guys who didn't grow up with women would fall into".[6] Hoult practised ballet with his sisters and was involved in productions of Swan Lake and The Nutcracker with the English National Ballet.[7] He was educated at The Coombes Nursery in Arborfield and Arborfield Church of England Junior School.[8] Although he initially wanted to attain advanced level certificates in English, Biology, and Psychology,[5] in 2002, at the age of 12, he decided instead to attend acting school at Sylvia Young Theatre School. At the age of 14, he left to attend the Church of England secondary school Ranelagh School.[9] Hoult played trombone as a child and was part of the local choir.[2]

Career

Early career (1996–2005)

The director of a play in which Hoult's brother was appearing discovered Hoult's own acting potential. The director was impressed by the three-year-old Hoult's ability to "concentrate well" and offered him a role in his next theatre production, The Caucasian Chalk Circle.[9] Hoult began attending auditions and at the age of five was cast in the 1996 drama Intimate Relations; his first feature-film role. He later appeared in the television programmes Casualty, Silent Witness, The Bill, and Doctors, among others. Hoult initially treated acting as a hobby rather than a potential career option; in a March 2009 interview with The Daily Telegraph he said he was not "in love with it ... I just enjoyed it. It was like playing for a football team. When you got a part it was great. And meeting new people. It was an exciting new world."[9]

Hoult's next feature-film appearance came at the age of eleven alongside Hugh Grant in Chris and Paul Weitz's 2002 comedy-drama film About a Boy.[10] Hoult was initially reluctant to audition for the role as the casting process was a lengthy one and interfered with his schooling. He nonetheless decided to participate in the early rounds of auditions and was eventually cast in the role of Marcus, a "woolly-hatted, oddball son of a suicidal, hippy-ish single mother, [who] he gets bullied horribly at school".[11] About a Boy was a commercial success, grossing more than $130 million worldwide and being praised by film critics.[10][12] Hoult's portrayal of a lonely schoolboy was well received; David Thomas, writing for The Daily Telegraph, attributed the film's appeal and success to Hoult's performance.[11] By the time the film was released, Hoult had left his junior school in Arborfield and began attending Sylvia Young Theatre School in London. He said the change was difficult; his time there was short and he preferred attending a regular school. He still did not want to pursue acting as a profession and at 14 he left Sylvia Young Theatre School in favour of Ranelagh School, a Berkshire-based Church of England day school.[9]

Hoult starred in Richard E Grant's semi-autobiographical​ film Wah-Wah (2005) as Ralph Compton, a boy who is forced to deal with the disintegration of his family. The film, set in Swaziland during the 1960s, chronicles the decline of the British Empire in Africa.[13] Hoult made his debut in Hollywood with Gore Verbinski's film The Weather Man (2005) as the son of a television weather presenter (Nicolas Cage) undergoing a mid-life crisis. The film and Hoult's performance went unnoticed.[14][15] Both Wah-Wah and The Weather Man performed poorly at the box office.[16][17]

Skins and West End debut (2006–10)

Hoult was a student at Sixth Form College Farnborough in 2006 when he was cast in the lead role of the television teenage-drama Skins. He was initially sceptical of his ability to play Tony Stonem, a manipulative, egocentric anti-hero, and identified more closely with the supporting character Sid.[15] The programme was a success and ran for seven series, only two of which Hoult appeared in. His performance was well received, the character was popular and Hoult garnered widespread attention.[18] Skins won the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) Philip Audience Award, and Hoult was nominated for the Golden Nymph Award for Best Actor in a Drama Series.[19] Critic Elliott David lauded Hoult for his performance in a 2016 retrospective review, and wrote that he "maintain[ed] the inexplicable core of his character throughout".[20] During his time on Skins, Hoult felt overwhelmed by the attention he received and considered quitting acting at one point. Instead, he quit school at the end of Skins' first season and chose to focus solely on acting.[5] The programme has since been credited for widening Hoult's opportunities as an actor; directors and producers said his performance led them to cast him in their projects.[20]

A young, blue-eyed, Caucasian man with short, dark hair wearing a dark-blue jacket, a white shirt, and a black tie against a blurred background of yellow-green tree foliage.
Hoult at Santa Barbara International Film Festival, 2009

Hoult briefly appeared as Stefan Fredman in the pilot episode of the British television series Wallander.[21] He later made his West End theatre debut as Mark, the protagonist in William Sutcliffe's coming-of-age play New Boy; the production premiered at Trafalgar Studios and had record-breaking ticket sales, which was mostly attributed to Hoult's popularity among viewers of Skins.[22][23][24] The play was staged for a week in March 2009 because Hoult had committed to a part in the fantasy-adventure film Clash of the Titans (2010), filming for which was scheduled for mid-2010. Hoult's performance as Mark, a "ferociously bright and articulate but sexually confused sixth-former" received a mixed response from critics. Dominic Cavendish of The Daily Telegraph wrote that his performance was persuasive, but Lyn Gardner of The Guardian found him average and highlighted his inability to bring out the "unresolved sexual tension beneath [the] banter".[23][24] Clash of the Titans was panned by critics but was a success at the box office, grossing nearly $500,000,000 worldwide.[25]

Hoult next appeared in Tom Ford's A Single Man (2009), after the actor originally cast in the role of Kenny Potter left the film a few days before filming commenced. Hoult had previously shown interest in the project and had sent a recorded audition tapel; he was eventually chosen for the role of Kenny, a homosexual college student who helps a college professor, played by Colin Firth, deal with his grief.[26][27] It was variously described by media outlets as the first adult role for Hoult, who described Kenny as a "spontaneous" character who is not simply defined by his sexuality.[27][28][29] Because the role was his first as an American character, Hoult worked on his accent; Sukhdev Sandhu of The Daily Telegraph noted Ford's choice of casting British actors as Americans (Hoult and Matthew Goode) and vice-versa (Julianne Moore).[30][31] A Single Man opened to widespread acclaim despite reservations from critics about Ford's directorial abilities; it was a box-office success.[32][33][34] Peter Travers, writing for Rolling Stone, praised Hoult's "beautiful" performance.[35] The film earned him a nomination for the BAFTA Rising Star Award at the 2010 ceremony; Kristen Stewart won the award.[36][37] In 2010, Hoult voiced the character of Elliot in Lionhead Studios' action role-playing game Fable III (2010).[38]

Commercial success with X-Men and Mad Max (2011–2016)

Hoult was cast as Nux in George Miller's action film Mad Max: Fury Road; the project spent several years in development hell because plans for a fourth film in the Mad Max franchise encountered financial difficulties.[39] Filming was planned for mid-2010, but heavy rain caused severe delays during pre-production in Australia.[20] With no other immediate commitments, Hoult began to look for other prospects. He was eventually cast in the role of Hank McCoy/Beast for the X-Men film series owing to his ability to play somebody "gentle with a capability of being fierce".[40][41] Although earlier reports had said Benjamin Walker was to play the role, Hoult was finalised for the 2011 Matthew Vaughn-directed installment X-Men: First Class, a prequel to the franchise's earlier films. Before filming began, Hoult familiarised himself with his character; he said he "formulated [his] own version of the Beast" and took inspiration from Kelsey Grammer's performance in the previous three X-Men films because he wanted to emulate Grammer's charm and eloquence. Hoult learnt to speak in a dialect similar to Grammer's without trying to imitate it.[42] He also underwent physical training and gained weight to better suit his character.[43] The film, which was widely praised by critics for its script and performances, performed moderately well at the box office, collecting about $353 million against a production budget of $160 million.[44][45] Although it was the lowest-ranked production in the entire series in terms of revenue, Chris Aronson of 20th Century Fox deemed it "an excellent start to a new chapter of the franchise".[46]

A young, Caucasian man with short, dark hair and facial stubble wearing a grey, V-neck jumper speaks into a microphone against a black background.
Hoult at the San Diego Comic Con, 2013

Mad Max: Fury Road was eventually filmed in 2012 in the Namibian desert. Miller had conceived Nux, a terminally ill slave, as a "quasi kamikaze pilot"; Hoult said of his character; "he's very enthusiastic and committed and affectionate but also kind of clumsy".[47] Hoult shaved his head and followed a strict diet because his role required him to lose a lot of weight.[48] He also talked about performing stunts in the film, describing the entire experience as "scary",[49] but favourably compared the stunt crew and Miller's choice to incorporate real action sequences instead of using a green screen, saying it made the performance more believable because the actors are placed in a real situation.[50] Fury Road opened to critical acclaim on 14 May 2015 and grossed more than $378 million worldwide, making it the highest-grossing film in the Mad Max franchise. The technical aspects and stunt sequences drew particular praise from film critics and it was credited for reviving interest in the series.[51][52] Hoult's performance was praised by Robbie Collin of The Daily Telegraph, who praised him for being "fabulously unhinged as ... a twitchy stowaway on the trip".[53] Daily Express's Stefan Kyriazis singled out Hoult for his "fantastically complex and utterly heartbreaking" performance.[54]

In 2013, Hoult had starring roles in two major films, which yielded contrasting results. He first played a zombie named R in Jonathan Levine's romantic comedy Warm Bodies, which was released on 1 February.[55] An adaptation of Isaac Marion's novel of the same name, the film is presented from point of view of the central character, mostly through narration]. Levine said he had difficulties finding a suitable actor to play R until he met Hoult, who was attracted to the project—which he described as "much more than a horror movie" owing to the use of multiple pop culture and literary allusions—and even more so to the role which "bowled [me] over". Hoult said he drew inspiration from Edward Scissorhands (1990) because he thought the central characters in both films share the same difficulties.[56] To prepare for the role of a zombie, Hoult and the other actors practiced with Cirque du Soleil performers; he said of the experience; "we would take our shoes off in a dance studio ... kind of grow out of the wall and make our bodies feel very heavy".[57] The film garnered positive response from critics and audiences.[58] His next film, Bryan Singer's fantasy adventure Jack the Giant Slayer, failed at the box office and received mixed response from critics. He played the eponymous hero in the film, which is based on the British fairy tales "Jack the Giant Killer" and "Jack and the Beanstalk".[59] Hoult's performance was poorly received by film critics Mary Pols, Justin Chang and Richard Roeper; Pols was critical of his "disconcerting" imitation of Hugh Grant and the other two dismissed him and his character as "bland" and "boring", respectively.[60][61][62]

Hoult then appeared in Jake Paltrow's science-fiction film Young Ones (2014). Set in a dystopian future where water is scarce, the film had Hoult play Flem Lever, a young man who is trying to claim the land owned by the film's central character Ernest Holm (Michael Shannon).[63] Hoult thought the role was unlike any of his previous roles and said his character's questionable choices throughout the film intrigued him. Hoult read novels written by S. E. Hinton to prepare for the role. The film was shot in a deserted location in South Africa; Hoult said filming in the hot weather conditions was difficult but the "beautiful" scenery helped to tell the story better.[64] He and his co-star Elle Fanning said it also made them more conscious of environmental concerns.[65] The film premiered at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival and was met with mixed responses.[64] Commentators highlighted the film's standout scenery but were critical of its plot.[63] Keith Uhlich of The A.V. Club said Hoult was a poor fit for the story’s "stoically retrograde machismo".[66]

Hoult reprised his role as Hank McCoy in Bryan Singer's X-Men: Days Of Future Past, his only other release of 2014. Hoult said playing the character was a freeing experience for him and that it was "fun to suddenly be able to break loose ... when you're wearing the makeup ... you can perform big ... you get to have two very different techniques, performances". He also said the lengthy make-up procedure could last up to three and a half hours.[67] X-Men: Days of Future Past earned more than $747 million worldwide, making it the highest-grossing film in the series and in Hoult's career at that time.[68]

In 2015, Hoult had three other releases–the feature film adaptation of Gillian Flynn's mystery novel Dark Places; Owen Harris' dark comedy Kill Your Friends, based on the 2008 novel of the same name; and Equals, a dystopian, science-fiction romantic drama directed by Drake Doremus–all of which were critical failures and rank among the lowest-grossing films of his career.[69][70] Response to Hoult's perfomance in Equals was relatively better;[71][72][73] Peter Travers dubbed him and his co-star Kristen Stewart "quietly devastating" and Katie Walsh, writing for Los Angeles Times, said the duo were "finely matched both in their androgynous beauty and in their performances of a repressed humanity".[74][75] Despite doubts about his contract with the franchise, Hoult returned for the 2016 film X-Men: Apocalypse. Upon release, the film became the third-ranked X-Men film in terms of worldwide box office collections, earning around $540 million.[76] It was also a top-grossing production outside the US.[77]

Transition to biographical and independent films (2017–present)

The action film Collide was released in the United States in February 2017 to a poor response from audiences and critics.[78][79] The film garnered negative reviews; its dismal box office performance was attributed to poor marketing and multiple delays caused by the 2015 chapter 11 bankruptcy of its production company Relativity Media.[80] Forbes' Scott Mendelson analysed the film's failure and said Hoult did not necessarily have enough "star power"[81] to draw audiences. He also responded negatively to Felicity Jones' casting as a damsel in distress, which he said further damaged the film's chances of success. He highlighted the misogyny and sense of entitlement in the entertainment industry, writing that director Eran Creevy and Hoult would get better offers despite the failure of films like Collide, as opposed to the minority group, who are either ignored or stereotyped.[81] Responses to Hoult's next film, the romance drama Newness, were more enthusiastic.[82] The production had its world premiere at the 2017 Sundance Film Festival; it stars Hoult and Laia Costa as a Los Angeles-based couple who meet through online dating and begin an open relationship.[83] Drake Doremus, the film's director, said Hoult's role was unlike his previous work; "a very complex and emotionally mature performance that we haven’t seen yet".[84]

Hoult at an event for The Current War in 2017

Hoult starred in a series of biographical and historical films in 2017; he said he preferred playing characters that might help him improve as an actor and that the "actors I look up to started doing their best work in their early 30s and I’ll be hitting that age  ... I’m just trying to learn".[85] He portrayed American author J.D. Salinger in Danny Strong's Rebel in the Rye, which chronicles Salinger's life from his youth to the World War II era and the years preceding the publication of his debut novel The Catcher in the Rye.[86] Hoult auditioned for the role because he was intrigued by the film's script and Salinger's life, of which he had little knowledge; "I didn’t know he fought in the second world war and landed on D-Day: ... had intermittent PTSD or that he became interested in Vedanta philosophy and meditated and did yoga".[85] To prepare for the role, Hoult read The Catcher in the Rye and biographies about Salinger. Hoult said the biggest challenge was to get a real understanding of Salinger's character; "everyone has an idea of [Salinger] in their mind ... you’re creating a character that people have very strong feelings about. You can’t prove to be right or wrong through impressions." [87] Rebel in the Rye opened to a poor response from film critics.[88] Carson Lund of Slant was largely unimpressed by Hoult's "feeble" performance and his inability to "reinvest the character with the complexities lost in the story’s programmatic telling".[89] RogerEbert.com's Matt Fagerholm wrote that although Hoult was capable of illuminating the insecurities and fixations of his character, he is never "quite believable as Salinger". Fagerholm ascribed the failure to the script, which left the character's key motivations "frustratingly muddled".[90]

Hoult co-starred with Benedict Cumberbatch and Michael Shannon in The Current War, a dramatisation of the feud between electrical pioneers Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse, played by Cumberbatch and Shannon respectively. Hoult was cast in the role of Nikola Tesla, for which he grew a moustache and attended science lessons about electromagnetism and dynamos.[85][91] He lost weight for his role by following a strict diet.[92] Response to The Current War was mixed; David Ehrlich of IndieWire described Hoult's performance as a tribute to David Bowie, who had previously played Tesla in The Prestige (2006).[93] In a departure from biographical dramas, Hoult next starred as an American soldier in Sand Castle, a production he described as a very different war film "in terms of the pacing and the emotion ... very under the surface, that futility-of-war idea".[92] He recalled the filming experience in the Jordanian military bases practising clearing procedures: “we put on these masks, get given these guns, are put inside this pitch-black house ... try and hunt down these bad guys hiding inside. You’re in all the gear ... the adrenaline starts pumping".[92] Released on Netflix in April 2017, the film garnered mixed reviews.[94]

Upcoming films

Hoult will appear in an upcoming British-Irish-American animated television mini-series adaptation of Richard Adams' 1972 novel Watership Down; the mini-series is directed by Noam Murro and adapted by Tom Bidwell.[95] It will be a four-part serial that will be broadcast on BBC One in the United Kingdom and will stream internationally on Netflix in 2017. Hoult voiced one of the lead characters, Fiver. He will also reprise his role as Beast in the 2019 film X-Men: Dark Phoenix.[96]

Personal life and other work

A young, Caucasian man with short, dark hair and facial stubble wearing a blue jacket and white shirt against a busy, outdoor background. Behind him is a man in a high-visibility jacket and a woman with an umbrella.
Hoult at the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival

While filming X-Men: First Class in 2010, Hoult began dating his co-star Jennifer Lawrence. The couple broke up in 2014.[97] Since March 2017, Hoult has been dating model Bryana Holly.[91] In April 2018, the couple had their first child together.[98] Hoult lives in a flat in north-west London;[91] he also made an unsuccessful offer to buy a house in the London Borough of Camden in 2012.[91][99]

During his childhood, Hoult played basketball for the Reading-based team Reading Rockets, which played in the English Basketball League.[100] He was later appointed as the club's ambassador.[101] He also follows Formula One and has attended several Grand Prix events at Montreal, Singapore, and Germany.[102][103][104]

Hoult is a philanthropist and supports numerous charities; he has been associated with organisations that support children. He was appointed the first National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC) Young Person Ambassador, for supporting​ the charity's activities aimed at children and young people.[105] Since 2009, he has also been involved with the Teenage Cancer Trust; he continues to visit patients supported by the organisation and has helped promote its awareness campaigns, including the sun-safety campaign "Shunburn".[106] Hoult designed sweaters for Save the Children's and Selfish Mother's joint Christmas Jumper Day campaign. He encouraged customers to buy the festive collection and support the charitable cause, which he though would bring a "real change to children's lives".[107] He also donated a pair of shoes, which was auctioned by Small Steps Project, an organisation that helps homeless and malnourished children.[108] Hoult was inducted into the NSPCC Hall of Fame in 2010, for his contributions to the campaign against child cruelty.[109]

Hoult visited slums in Nairobi, Kenya, as a part of a Christian Aid project aimed at providing clean water and sanitation. During his stay he met the natives and helped clean the locality. He said of his experience; "I met great people making the best of the situation ... it is heart-breaking in many ways to see the living conditions".[110] Hoult also participated in the Rickshaw Run in January 2017, in which participants drove an auto rickshaw (also called a tuk tuk) for 3,000 kilometres (1,900 mi) across India to raise funds for Teenage Cancer Trust and World Wide Fund for Nature.[111][112] He has also been associated with Jeans for Refugees, a project and fundraising initiative intended to help refugees around the world.[113] He donated a signed pair of jeans to the organisation; profits from the campaign were donated to the refugee support agency International Rescue Committee.[114]

Filmography and awards

Selected filmography

Accolades

For his role in About a Boy, Hoult won the Best Youth Performance at the Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards and earned a nomination for Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Young Performer.[2] He was nominated for the 2010 British Academy Film Awards for Orange Rising Star Award for his role in A Single Man.[36]

References

  1. ^ "How do you pronounce 'Denzel'? – The Graham Norton Show". BBC. Archived from the original on 30 December 2013. Retrieved 27 February 2014. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ a b c "Nicholas Hoult". Buddy TV. Archived from the original on 28 October 2015. Retrieved 1 March 2018. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ Shoard, Catherine (14 January 2007). "Teen player". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 3 March 2011. Retrieved 14 April 2007. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help); Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ Small, Julie (13 May 2010). "Calling a Hoult to poverty". Reading Chronicle. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
  5. ^ a b c Adel, Ziba (20 May 2011). "Nicholas Hoult: 'Can you not just say I was lighthearted and witty?'". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 30 December 2016. Retrieved 6 March 2018. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  6. ^ Rapkin, Mickey (19 February 2013). "About a Boy". Elle. Archived from the original on 1 March 2018. Retrieved 1 March 2018. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  7. ^ "Is this it?". The Guardian. 16 February 2007. Archived from the original on 3 March 2014. Retrieved 27 February 2014. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  8. ^ Sale, Jonathan (13 January 2006). "Passed/Failed: An education in the life of Nicholas Hoult, actor". The Independent. Archived from the original on 19 October 2016. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
  9. ^ a b c d "Nicholas Hoult: about a man". The Daily Telegraph. 6 March 2009. Archived from the original on 17 January 2018. Retrieved 16 January 2018. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  10. ^ a b "About a Boy (2002)". Rotten Tomatoes. Archived from the original on 27 November 2017. Retrieved 6 February 2018. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  11. ^ a b Thomas, David (1 May 2002). "About the boy". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 7 February 2018. Retrieved 6 February 2018. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
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External links