Jack Gleeson (born 20 May 1992) is an Irish actor. He is best known for portraying Joffrey Baratheon in the HBO television series Game of Thrones (2011–2014). Following this role, Gleeson took a six-year hiatus from screen acting. He returned to the screen in 2020 and has since appeared in the Irish film In the Land of Saints and Sinners (2023) and the series The Sandman (2025) and House of Guinness (2025).

Early life

Jack Gleeson was born in Cork, Ireland, and raised in Ranelagh, Dublin, where he attended Gonzaga College. Both of his parents are lawyers. He has two older sisters, Rachel and Emma, who are also involved in Irish theatre. He attended drama classes with them when he was young, and also performed in youth theatre.

Gleeson attended Trinity College Dublin between 2010 and 2015. He studied philosophy and theology and was elected a scholar in 2012. At Trinity, Gleeson was a member of DU Players, where he met his future co-founders of Collapsing Horse Theatre Company.

Career

Gleeson began acting at the age of eight in the Independent Theatre Workshop. His first roles were in films such as Reign of Fire (2002), Batman Begins (2005), Shrooms (2007), and A Shine of Rainbows (2009). In 2010, he played a leading role in the film All Good Children, which was selected for the Directors' Fortnight at the Cannes Film Festival. A reviewer for Variety considered Gleeson "the pic's big discovery".

In 2011, Gleeson starred as Joffrey Baratheon in the HBO fantasy drama Game of Thrones. His performance received critical acclaim, and his character is widely regarded as one of television's best villains. In 2012, Gleeson expressed his intention to step back from professional acting to pursue an academic career once his work on the series was finished. He retired from screen acting in 2014 after concluding his work on Game of Thrones, but stated that while he had previously been interested in pursuing academia, he had since "gone off that idea". TVLine named Gleeson "Performer of the Week" for his work in the episode "The Lion and the Rose".

Throughout the 2010s, Gleeson was a member of the Dublin-based Collapsing Horse Theatre Company, of which he was a co-founder and producer. He was in the original cast of the company's first production, Monster/Clock, a puppet show that premiered in Dublin in 2012. His next appearance was in "lo-fi comedy", Bears in Space, which premiered in Dublin in July 2014 and was part of the 2014 Edinburgh Festival Fringe. The show received positive reviews and was revived in Dublin and London in 2015, as well as Off-Broadway at 59E59 Theaters in New York in September 2016. In 2017, Collapsing Horse was appointed artistic director of the Cat Laughs comedy festival; Gleeson gave a four-hour performance "as a cat from the 9th-century absurdist poem". Collapsing Horse came to an end in November 2019.

Gleeson made two public appearances in 2019. In June, he was featured in the musical comedy program AMUSICAL at the Cat Laughs festival. Then, in August, he made a surprise appearance at Trinity Brawl 2, a wrestling event in Dublin.

Gleeson returned to the screen in Sara Pascoe's 2020 series Out of Her Mind. In 2023, he appeared alongside Liam Neeson in the film In the Land of Saints and Sinners, and guest-starred in season four of Sex Education and in the BBC adaptation of The Famous Five novels. In 2025, Gleeson reunited with fellow Game of Thrones alum Alfie Allen in the Dutch–Belgian thriller Safe Harbor. He also appeared as Puck / Robin Goodfellow in the second season of the Netflix series The Sandman and as Byron Hedges in the historical drama House of Guinness, which is loosely based on the history of the Guinness family.

Personal life

Gleeson divides his time between London, where he moved in 2015, and Dublin. On 27 August 2022, he married his long-time girlfriend Róisín O'Mahony in a small Catholic ceremony in County Kerry.

Gleeson publicly supported the successful campaign to legalise abortion in Ireland in 2018.

Acting credits

Film

YearTitleRoleNotesRef.
2002Reign of FireKidUncredited
2003FishtaleBoy with fishShort film
2004Tom Waits Made Me CryYoung Vincent
Shaving the Baby
2005Batman BeginsLittle Boy
2007ShroomsLonely Twin
2008We Are MunsterShort film
2009A Shine of RainbowsSeamus
2010All Good ChildrenDara
2012ChatAdamShort film
Electric BurmaHimselfDocumentary
2014RingsendShort film
2021Rebecca's BoyfriendRory
2023In the Land of Saints and SinnersKevin Lynch
2025With Compliments from the Gentlemen Across the Bar in OmanHimselfShort film
LearnersCharlieVoice, short film

Television

YearTitleRoleNotesRef.
2011–2014Game of ThronesJoffrey BaratheonMain role (seasons 1–4)
2020Out of Her MindCasper2 episodes
2023Sex EducationDodgy Mo2 episodes (season 4)
2023–2024The Famous FiveThomas Wentworth3 episodes
2025Safe HarborFarrell WalshMain role
The SandmanPuck / Robin Goodfellow5 episodes (season 2)
House of GuinnessByron Hedges6 episodes

Theatre

YearTitleRoleVenueNotesRef.
2002A Christmas CarolTiny TimGate Theatre
2007Great ExpectationsYoung Pip
DNARiverbank Arts Centre
2009The Giant Blue HandTimmy TimeThe Ark
2011SpurtVariousCork Midsummer Festival
2012Monster/ClockTobySmock Alley TheatreAlso associate producer
2013Distance from the Event—N/aDublin Fringe FestivalAssociate producer
Human Child—N/aSmock Alley TheatreCo-producer
2014–2016Bears in SpaceNico/SkinProject Arts Centre
Edinburgh Festival Fringe
Smock Alley Theatre
Soho Theatre
59E59 Theaters
2017The Water Orchard—N/aProject Arts CentreDramaturg
2018Collapsing Horse Science Fiction Radio HourPerformerSet TheatreEpisodes: "Yokespiracy" & "The Irrational Number"
The Sugar Club
2020–2022To Be a Machine (Version 1.0)Mark O'ConnellDublin Theatre Festival
Némo Bienniale Internationale
Hong Kong Arts Festival
2021The SeagullConstantineGalway International Arts Festival
2023To Be a Machine (Version 2.0)Mark O'ConnellDublin Theatre Festival

Accolades

AwardYearCategoryNominee / WorkResultRef.
1st Irish Theatre Festival2016Special Jury PrizeBears in SpaceWon
IGN Awards2011Best TV VillainGame of ThronesNominated
2012Best TV VillainNominated
2013Best TV VillainNominated
IGN People's Choice Awards2012Best TV VillainWon
2013Best TV VillainWon
Portal Awards2012Best Young ActorNominated
Russian National Movie Awards2015Best Foreign Villain of the YearNominated
Saturn Awards2013Best Performance by a Younger Actor in a Television SeriesNominated
Scream Awards2011Best EnsembleNominated
Screen Actors Guild Awards2011Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama SeriesNominated
2013Nominated
Young Hollywood Awards2014We Love to Hate YouNominated

Notes

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