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I don't know about that. Most Swedish actors in Hollywood act Russians in extremely many movies. Dolph Lundgren, Stellan Skarsgård and some of his sons.Yes, quite a few of you were right. He's an English actor.
According to the English, however, he looks Slavic enough to often be cast as an Eastern European. Of course, it's mostly the unusual and very attractive, I might add, eyes.
For the t-rolls, and we all know who they are, who looked him up, from now on I won't post a picture which advertises the subject is an actor.
I don't know about that. Most Swedish actors in Hollywood act Russians in extremely many movies. Dolph Lundgren, Stellan Skarsgård and some of his sons.
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It was with regarding looking slavic. I don't think there's a template for it and using actors according to it.I don't quite get your point.
What does that have to do that the British cast this English actor as a Russian in two English television series because they apparently thought he could pass?
I would add this kind of eyelids is not seen often with his face features, which don't evocate too much typical* Slavs or Finns; his cheekbones are to narrow and "shallow"; these eyelids are close to some Finns eyes, even if not so perfect as someones of them (with an horizontal superior eyelid almost rectiline, an inferior eyelid getting up from nose to cheek. They are not so typical of British people but occur there less rarely than among French people, for the most in regions with stronger Viking input (so Finn "contamination"). That said, I suppose this kind of eyes were not too seldom among our Paleo-Mesolithic ancestors, even in South, so they don't reveal everytime a more recent introgression.
* Slavs are far to be "typical" for western European, a lot of them could pass almost everywhere, if less in mediterranean countries.
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