Damien Thomas, who has died aged 83, was a British actor who worked extensively across television, theatre and film; emerging in the late 1960s, his most prominent roles were the bloodthirsty Count Karnstein in Hammer’s Twins of Evil (1971), the cursed Prince Kassim in Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger (1977) and the Jesuit priest Father Alvito in the small-screen hit Shōgun (1980), for which he learned Japanese.
Born April 11, 1942 in Ismailia, Egypt to an RAF officer father and a French mother, Thomas studied at art college in London before graduating from RADA in 1966. He made his stage debut that same year as Flamineo in a revival of Webster’s The White Devil, his TV debut opposite Felicity Kendal in Love with a Few Hairs (1967), and his film debut in a starry Julius Caesar (1970), playing Pindarus to John Gielgud's Caesar.
An appearance in the Hammer-produced ITV anthology series Journey to the Unknown (1968) paved the way for Twins of Evil, although Thomas later confessed he wasn’t wholly sure what he was getting into: “I thought I was just being given this screentest to act opposite the others who were taking screentests… I had no idea I was actually in the running for a principal role. It was quite nice to find out that, in fact, I was up for the role. And even nicer to find that I got it.”
Fashioned on Hammer’s usual shoestring budget – Thomas’s prop fangs snapped when the actor bit co-star (and former Playboy Playmate) Madeleine Collinson – the film hardly elevated the actor to Christopher Lee-level stardom: “I was about to face a couple of the worst years of my career. Now when I look back at the film, I don’t think I was as bad as I thought at the time.”
Yet his olive skin kept Thomas in the conversation for comparably exotic roles as the decade played out. Playing the Prophet Muhammad’s son Zaid in The Message (1976) earned the actor a lifelong Middle Eastern fanbase; Kassim in the Sinbad movie endeared him to matinee-goers, although again Thomas admitted some reservations: “I discovered that I was a prince for ten minutes [and then] a baboon for most of the rest of the movie… Well, it was fun, and work, so I did it.”
Doing for samurai what Roots (1977) had done for slaves, the James Clavell adaptation Shōgun became a runaway ratings hit, attracting audiences of 25 million in the US before winning three Golden Globes and two Emmys. In a 1982 interview, Thomas revealed the nine-month Japanese shoot left him pondering whether to adopt a more Zen lifestyle, “but it can’t be done where I live in Richmond”.
Buoyed by this success, Thomas became a TV fixture: he was the shadowy drifter Jake Haulter in Tenko (1984), Jose Camarena in the second series of Lynda LaPlante’s Widows (1985) and Michael Samuels, the liberal-leaning Environmental Secretary outwitted by Francis Urquhart in the original House of Cards (1990).
One professional setback – assuming the villain role in Roman Polanski’s maritime flop Pirates (1986) – was compounded by personal tragedy that October after a depressed former lover, the showgirl-turned-actress Suzie Jerome, died from hypothermia on a beach close to Thomas’s Dorset cottage: “I gather from her friends that she was very much in love with me, but she never told me so… I wasn’t ready to launch into another relationship after the pain of marriage and divorce.”
Thereafter, Thomas returned to the stage, directing several times for Theatre West and understudying Frank Langella in the original 2006 production of Peter Morgan’s Frost/Nixon at the Donmar Warehouse; he also landed late-career supporting roles in the Kazuo Ishiguro adaptation Never Let Me Go (2010), the Madonna-directed W.E. (2011) and period horror The Limehouse Golem (2016). His final role was in the miniseries Whatever After (2021).
“I seem destined to play the saturnine and tanned roles,” Thomas shrugged to the Daily Mail in 1984. “But I couldn’t care less – because they’re usually good meaty parts.”
He is survived by his wife Julia, three children and three stepchildren.
Damien Thomas, born April 11, 1942, died April 18, 2025.