Derek Jacobi Net Worth

How much is Derek Jacobi worth?

Net Worth:$8 Million
Date of Birth:October 22, 1938 (85 years old)
Gender:Male
Height:1.78 m, 5 ft 10 in
Profession:Stage Actor
Nationality:British
Derek Jacobi Net Worth:
$8 Million

Distinguished actor and director who has won several awards for his theatre work, which includes Hamlet, Uncle Yanya, and Oedipus the King. In 1984, he won a Tony Award for his role in Much Ado About Nothing. In 2015, he appeared as the king in Cinderella.

He was a dedicated member of The Players of Leyton drama club.

He became a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1985.

The stage actor impresses with a net worth of 8000000 dollars. Congratulations for this achievement!

More about the earnings of Derek Jacobi

Actor Derek Jacobi has a networth that has to be considered pretty high.

Personal Life

He began a civil partnership with Richard Clifford in March 2006.

He was in the 2000 movie Gladiator with Russell Crowe.

Inspirational Quotes by Derek Jacobi

You have to pretend to live in those clothes that they lived in, to live within the climate that they had then. You have to imagine with the help, obviously, of all the other technicians that are around - the writer, the director, the other actors.

Derek Jacobi

I think actors always retain one foot in the cradle. We're switched on to our youth, to our childhood. We have to be because we're in the business of transferring emotions to other people.

Derek Jacobi

They were totally supportive, always saw everything I did. One of the thrills of my life was when they went to the theater to see something that I wasn't in. It opened doors for them that otherwise would have been totally closed.

Derek Jacobi

He was somebody who made me think, I suppose, about the contemplative life. I've always been a city fellow, but I've often had vague thoughts about 'checking out' and perhaps going into a monastery and just seeing what it was like.

Derek Jacobi

Ellis Peters's historical detail is very accurate and very minute, and therefore is not only interesting to read but good for an actor to acquire a sense of the period. And the other thing I think is that an actor lives in the land of imagination.

Derek Jacobi