Mads Mikkelsen

Mads Mikkelsen’s Path From Dancer to Screen Icon
Long before cameras found him, Mikkelsen trained as a gymnast and spent nearly a decade as a professional dancer, studying at the Balettakademien in Gothenburg. A shift toward drama led him to the Aarhus Theatre School in 1996, the same year he debuted on screen as a low-level drug dealer in Nicolas Winding Refn’s Pusher. Danish television work followed, including a four-year run on Unit One, before Casino Royale introduced him to global audiences as Bond villain Le Chiffre. Hannibal, the NBC series that ran from 2013 to 2015, cemented his reputation internationally, and roles in Doctor Strange, Rogue One and Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny kept him in major franchise work through the following decade.
Death Stranding and the Voice of Cliff
Hideo Kojima cast Mikkelsen as Cliff (Clifford Unger) in 2019’s Death Stranding, combining motion capture, facial performance and English-language voice work for the character. The role marked one of his most substantial contributions to video games, built through full performance capture rather than studio voiceover alone.
Quantum of Solace and Le Chiffre’s Return
Mikkelsen reprised Le Chiffre for the 2008 Quantum of Solace video game tie-in, lending his voice to the character he had originated on screen two years earlier in Casino Royale.
Danish Dubbing for Pixar and Kiros in Mufasa: The Lion King
In his native Denmark, Mikkelsen voiced Randall Boggs for the Danish dub of Monsters, Inc. and later took on Chick Hicks for the Danish versions of Cars and its 2017 sequel, Cars 3. His most recent voice credit arrived with Mufasa: The Lion King, where he voiced Kiros in the English-language release, expanding his animation work beyond home-market dubbing for the first time in a major studio release.