June 20, 2026
‘Game of Thrones’ Star Aidan Gillen on Golden Age of British Drama


โ€œGame of Thronesโ€ and โ€œPeaky Blindersโ€ alum Aidan Gillen waxed nostalgic about the golden age of British drama at the Transilvania Intl. Film Festival and argued that thereโ€™s โ€œtoo muchโ€ content clogging the airwaves for todayโ€™s TV consumers.

โ€œI just think thereโ€™s so much stuff. Even the TV stuff now is being designed to try and give you these little [dopamine] hits now and then,โ€ he said. โ€œEven the sophisticated, high-end TV stuff is also being dumbed down a little to try and keep people interested.โ€

He added: โ€œThereโ€™s too much on TV.โ€

The Irish screen star, whoโ€™s serving on the international competition jury this week in Transilvania, is also on hand to promote his latest films: 2025 Tribeca premiere โ€œRe-Creation,โ€ย an Ireland-set dramaย from directors David Merriman and Jim Sheridan based on the real-life murder case of French producer Sophie Toscan du Plantier, andย โ€œGorky Resort,โ€ director ลukasz Poล‚kowskiโ€™s historical drama aboutย a young Polish lieutenant in a Soviet prisoner-of-war camp.

Speaking to a full house during an hour-long masterclass at the Transilvania festival, Gillen opened up about his career on screen, reminiscing about iconic roles in series including โ€œGame of Thrones,โ€ โ€œThe Wireโ€ and โ€œPeaky Blindersโ€ and describing how he broke into the British theater scene as a precocious teenager.

โ€œIโ€™m not a trained actor. I didnโ€™t go to drama school. I was very keen to get out of school as soon as I was able to,โ€ Gillen said. โ€œI found the classroom environment extremely stifling.โ€ย 

The Irish actor said he turned to on-the-job training instead, joining a theater group at the age of 14 and devouring VHS tapes from a local rental shop, โ€œwatching everything from the arthouse European stuff to horror movies to Westerns to Merchant Ivory stuff.โ€

At the age of 18,ย he moved to London, where he soon found work at the Bush Theatre, a celebrated yet intimate venue that he credits with teaching him the essentials of his craft. His first big break came with a role in โ€œSafe,โ€ aย gritty 1993 BBC drama from director Antonia Bird in which he starred oppositeย Kate Hardie as a young homeless man scraping by on the streets of London.ย Looking back, he described that period as a golden age for British TV.

โ€œYou could make these quite out-there, daring dramas with no interference that would end up on television, and like 10 million people would see it. It was quite incredible,โ€ he said. โ€œThey donโ€™t really do that anymore. They stopped making that stuff and started making โ€˜Ballroom Dancing With the Stars.โ€™ People used to watch that stuff. It wasnโ€™t just, โ€˜Oh, this is highbrow art stuff.โ€™ It was like, โ€˜This is fucking brilliant drama.โ€™โ€

Following the success of โ€œSafe,โ€ which won a BAFTA for best single drama, Gillen had a starring role in โ€œQueer as Folk,โ€ย Russell T. Daviesโ€™ groundbreakingย series about queer life in Britain in the 1990s, before crossing the pond to play the venal Baltimore politician Tommy Carcetti in HBOโ€™s โ€œThe Wire.โ€ Soon after came perhaps his most iconic roles, as power player Petyr โ€œLittlefingerโ€ Baelish in โ€œGame of Thronesโ€ and the assassin and bounty hunter Aberama Gold in โ€œPeaky Blinders.โ€

Though Gillen rued a general decline since the peak of prestige TVโ€™s golden age, he said thereโ€™s still โ€œloads of really daring stuff happening in television,โ€ crediting shows like โ€œPluribusโ€ for their โ€œreally sophisticatedโ€ storytelling.

While pining for the good olโ€™ days before โ€œyou [had] to subscribe to all these streamers,โ€ the actor admitted that โ€œmaybe me going on about this is like the time that radio came in, and your great-grandparents were going, โ€˜This thing is like the devilโ€™s work.โ€™ย 

โ€œTV was like that when I was a teenager. โ€˜TV is going to kill our kids.โ€™ And I used to come home from school and go to bedโ€ฆand watch like 10 hours of TV,โ€ he said.

It is perhaps that childhood sense of awe and wonder, he said, that still drives him as an actor.

โ€œOne of the reasons I wanted to become an actor is becauseโ€ฆI always saw the world as a really amazing playground โ€” a work of art, a living dream. I wanted to be part of that and part of painting that picture,โ€ he said.

โ€œIt was the doing of the thing. Not the finished product, not the hotel room, not going to a film festival and walking on the red carpet or being famous or any of that stuff. I was never interested โ€” and Iโ€™m still not โ€” in any of that,โ€ he said. โ€œItโ€™s the actual working โ€” going in and doing it on the day โ€” thatโ€™s what excites me.โ€

The Transilvania Intl. Film Festival runs June 12 โ€“ 21.

About The Author

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *