Tchéky Karyo, the actor, who has died of cancer aged 72, had been working steadily in the film industry for more than 30 years before he became a household name in Britain as Julien Baptiste, the craggily careworn retired French detective in the BBC’s hit thriller The Missing (2014).
As well as character parts in dozens of French films, Karyo had “baddie” roles in several big-budget Hollywood movies, including as a drug baron in Bad Boys (1995, with Will Smith), a vengeful French officer in The Patriot (2000, with Mel Gibson) and as the Russian defence minister in the James Bond caper GoldenEye (1995, with Pierce Brosnan).
With Mel Gibson in The Patriot – Alamy
He was in his 60s when the call came from the BBC which, instead of casting a native English speaker with a dodgy accent, wanted to cast a French actor as Baptiste, the gentle philosopher-detective called out of retirement for a last case – that of a British child who has gone missing in France.
The eight-part series proved a ratings hit and was nominated for Golden Globes, Emmys and Baftas. More than any other actor it was the charismatic Karyo who carried the drama, and he went on to limp his way through two series of The Missing (he confessed that he often forgot which was the gammy leg) and was rewarded with two spin-offs of his own, in 2019 and 2021, simply called Baptiste.
He was given his own spin-off, Baptiste, with Fiona Shaw – Jonathan Ford
He acquired a dedicated following among British women of a certain age and in 2019 came top of the “Mr Silver Fox” list on the IMDb website for his “beautiful French accent”. “I didn’t expect it,” he confessed. “It has made me feel young again.”
Yet when he was first approached for the role, Karyo had doubts about appearing in a series that involved the abduction of a child just a few years older than his own, and doubted whether his English would be good enough. But when he read the script, by brothers Harry and Jack Williams, he felt it was “interesting to see how different people react to this situation”. He found that working with the British cast and crew was “maybe the best shooting experience I’ve had for a long time”.
Karyo claimed that he drew on memories of his own unhappy childhood in building the character of Baptiste, who struggles to control his own fragile emotions as he copes with those of the despairing father of the missing child, played by James Nesbitt. “What I went through as a child was a real earthquake and it’s true that this was a treasure to work on as an actor. It helped me many times,” he said.
Karyo in 2001 – ANNE-CHRISTINE POUJOULAT
He was born Baruh Djaki Karyo on October 4 1953 in Istanbul, one of three children of a Turkish delivery driver of Spanish-Jewish origin and a Greek-Jewish mother. The family moved to Paris when he was a baby and the spelling of his name was changed to Tchéky to make it easier for the French to pronounce.
Family life, however, was turbulent. His parents were always fighting – “When they weren’t yelling at each other we thought they were sick” – and when Tchéky was 13 his mother asked his father to leave and take Tchéky with him.
Though he later forgave his mother, whom he did not see for six years, her desertion left him “really angry and really sad because for us it was like the world was falling apart”.
Karyo in GoldenEye – © Eon Productions / United Artists / Collection Christophel
Tchéky’s father wanted him to learn a trade and after leaving school he began training as an accountant. But he had always wanted to act and, aged 19, he quit college to study drama at the Cyrano theatre, supporting his acting by working variously as a meat porter, railway employee and delivery driver, then joined the Daniel Sorano theatre company and later the National Theatre of Strasbourg.
Karyo first made his mark on the big screen as a gangster’s psychotic stooge in Bob Swaim’s crime thriller La Balance (1982), which earned him a César nomination for most promising male actor.
With Luc Besson on the set of Nikita – Patrick CAMBOULIVE
He went on to star in numerous French gangster capers before roles as a hunter in Jean-Jacques Annaud’s adventure film The Bear (1988) and as a recruiter and trainer of assassins in Luc Besson’s thriller La Femme Nikita (1990) brought him to international attention.
For the next two decades he made as many films abroad as at home, his credits including Ridley Scott’s 1492: Conquest of Paradise (1992), Griffin Dunne’s romantic black comedy Addicted to Love (1997), Michael Cole’s hit comedy Saving Grace (2000), starring Brenda Blethyn, and Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s anti-war epic A Very Long Engagement (2004).
Most of these were supporting roles but in 1994 he played the title role in Roger Christian’s 1994 biopic Nostradamus, though the Los Angeles Times reviewer found his characterisation of the medieval prophet “so introspective and brooding as to seem glum”.
With his then wife, Isabelle Pasco, in 1997 – Ron Galella
In 2023 Karyo was reunited with scriptwriters Harry and Jack Williams for another BBC series, Boat Story, a comedy thriller in which he played a sharp-suited gangster known as “The Tailor”. But, he said, it was as Julien Baptiste, more than any other character, that he felt he could be himself.
In France, Karyo was also known as a musician and songwriter and released two albums.
In 1995 Tchéky Karyo married the actress Isabelle Pasco. They later divorced and in 2002 he married the actress Valérie Keruzoré, with whom he had a son and a daughter. They survive him with a daughter from his first marriage.
Tchéky Karyo, born October 4 1953, died October 31 2025
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