Cultural depictions of George V of the United Kingdom
George V has been portrayed on screen by:
- Henry Warwick in the 1918 silent film Why America Will Win
- William Gaffney in the 1919 silent film The Great Victory, Wilson or the Kaiser? The Fall of the Hohenzollerns
- Derek Erskine in the 1925 silent film The Scarlet Woman: An Ecclesiastical Melodrama
- Carleton Hobbs in the 1965 film A King's Story
- Michael Osborne in the 1975 ATV drama series Edward the Seventh
- Marius Goring in the 1978 Thames Television series Edward & Mrs. Simpson
- Keith Varnier in the 1978 LWT drama series Lillie
- Rene Aranda in the 1980 film The Fiendish Plot of Dr. Fu Manchu
- Guy Deghy in the 1981 Southern Television drama series Winston Churchill: The Wilderness Years
- Andrew Gilmour in the 1985 Australian miniseries A Thousand Skies
- David Ravenswood in the 1990 Australian TV miniseries The Great Air Race
- John Warner in the 1991 RTÉ TV drama The Treaty
- David Troughton in the 1999 BBC TV drama All the King's Men
- Rupert Frazer in the 2002 TV miniseries Shackleton
- Alan Bates in the 2002 Carlton Television drama Bertie and Elizabeth
- Tom Hollander in the 2003 BBC miniseries The Lost Prince
- Clifford Rose in the 2005 TV drama Wallis & Edward
- Andrew Pritchard in the 2005 British TV drama documentary The First Black Britons
- Julian Wadham in the 2007 TV drama My Boy Jack
- Michael Gambon in the 2010 film The King's Speech
- James Fox in the 2011 film W.E.
- Guy Williams in the 2013 Christmas episode of Downton Abbey
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