Fahri Yardim was born in Hamburg, Germany, the son of an academic family of Turkish extraction. Performing on stage in school productions he developed his love of acting. He trained at the Hamburger Bühnenstudio der darstellenden Künste (Hamburg Stage Studio of the Performing Arts) and appeared in theatre productions in Berlin and Hamburg. Fahri represents a generation that focuses on character rather than nationality. He is a naturalist who avoids ethnic stereotype, and his versatility is mirrored in his choice of roles: He portrayed an Anatolian inAlmanya - Willkommen in Deutschland(2011), a Greek inKebab Connection(2004), a German Sinte inChiko(2008), a German inMogadischu(2008), and a woman inUnter Frauen(2012). His most memorable roles include the Brunswick-set film66/67 - Fairplay war gestern(2009). 2012 proved to be a peak year allowing him to demonstrate the range of his talent and his powerful, committed, discursive and nuanced personality. He played a priest in Marcus H. Rosenmüller'sWer's glaubt, wird selig(2012), an artist in Marc Rothemund'sMann tut was Mann kann(2012), a paramedic in Lars Becker's ZDF thrillerDie Geisterfahrer(2012), a doctor in the ProSieben crime dramaKreutzer kommt ... ins Krankenhaus(2012) and a detective in the Sat.1 thriller dramaHannah Mangold & Lucy Palm(2011). In 2013 he will appear with Ben Kingsley in the international movie version ofDer Medicus(2013). In Austria he is a regular in the ORF police drama CopStories. And in March of 2013 he wasTil Schweiger's partner in the first of several projectedTatort(1970) episodes.