Derek George Jacobi (born October 22, 1938) is a British actor, knighted in 1994 for his services to the theatre.

Jacobi was born in London and educated at the University of Cambridge before embarking on his stage career. He quickly came to the fore, and his talent was recognised by Laurence Olivier, who gave him the role of Cassio in his 1965 film of Othello. Although Jacobi's name was becoming known and he was increasingly busy with stage and screen acting, his big breakthrough did not come for another ten years. It was in the title role of the BBC's blockbuster series, I, Claudius (1976), that he finally made his popular reputation. His performance as the stammering, twitching emperor won him many plaudits. (It was a performance he would later come close to repeating in the role of Alan Turing in the stage play, Breaking the Code (televised 1996) and when playing a deranged murderer in the Hollywood film, Dead Again.)

Jacobi continued to play Shakespeare, notably in Kenneth Branagh's 1989 film of Henry V (as the Chorus) and in two notable productions of Hamlet (as Hamlet in the BBC Television Shakespeare production in 1980 and as Claudius in Kenneth Branagh's movie in 1996), but also attracted new audiences as the detective-monk, Cadfael, in ITV's adaptation of the novels of Ellis Peters. He remains one of Britain's foremost actors.\n