Welcome to Richard Madden Fan, a fansite dedicated to Richard Madden, Scottish stage, film, and television actor known for portraying Robb Stark in Game of Thrones, Prince Kit in Disney's Cinderella, David Budd in Bodyguard, and most recently, Ikaris in Marvel's Eternals. Please enjoy our site and our gallery with over 35k high quality images.

"I just think of myself as an upstart who is trying to get better at what I do."
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Added in the gallery, outtakes from the beautiful photoshoot Richard did with Lily for People Magazine. Enjoy!

Photoshoots & Portraits > Session 029 [+4]


Updated the gallery adding digital HQ scans from the Flaunt issue #140 featuring Richard (with big thanks to Emily!) and some more pics from the Regent Street Apple Store event. Enjoy!

MAGAZINE SCANS > Flaunt Magazine Issue #140 (2015) [+5]
PUBLIC APPEARANCES > 2015 > March 20: Cinderella – Apple Host Meet The Filmmaker [+9]


GET INTO FILM – Into Film Reporter Manasi talks to Kenneth Branagh, Lily James, Richard Madden & Holliday Grainger to discuss release of Disney’s live-action Cinderella.



SUGARSCAPE – The live action Cinderella remake hit up our UK cinemas on Friday, and to celebrate we went and had a chinwag with Richard Madden who plays Prince Charming aka Kit in the movie. And as well as having glorious eyebrows, a fabby Scottish accents and actual Louboutins on, he had some well funny stuff to say about old Cinders too – ’cause it turns out he’d buy her a pair of Nike trainers if he got the chance, isn’t massively keen on the whole ‘foot fetish’ thing, and probably wouldn’t go after his own Princess IRL. Oh, and he reckons Prince Charming would be a fan of Disclosure and Years and Years, isn’t very good at chat up lines and thinks you should go and see the film because it’s magical.

If you don’t want to marry him already and chase him around the ball until he makes that bloody glass slipper fit on your foot, you should probably reassess your priorities. (source)



PACinderella hunk Richard Madden has insisted the latest adaptation of Lady Chatterley’s Lover in which he stars will focus on romance, not raciness. DH Laurence’s novel was the subject of an obscenity trial in Britain after it was first published in full in 1960, because of the graphic language it uses to describe the passionate love affair between married aristocrat Lady Chatterley and her gamekeeper Oliver Mellors. Game Of Thrones star Richard as been cast opposite Holliday Grainger in a new BBC adaptation of the infamous story.





COMPANY.CO.UK – IRL Prince Charming, Richard Madden chats William & Harry, prints and the artist formerly known as Prince to Company’s Holly Rains, you may be sensing a theme here…



THE TELEGRAPH.CO.UK. – Richard Madden and Lily James managed to wreck some of the practice dresses during Cinderella rehearsals. The Scottish actor takes on the role of Prince Kit in Kenneth Branagh’s live-action remake of the classic Disney telling, with Lily James in the title role of Cinderella.

Triple Oscar-winning designer Sandy Powell is behind the spectacular costumes, with Richard revealing how careful he was with her creations.

“I kind of always think there were three of us in this relationship; the prince and Cinderella and the dress,” Richard smiled to Cover Media. “So we had to learn a new technique of dance, which was kind of like skiing so you won’t destroy it. And we practised for a couple of months before Sandy would let us near the actual dress. We managed to tear up a couple of the practice ones in the process.”

Sandy has previously bagged golden statues for her work on The Young Victoria, The Aviator and Shakespeare in Love, so she is a pro at period costumes.

For Cinderella, Sandy blended different time periods in order to produce the fairytale outcome.

“For me it was 19th century, with a bit of 1940s and 1950s thrown in. Like for the stepmother [Cate Blanchett], I was looking at those, sort of, 1940s actresses like Marlene Dietrich, Joan Crawford. And when they were in films, made in the 1940s, set in the 19th century, how it all looked, it’s all a bit wrong – you can still see the 1940s, and I really liked that element for Cate,” she explained.

“And then for the sisters I went a decade higher and went to sort of 1950s versions of the 19th century.” (source)