Career
He is best known for his work in the theatre. His first documentary, Muse of Fire, premiered in autumn 2013. Giles Terera trained at Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts.
After leaving Mountview, in 1999, he joined an acting ensemble at the National Theatre, where he appeared in Troilus and Cressida, Candide and The Darker Face of the Earth.
He then went on to star as the Ugly Duckling in Honk!. Since then Terera has appeared consistently in British theatre, and some of his most notable appearances are in London"s National Theatre and the West End.
They include. Death and the King"s Horseman, The Tempest, Avenue Q, RENT, 125th Street and Jailhouse Rock.
He has been nominated for three awards for the Whatsonstage.com In 2007 he became the first Black actor to play Christy in Dublins Abbey Theatre production of Playboy of the Western World. In 2011 Terera played Caliban in Trevor Nunn"s production of The Tempest opposite Ralph Fiennes at Haymarket Theatre.
As well as his numerous stage appearances Terera has made occasional appearances in film and television His most notable television appearance was in the CBBC programme Horrible Histories, performing in all five series from 2009 to 2013.
He has also appeared in British Broadcasting Corporation television show Doctors and in the film London Boulevard.
He also appeared in a televised production of Hamlet. Terera is also a filmmaker and musician. His first documentary, Muse of Fire, created with Dan Poole, centres on modern perspectives of Shakespeare, featuring interviews with actors and filmmakers such as Judi Dench, Ian McKellen, Jude Law, Julie Taymor, Fiona Shaw and Baz Luhrmann.
The film premiered in autumn 2013 on British Broadcasting Corporation Four.
His credits as a musician, aside from appearing in numerous musical theatre productions, include composing scores for theatre and performing live as a solo musician. He also composed the score for his film, Muse of Fire, and his vocals can be heard in several songs for Horrible Histories.
In 2013 Giles Terera also curated and directed a series of events at the National Theatre as part of its 50th-anniversary celebrations entitled Walk in the Light, which honoured the contribution of Black artists to British theatre.