Benedict Cumberbatch may have portrayed villains such as Khan in the film Star Trek Into Darkness and Sauron in The Hobbit movie trilogy, but the actor has been hailed a “superhero” after it emerged he helped fight off a gang of muggers trying to rob a Deliveroo cyclist in central London.
The incident, which has only just come to light, happened last November in Marylebone High Street, a deerstalker hat’s throw from the Sherlock star’s fictional Baker Street home in the hit BBC TV series.
Cumberbatch, aged 41, had been travelling in an Uber with his wife, the director and playwright Sophie Hunter, when he spotted the four muggers punching the cyclist, with one of the assailants hitting him over the head with a bottle.
The vehicle’s driver, Manuel Dias, told The Sun: “I was taking Benedict and his wife to a club — but I didn’t know it was him at first.
“I went to turn down into Marylebone High Street and we saw four guys were pushing around a Deliveroo cyclist.
“My passenger jumped out, ran over and pulled the men away. They turned towards him and things looked like getting worse, so I joined in.
“He stood there instructing them in the street, shouting, ‘Leave him alone’.
“It was only then I recognised Benedict. Then it all got a bit surreal. Here was Sherlock Holmes fighting off four attackers just round the corner from Baker Street.”
He continued: “I had hold of one lad and Benedict another. He seemed to know exactly what he was doing. He was very brave. He did most of it, to be honest.
“They tried to hit him but he defended himself and pushed them away. He wasn’t injured. Then I think they also recognised it was Benedict and ran away.
“Benedict was courageous, brave and selfless. If he hadn’t stepped in the cyclist could have been seriously injured.
“He asked the rider how he was and when he said, ‘I’m OK’ Benedict just hugged him.
“The cyclist was lucky, Benedict’s a superhero,” he added.
According to The Sun, the Metropolitan Police Service confirmed they had been called to the incident in November, but no arrests were made.
A Deliveroo spokesman commented: "Deliveroo riders are heroes delivering millions of meals to hungry customers right across the country.
"Their safety is our priority and any violence against riders is totally unacceptable.
"We’d like to thank Benedict Cumberbatch for his heroic actions. On behalf of everyone at Deliveroo: thank you so much."
Cumberbatch himself said: “I did it out of, well, I had to, you know ...”
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14 comments
How come this story only surfaced six months after the events described?
He's probably been mucking around with his time gem again.
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Are you sure... I thought it was Butchabit Gendersnatch, famous activist.
Well done Benedict.
Dam fine fellow.
Benylin Crustybun is to be applauded for his actions, of course, but "hero" seems a sufficient label, without the "super-" prefix. That is assuming he didn't defeat the miscreants by waving his hands around while some CGI burst of energy threw them across the street. Likewise, the Deliveroo spokesperson's use of "hero" to describe those who transport greasy bundles of lukewarm food to people too lazy to cook or go out themselves, devalues the word.
Top marks to Butawhiteboy Cantbekhan for his bravery.
Lots of missed opportunities in this article for hilarity when they could have done this:
benedict-cumberbatch-name-wrong-article-1.jpg
As the writer of the article, I did consider that, but following discussions with our in-house legal team (or at least person at road.cc who can legit put the letters LLB after his name ... erm which is me) decided that the prospect of a letter from Mr Cucumberpatch's learned friends might put me in the boss's bad books
...and you thought you'd let the commenters have the fun instead.
Surely he’s related to Engleburt Humperdinck?
He would have been hard as nails if he'd gone to our school for precisely this reason. No surprise here.
Well done to the driver for joining in but Cumberbatch is simply a top, top bloke, that's a hell of a lot more than most have done in the same circumstances.
however, Fight 'off' not 'of' and you might want to recheck your deerstalker sentence, hat should be singular, deerstalker plural.
Cheers for the "off" spot. As for the titfer, "deeerstalker hat" is correct (if it's good enough for Lock & Co Hatters of St James's Street, it is certainly good enough for me), the apostrophe s denotes the possessive (just one hat is theoretically being thrown).
I like Bendict Cucumberbuttybach, famous Welshman.
Its "Bendydick Cumbersnatch"!