Background
Lachlan grew up in East Sussex, and is the fifth eldest of six brothers.
Lachlan grew up in East Sussex, and is the fifth eldest of six brothers.
University of Oxford. New College; Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute.
He is best known for playing blind Lieutenant Edward Courtenay in the Independent Television hit television series Downton Abbey and Slater in the complex psychological thriller Brand New-U. He went to Saint Paul"s School in Barnes, West London. At the age of 16, he was offered a contract to play cricket with Northamptonshire Cricket Club. He took a gap year after school, worked as a model, and went to live in Rome, where he got a Diploma in spoken Latin from the Gregorian University.
He then travelled to the South Pacific islands, before going on to study Classics at New College, Oxford.
After Oxford, he went to New York to train as an actor and director at the Lee Strasberg Theatre and Institute under Robert Ellermann. After drama school, he co-founded, trained and directed Perennial Theatre Company, but left in order to focus on his individual career.
Lachlan"s first job out of drama school was the role of Captain Jack Harkness" brother Gray in the British Broadcasting Corporation hit television series Torchwood. He then went on to play the role of Lord Brandon Perry in the film biopic Vivaldi the Red Priest, starring Steven Cree, Clemency Burton-Hill, James Jagger, Charity Wakefield, Matthew McNulty and Christian McKay.
In 2011, Lachlan played the tragic, suicidal character of Lieutenant Edward Courtenay in the second series of Downton Abbey, working alongside Jessica Brown-Findlay and Rob James-Collier.
He then starred as Captain Davenport in the Norwegian feature film Cross of Honour (originally Into the White), also starring Rupert Grint and David Kross, a Second World War drama based on a true story about British and German pilots who, having shot each other down, are forced to share a cabin in the mountains. One reviewer noted his performance was "as elegant as a young Hugh Grant". In 2012, he played the sinister character of Dominic in Mike Figgis"s suspense thriller Suspension of Disbelief starring Sebastian Koch and Lotte Verbeek.
He then went on to play the small part of the arrogant banker Alain Allanic in the English-language French police television series Jo, opposite Jean Reno.
In 2014, in the upcoming independent thriller The Unfolding, he plays the lead role of a young researcher in psychical events who is drawn into a terrifying confrontation with an evil spirit. Most recently, he stars in the upcoming BFI funded Brand New-U, a psychological thriller exploring the nature of identity.
Working with Bafta Award winning director Simon Pummell, he plays the lead role of Slater, alongside Nora-Jane Noone. The World Premiere was at the Edinburgh International Festival on 20 June 2015 and the film was nominated for the prestigious Michael Powell Award for Best British Feature.
Alongside his film and television work, Lachlan has worked at the National Theatre in the award-winning production of Terence Rattigan"s After the Dance, directed by Thea Sharrock and starring Benedict Cumberbatch, and in various fringe theatres.
In 2013-2014, he also starred in the latest Heineken and Mercedes advertising campaigns. He can speak Italian, French and Russian. Charity Lachlan has been a supporter of Blind Veterans United Kingdom, formerly known as Street Dunstan"son
lieutenant was while he was researching the role of Lieutenant Courtenay that Lachlan encountered the work of Blind Veterans United Kingdom, and he has been an ambassador for the charity ever since.
In May 2012, he ran the London Marathon to raise money for the charity. He also supports the Stride Foundation.