Thomas William Hiddleston was born on February 9, 1981, in Westminster, London, the second of three children of James Norman Hiddleston, a physical chemist and scientific director, and Diana Patricia Servaes. He grew up primarily in Oxford and Wimbledon, and was educated at the Dragon School in Oxford and subsequently at Eton College, one of Britain's most prestigious boarding schools. He read Classics — Greek and Latin language and literature — at Pembroke College, Cambridge, before training at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London. His classical education and intensive RADA training gave him a technical foundation in verse speaking and physical performance that distinguishes his work from that of film-trained actors.
His early career combined British theatre — including work at the Royal Shakespeare Company — with early film and television roles that were sufficient to establish his technical reputation without generating significant public recognition. His casting as Loki, the Norse god of mischief and manipulation, in Kenneth Branagh's Thor (2011) changed everything. The character — an adopted son who has discovered his true origins and whose grievances are simultaneously entirely understandable and entirely destructive — was a perfect vehicle for Hiddleston's particular gifts: the ability to be genuinely charming and genuinely dangerous in the same moment, to make villainy sympathetic without diminishing its threat. The character's popularity was immediate and overwhelming, and has sustained across twelve years and multiple MCU appearances.
His performance as Jonathan Pine in the BBC/AMC miniseries The Night Manager (2016) — adapted from John le Carré's novel — demonstrated that his range extended well beyond the theatrical grandeur of Loki: Pine is a quiet, damaged, internally determined figure who works largely through stillness and concealment rather than expression. The performance earned him a Golden Globe for Best Actor and established him as a dramatic actor of the first rank independent of his superhero franchise success. His theatrical work — including a celebrated Hamlet at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in 2017 — continued to demonstrate a commitment to classical performance that most actors of comparable film fame do not maintain.
Hiddleston's INFJ quality is most visible in the specificity and depth of his preparation for roles: he reads extensively, researches the psychological world of his characters with genuine scholarly thoroughness, and brings to his performances a quality of inner life that produces the sense of understanding something about the character that the character doesn't quite understand about himself — which is Loki's exact condition for most of his MCU appearances. His public persona — warm, intellectually engaged, seemingly genuinely interested in the people he talks to — reflects the INFJ's characteristic alignment between inner depth and outer presentation: there is no significant gap between how he appears and what he is, which produces the quality of authenticity that his audience finds so compelling.