Alexander Siddig Biography, Age, The Spy, Deep State, GOT, Interview

May 2024 · 18 minute read

Alexander Siddig Biography

Alexander Siddig born Siddig El Tahir El Fadil El Siddig Abderrahman Mohammed Ahmed Abdel Karim El Mahdi is a British-Sudanese actor.

Alexander Siddig Age

Born 21 November 1965, Wad Madani, Sudan. He is 53 years as of 2018.

Alexander Siddig Height

Alexander stands at a height of 1.82 m.

Alexander Siddig Image

Alexander Siddig Image

Alexander Siddig Wife

Siddig met Nana Visitor on the set of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. In 1996, they began a relationship and they married in June 1997; their son, Django El Tahir El Siddig, was born on 16 September 1996. They later divorced in 2001.

Alexander Siddig Young

He attended St Lawrence College, Ramsgate, Kent. Western culture required a surname, so El Fadil was taken from Sid’s grandfather and was adopted as his surname when he moved back to England. He was credited under the shortened name Siddig El Fadil until October 1995. Three seasons into his run on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, he changed his stage name to Alexander Siddig stating he chose Alexander to honor his English heritage from his mother’s side, and because he felt the name came without religious implications.

Alexander Siddig Career

He worked as a director in a small theatre in London. Siddig first appeared to television audiences as Prince Feisal in A Dangerous Man: Lawrence After Arabia, the 1990 TV sequel to Lawrence of Arabia.

His performance in A Dangerous Man: Lawrence After Arabia 1992 brought him to the attention of Rick Berman, who was creating the new series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine in 1993. Although he originally auditioned for the role of Commander Benjamin Sisko, Berman decided Siddig was too young for the role and cast him as Dr. Julian Bashir instead. The part had to be slightly rewritten for Siddig as the original “bible” had called for a Hispanic male named Julian Amoros to play the part, although Berman reports that no other actors were considered for the role.

After Star Trek: Deep Space Nine finished, Siddig appeared as an Algerian secret agent on the trail of Islamists in the controversial episode “Nest of Angels” of the British television show Spooks in 2003. In 2005, he appeared as Saladin’s aide, Imad, in Ridley Scott’s film Kingdom of Heaven. He gave a critically lauded performance as Prince Nasir in Syriana, alongside George Clooney and Matt Damon.

He played the title role in 2006’s Hannibal – Rome’s Worst Nightmare for the BBC (United Kingdom). Early 2007, Siddig joined the cast of Un Homme Perdu (aka A Lost Man) and he returned to American television in the role of former terrorist Hamri Al-Assad for the sixth season of 24. In 2009, he co-starred with Patricia Clarkson in the award-winning film Cairo Time in 2009 as Tareq Khalifa, an Egyptian who battles his attraction to his friend’s wife.

In August 2010, he expressed his doubts about resurrecting his character, Dr. Julian Bashir, from Deep Space Nine, stating that he has “other ambitions”.

In 2013, Siddig appeared as a Syrian-Canadian in the IFC film Inescapable with Marisa Tomei and Joshua Jackson, and as King Minos in the BBC show Atlantis.

In 2015 appeared in HBO series Game of Thrones in season 5 and season 6 as Doran Martell, the ruling Prince of Dorne.

Alexander Siddig Game Of Thrones

Alexander played Doran Martell on Game of Thrones—the Prince of Dorne—who met his death during the premiere of the HBO drama’s sixth season when he was stabbed in the heart by Ellaria Sand, the former lover of his late brother Oberyn

Alexander Siddig Gotham

He is appearing in Gotham as Ra’s al Ghul.

Alexander Siddig Peaky Blinders

Siddig played the role of Ruben Oliver.

Alexander Siddig Star Trek

Siddig is best known for his role as Dr. Julian Bashir in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.

Alexander Siddig Kingdom Of Heaven

Kingdom of Heaven is a 2005 epic historical drama film directed and produced by Ridley Scott. Alexander is starred as Imad ad-Din al-Isfahani.

Alexander Siddig Merlin

He starred as  Kanan

Alexander Siddig 24

Siddig played the role of Hamri Al-Assad.

Alexander Siddig James Callis

Gaius Baltar (James Callis) Totally Looks Like Dr. Bashir (Alexander Siddig).

Alexander Siddig James Callis

Alexander Siddig Deep Space Nine

Played the role of Dr Julian Bashir. After three seasons into his run on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, he changed his stage name to Alexander Siddig (stating he chose Alexander to honor his English heritage from his mother’s side, and because he felt the name came without religious implications).

Alexander Siddig Movies

Year

Film

Role

2017

Submergence

Dr. Shadid

2013

The Fifth Estate

Dr. Tarek Haliseh

May in the Summer

Ziad

2012

Inescapable

Adib Abdel-Kareem

2010

Miral

Miral’s father

4.3.2.1.

Robert

Clash of the Titans

Hermes

2009

Cairo Time

Tareq Khalifa

2008

A Lost Man

Fouad Saleh

Doomsday

Hatcher

Espion(s)

Malik

2007

The Nativity Story

Angel Gabriel

The Last Legion

Theodorus Andronikus

2006

Hannibal – Rome’s Worst Nightmare

Hannibal

2005

Kingdom of Heaven

Imad ad-Din al-Isfahani

Syriana

Prince Nasir Al-Subaai

2004

The Hamburg Cell

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed

2002

Reign of Fire

Ajay

2000

Vertical Limit

Kareem Nazir

1992

A Dangerous Man: Lawrence After Arabia

Emir Feisal I

1987

Sammy and Rosie Get Laid

Partygoer

Alexander Siddig Tv Show

YearProductionRole
2019The Spy
Deep State
2017–2018GothamRa’s al Ghul
2017The Kennedys: After CamelotAristotle Onassis
2016Peaky BlindersRuben Oliver
2015–2016Game of ThronesDoran Martell
2015TutAmun
Bar RescueHimself
2013–2014Da Vinci’s DemonsAl-Rahim
2013Wild ArabiaNarrator
AtlantisMinos
2012True LoveIsmail
2011PrimevalPhilip Burton
2010Strike BackZahir Sharq
2009Waking the DeadDr Mohammed
2008MerlinKanan
200724Hamri Al-Assad
2005Agatha Christie’s PoirotMr. Shaitana
2003Spooks
(titled MI-5 in the US and France)
Ibhn Khaldun
1993–1999Star Trek: Deep Space NineDr Julian Bashir
1993Star Trek: The Next GenerationDr Julian Bashir
1992Big BattalionsYousef

Alexander Siddig Website

To Interact with his official website click here

Alexander Siddig Twitter

Tweets by alexsiddig

Alexander Siddig Instagram

Alexander Siddig Interview

Alexander Siddig Exclusive Interview; The CAIRO TIME Star Opens Up About DEEP SPACE NINE, MIRAL, His Sci-Fi Obsession, More

Source: collider.com

Siddig’s been traveling with the film to festivals around the world for a good portion of the past year, starting with its premiere at last September’s Toronto International Film Festival. Given ethnic sensitivities around the world, the international promotional tour with the film seemed a natural place to start the conversation. Siddig is exceedingly smart, friendly and refreshingly frank which allowed for a fun and honest conversation. Click here for the audio.

Collider: Now, you’ve been talking about this film for quite some time.
Alexander Siddig: Yeah.

What are the varying reactions that you get to it?

Siddig: We’ve been talking about it for about 8 months. I mean, that’s an astonishing amount of time because it’s a very independent movie and it’s hard and slow to sell those (kinds) of movies and so we’ve been working, I mean, not every day obviously, every now and then. We’ve done it in maybe four or five different countries: Middle East. I accompanied it to Doha.

For the Tribeca Film Festival (in Doha), right?

Siddig: The Tribeca Film Festival in New York AND in Doha (Tribeca has another festival in Qatar). And (I) just came back from Italy. Obviously, Canada (The filmmakers are Canadian), Ireland. I’ve been everywhere. You know, as we do without studio backing. Just to sell the movie and so far, the reaction’s been really amazing, almost unanimously. You know, the people who really can’t bear the movie, they’re not going to come up to me and tell me (jokingly pointing a finger). No one’s that mean-spirited (both laughing). “Hey, I really hated your movie, by the way. Just want to make your day!”

No, of course not, but in the questions at Q&As afterwards.

Siddig: The Q&As have been really great. They’ve been really intelligent. You know, the movie goes out of its way to treat people as if they’re as intelligent as the director. You know, without being clever. Just saying “This is, I’m having a talk to you and I’m not gonna condescend and we’re gonna get on. 3,000 people outside in Doha, with their families, their kids, sat down quietly and watched the movie and really loved it. I was encouraged by that and I’m encouraged by the fact that men seem to respond just as well as, as women. I mean, I think one of the trepidations that we had before we started was that we thought men somehow wouldn’t get it. They wouldn’t click. It was going to be some, a kind of chick flick. But it turns out that they’re just as articulate about the film as, as the women are and it’s ranged from deeply political things like, “How dare you do a movie about Arabs without really knowing your Arabs and without an Arab-speaking actor in your lead role to people literally weeping. A woman reviewer came up to (the film’s writer/director) Ruba (Nadda) yesterday and just started weeping.
Hmm.

Siddig: Weird.

Yeah.

Siddig: (Laughs) Which is wonderful.

(Wryly) Well, of course. If you like to make people cry.

Siddig: (Jokingly) We love to make people cry. (Smiling) Movie business.

Maya Angelou said [“I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.”]

Siddig: Yeah.

And ultimately, it, it is a film so much about emotion. It’s also definitely a film about contrasts. The beautiful scenery with some of the ugly violence that’s discussed.

Siddig: Absolutely.

The new world values with the old school traditions. And both characters, as much as they’re fully fleshed out characters, they’re also symbols. And she is literally married and you are literally reaching out and so as much as symbols are: You of Egypt, her of America, and the fact that it’s an unconsummated love.

Siddig: Yeah.

Just like America is married to its (ways)–

Siddig: To its-

— and, you know, the Middle East is reaching out.

Siddig: Yeah, yeah.

What message is the director sending?

Siddig: Well, I mean, I think that’s a tall order if I- I mean, I would love to think it had that kind of political reach, but certainly on a personal level, it’s sending out a message of great dignity and great ethical strength on the part of the Ameri- the woman who is married. This is the perfect opportunity to betray her husband or at least, her vows to her husband and without getting into the morality of that, she chooses not to. And he, as the great temptation, has the poise to not push her too far, to not anger her. You can kind of extrapolate a political scenario there—

It’s pretty hard not to because they are–

Siddig: Absolutely.

— very much symbols-

Siddig: Absolutely.

-(And) so, if you look at it in a symbolic way, here it is the Middle East—

Siddig: Well, I think it is, the interesting thing from that point of view, which I think is a really interesting angle you’re, you’re bringing up is that neither of them are trying to change each other and that lack of force, that lack of friction between them allows much easier merging of each of them to each other and so, the moment you’re not pushing towards someone, imposing on them, trying to impress them, quite literally, that’s the moment you’re open enough to hear what they’re saying. What, who they are. Let them in. And to extend that metaphor, the moment we try to change the Arab world and the moment the Arab world isn’t trying to change America or the West, that’s the moment you get to actually hear what each other is saying and, and “Oh right. You have your own mind. You have your own way of doing things. Cool.” I have not really thought about the movie in those terms before because I’ve been obsessed about personal, obviously as an actor. But yeah, I think that’s right. Quite interesting.

Did the crew have to disclose the script to the Egyptian government (since they shot on location)?

Siddig: Yeah, yeah, yeah. They didn’t have a problem with anything in the script. In terms of values, it was chaste. There was no porn. There was no particular violence. There was no discriminatory menace in the movie about, “Egyptians are horrible or Cairo is like this.” There are a couple of difficult truths. Ruba couldn’t write a movie about Cairo without- you know, it would’ve been a lie of omission had she not mentioned some of the child labor, for example, that’s going on. But that’s the truth about poverty in Africa. Not the truth about Egyptians’ nastiness to their children, (but) about the fact that young girls need to earn money at a very early age of 10 or 12 before they can afford a dowry for when they get married, for example. It’s how it excludes them from education. The uncomfortable truth of the Israeli checkpoint stopping buses and treating people rather rudely. It would’ve been just a lie to say that doesn’t happen. She glances off of these ideas, but she doesn’t obsess on them. She just says, “I’ve got to show you this deck of cards. That’s the whole deck, BUT I’m gonna pick these two cards. We’re gonna play with these ones. And so you don’t feel like you’re missing anything. That makes a holistic movie, at least (a) quite honest and a cool movie.

And, as we were talking about before, it deals with a deeper exploration of things that heretofore were stereotypes or taboos. And science fiction has always been on the forefront of that and I’d be remiss not to ask about Deep Space Nine.

Siddig: Sure!

The Star Trek film (directed by J.J. Abrams) is so successful–

Siddig: Yeah.

— and it’s THAT portion of the Star Trek story. Because they’re going to be continuing on with this story.

Siddig: Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Does this put to bed any DS9 film?

Siddig: Oh. I think almost beyond a shadow of a doubt. And I’m very proud of DS9. But I think that it lived and I think people quite weirdly enjoy it almost more now, that it’s not showing any more than they did at the time.

In which way?

Siddig: At the time, they were forced into making choices. I think Paramount made a few mistakes about putting, like, two or three Star Trek shows up against each other and on different channels, so that you literally were appealing to different constituencies. And that was probably, I think, an error of judgment. I think it hurt the very end of The Next Generation and it hurt the beginning of Deep Space Nine and then Voyager came along and Deep Space Nine was just a kind of flailing kid in the background that was just “Ah, and we’re here too. We’re doing another show.” Now, people actually get a chance to stand back and actually choose which ones they like from the whole array of this vast franchise. Deep Space has become really quite popular and people are really, really passionate or fond of it. I’m fond of the whole franchise, really. A couple of the later series were maybe a bit cynical, but, you know, they’ve gotta make money and-

The genetic– (Siddig recently voiced his strong objections to the storyline in the season 5 episode Dr. Bashir, I Presume which showed Dr. Bashir’s parents had him genetically modified as a child to counter learning disabilities).

Siddig: That’s totally fine. But (Abrams’ film) definitely put Deep Space Nine to bed. And I think that’s not a bad thing. Otherwise, you get into territory where we’re like, “And we’re gonna remake The Dukes Of Hazzard as a movie. And we’re gonna-” Which they do, all the time and you’re like, “Oh God, yawn. It better be really entertaining, otherwise I’m not going.” You know.

Well, The A-Team. You don’t really need to look further than that.

Siddig: Absolutely. And apparently, it’s a very entertaining movie, so that’s all you’re gonna get. But you’re not moving people here. You’re just taking their money. (Laughs)

Yeah. Yeah. Why do you think science fiction is always ahead of the curve, in terms of dealing with things without skin-deep judgments?

Siddig: Yeah. Well, the power of allegory. Abstraction can take the most harrowing, complicated real-life situation and say, “But this is actually just two grapes talking and they’re talking to a weird sunflower. They’ve abstracted the humanity out of it and transplanted it into something else that is much more comfortable. Much easier to cope with and gives the writer enormous freedom. I mean, you can do really dark, full-on stuff and take it so far away, to a spaceship somewhere miles and miles (away) on a funny little planet where the creatures are barely recognizable. That and the fact that they work with massive archetypes that we can’t really work with. Only Batman movies can work with those. The characters in Cairo Time, they’re not massive archetypes. They’re normal people. So yes, (as in Deep Space Nine) you’ve got the strong captain; you’ve got the clever doctor. They all have their adjectives or epithets. THAT’s the power of sci-fi. I love sci-fi, computer games. I love any escapes. Give me them all. I’ll take all of them and, yeah, I think that’s the strength of that genre.

Does your connection with DS9 compromise any ability for your agent to say, “Can we get him into the next Star Trek film? Have you reached out? (Jeffrey Combs, Vaughn Armstrong and Majel Barrett are among those who have played different characters in the Star Trek universe)

Siddig: No. No, I haven’t and I don’t think I, I will and I think that’s really cool. As an actor, I’ve got other ambitions and Deep Space Nine, although I’m deeply proud of it, is not something I’m campaigning to resurrect or that character, Bashir, or anything like that. Yeah, all good things (must come to an end).

Now speaking of moving forward, you’ve got Miral coming up with Freida Pinto–

Siddig: Yeah!

— and Julian Schnabel (the director of Basquiat and Before Night Falls, who received a Best Director Oscar nomination for The Diving Bell And The Butterfly).

Siddig: Yeah!

You watch the trailer and it’s extremely emotional–

Siddig: Yeah.

— just in that minute and a half [actual running time is 1:56]. What do you hope that effect will be on the audience of the film?

Siddig: Primarily, I hope people don’t get offended here because I know people are very sensitive and touchy about Jewishness and Israel and Arabs and blah, blah, but I just hope it’s not a memoriam to the Palestinians and Israel. I hope it’s not, “Oh, this film,” in 25 years or 30 years, (where people will say) “Oh, yeah there were Palestinians in Israel back then. Yeah, but now they’ve all emigrated. They’ve all been forced out. I mean, it’s not gonna be that soon, but it’s quite worrying what’s going on. And everybody, frankly, knows. And it’s an elephant in everybody’s room. And even Jewish friends over here are like, “We’re just so embarrassed of what’s happening.” And some people are more belligerent and go, “No. This is damn right.”

And likely on the other side as well.

Siddig: Of course. And that’s gonna happen. But (Miral) rolls back the clock and it goes, “whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Have a look. Wait a second. This is how it started. And, you know what? We’re not even gonna talk about the guys. Screw the guys. The guys aren’t important. The guys just yap. They run around, swinging their d—s. What’s important is how the women cope with this.” This is about three extraordinary women and they all have different reactions to what’s happening to their country where they were brought up. It starts in 1948 (the year of the declaration of the State of Israel), so it’s really novel from that point of view. And Rula Jebreal, in fact, who wrote the story as an autobiography and Schnabel really exploit the fact that, making it about the women is almost more powerful than making it about the men because this isn’t about the guns. This is about the hearts and minds behind the guns. It’s tough on the Israelis, but I think that’s ok. I think it’s fair. It’ll be moving and I hope- well, it’ll polarize people. There’s people who are just gonna go, “lalalalalala” with their fingers in their ears. Whatever they hear. Whatever comes out. And then, fine. Bring it on.

Yeah. (I’ll) Just ask another DS9 question, because there are still such passionate fans. It’s a decade later.

Siddig: Yeah! Yeah! Absolutely.

How responsive were the show’s executives to fan forums and fan ideas. Was there ever a, a storyline that you went, “Oh, this is clearly something that the fans have been asking for or that the fans lobbied for and got?”

Siddig: Yeah, I mean, to a degree. They were very careful because there was sort of danger of their becoming kind of a, not Lord Of The Flies, but they want to keep control of the farm. (Laughs) and the fans were very powerful, are very powerful. And “Give ‘em an inch, they’ll take a mile” was one of the attitudes in our production office, so they were very careful and cagey about that. But, someone like (DS9 Co-Executive Producer) Ron Moore, for example had his ear to the ground. And they read every single thing. They read every, you know, blog, whatever they were called back then. They weren’t blogs, salon, forum, note (laughs). You know. No doubt, some of those ideas sunk in, even if they weren’t admitting to it.

(Laughter) All right. Well congratulations on Cairo Time.

Siddig: Thanks. Thank you. Really nice to meet you.

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