Aneurin Barnard, a Welsh musician-actor who portrays a mystery guy called Daniel Solace in the multilingual German suspense-horror period series 1899, has received a lot of excellent feedback from fans for his depiction of the interesting and suspenseful character. On Thursday, November 17, the extremely enigmatic series premiered exclusively on Netflix. The series creators have been Baran bo Odar and Jantje Friese. The trio previously developed the hit Netflix time-travel thriller Dark. The series’ creators served as executive producers for 1899.
Netflix’s official summary for 1899 is as follows:
“The passengers of the Kerberos meet the greatest mystery of their life as they travel across the huge and hazardous Atlantic Ocean. Welcome to 1899, a tense new series from the makers of Dark.”
Since the show’s premiere on the streaming site, it has received a lot of attention from people all around the globe, thanks to the compelling acting performances of the main actors and the series’ fascinating character arcs.
Learn all there is to know about Aneurin Barnard, who portrays Daniel Solace in 1899.
Aneurin Barnard, a 35-year-old Welsh actor, made his acting debut in 2003 with the part of Young Jonathan in the TV series Jacob’s Ladder. However, the actor rose to prominence after playing the important role of Richard III in the 2013 limited series The White Queen. Barnard is most known for his roles as Dylan Parker in Elfie Hopkins (2012), Claude in The Truth About Emanuel (2013), Darnley in Mary Queen of Scots (2013), Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in Interlude in Prague (2017), and Gibson in the highly acclaimed 2017 film Dunkirk.
Ironclad, Hunky Dory, The Facility, Citadel, Trap for Cinderella, The Adventurer: The Curse of the Midas Box, Bitter Harvest, The Personal History of David Copperfield, Dead In A Week (Or Your Money Back), The Goldfinch, Radioactive, and a few more films have featured the Welsh actor.
Aneurin Barnard has also appeared in a number of notable television shows and films, including We’ll Take Manhattan, Agatha Christie’s Marple, Under Milk Wood, The Scandalous Lady W, Midsomer Murders, Peaky Blinders, The Pact, Moonfleet, Cilla, War & Peace, Thirteen, Barkskins, Sherwood, Doctors, Casualty, and Killing Jesus.