Brittish Actors

Collection of Classic Brittish Actors

Dean Andrews
Dean Andrews

Dean Andrews. Wikipedia.

Wikipedia entry:

Born in 1963 in RotherhamWest Riding of Yorkshire, Andrews went to Sitwell Junior School on Grange Road and Oakwood Comprehensive School on Moorgate Road. He went to school with Top Gear presenter James May.[3] His parents were publicans and he lived at the Masons Arms pub on Wellgate and the Green Dragon in Kimberworth. He belonged to the local Phoenix Amateur Operatic Society and appeared in several productions with Phoenix Players. He began work at Kirkby Central, a Vauxhall car dealership, in Wellgate, then began singing at holiday resorts such as SkegnessLincolnshire, and on cruise ships over twenty years. His entry into acting came when successfully auditioning for the 2001 film, The Navigators, which was set in Sheffield.

Dean Andrews
Dean Andrews

Andrews played Barry Shiel in the TV series Buried, which won the BAFTA Award for Best Drama Series in 2004. In 2005, Andrews played the character of Steven Maynard in the ITV drama Wire in the Blood. In 2007, he appeared in the BBC dramas True Dare Kiss and The Street. In 2006, he appeared in yet another BBC drama, Life On Mars, as the character DS Ray Carling. In 2008, he returned to play the character in the spin-off series Ashes to Ashes. Andrews also had a small role in the Channel 4 series No Angelsplaying Neil. He also starred in episode 11, series 5 of Waterloo Road. Andrews played one of the lead roles in ITV’s supernatural drama series Marchlands.

In 2011, he appeared in the BBC Two TV film United, which tells the story of the Manchester United Busby Babes team and the 1958 Munich air disaster. In September 2011 he appeared in the BBC drama The Body Farm as Peter Collins. In November 2012 he appeared in the six part BBC drama Last Tango in Halifax as Robbie. He plays the lead role in the five part BBC One series The Case, about a man accused of murdering his terminally ill girlfriend. He has also recorded voice-overs for Currys television advertisements.[4]Andrews will take over the role of Pete Lewis from Stephen Graham in the BBC show Being Eileen, airing from February 2013.[5][6][7]

In 2015 Andrews appeared as Tom Asher in ITV’s Midsomer Murders episode 17.3 “The Ballad of Midsomer County”

Andrews has two daughters, Sharny and Alice (born c.1985 and c.1991). He is a passionate supporter of his local football team, Rotherham United. He also enjoys watchingrugby league.

In September 2010, Andrews took part in the Bupa Great Yorkshire Run to raise funds for the Alzheimer’s Society, Bupa’s nominated charity for the 2010 Bupa Great Run Series.

Richard Dormer

Richard Dormer. Wikipedia

Richard Dormer (born 11 November 1969) is an Northern Irish actor, playwright and screenwriter. He is best known for his role as Beric Dondarrion in the HBO television series Game of Thrones and Dan Anderssen in Sky Atlantic‘s Fortitude.

Dormer was born in Portadown, Northern Ireland. He studied at the RADA school of acting in London.  After living and working in London, he returned to Northern Ireland. He lives in Belfast and is married to director Rachel O’Riordan.

Dormer gained recognition following his performance as Northern Irish snooker star Alex Higgins in Hurricane in 2003, which he wrote and starred in. Dormer won The Stage award for best actor in 2003.  In 2004, Dormer won the Irish Times Best Actor Award for his performance in Frank McGuinness‘s Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching Towards the Somme and in 2005 completed a season with Sir Peter Hall at the Theatre Royal and starred in Bath as Antonio in William Shakespeare‘s Measure for Measure, Jean in August Strindberg‘s Miss Julie and in a production of Samuel Beckett‘s Waiting for Godot.

Since, Dormer has written a number of plays including The Half and Gentleman’s Tea Drinking Society which were produced through Belfast’s Ransom theatre company. In 2012, Dormer was commissioned by the Abbey Theatre to write a production. Set in Brooklyn in the summer of 1969, Dormer’s Drum Belly gives an insight into the dark edgy underworld of New York’s Irish gangsters and opened April 2013 to mainly positive reviews and was published by Bloomsbury Publishing Dormer has also provided the voices for over twenty BBC Radio 4 plays, documentaries and advertising campaigns.

Following a run of film castings playing secondary characters, he was cast as the lead in the 2012 Good Vibrations which tells the story of Northern Ireland personality and punk rock visionary Terri Hooley. The film premièred at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival, was awarded Best Film at the Galway film awards, best screenplay, Dinard and nominated for the Outstanding Debut award at the 2014 British Academy of Film and Television Arts Awards. The film was well received by critics gaining consistent reviews, most of which highlighted Dormer’s performance as a strength.  Dormer’s portrayal of Terri Hooley saw him nominated in the Best Actor award in the 2013 Irish Film and Television Awards. He has since played roles in Yann Demange‘s critically acclaimed film ’71 alongside Jack O’Connell and forthcoming Gerard Johnson directed Hyena, 2014.

Richard Dormer
Richard Dormer

Dormer has become a well known television actor, more recently playing key roles in the Cinemax drama series Hunted and BBC One‘s Hidden.[16][17] 2012 also saw Dormer taking over the role of Lord Beric Dondarrion, known as the “Lightning Lord”, the leader of the “Brotherhood Without Banners” for Season 3 of HBO series Game of Thrones. In 2016, Dormer reprised his role as Dondarrion in the sixth season of the series and returned for the seventh season, airing in 2017 as well as the eighth and final season, airing in 2019.[19]

Dormer is the voice of the Dad on the children’s animated series Lily’s Driftwood Bay. The series aired in May on Nick Jr. in the UK and on Sprout in the US. It also airs on RTÉ in Ireland, ABC AustraliaKiKa in Germany, MTV in Finland, NRK in Norway, SVT in Sweden, and HOP! in Israel. Broadcasters in Australia and the US are keeping the original voices to the series.

In 2014, Dormer began filming on Sky Atlantic’s Fortitude. Described as “their most ambitious project to date”, he takes the role of Sheriff Dan Anderssen and stars alongside Stanley TucciMichael GambonChristopher Eccleston and The KillingSofie Gråbøl. Fortitude aired on 29 January 2015. The series is set in the fictional Arctic Norwegian settlement of Fortitude. On 9 April 2015, Sky Atlantic recommissioned the show for a second series consisting of 10 episodes.

Also in 2015, Dormer starred in the BBC drama We’re Doomed! The Dad’s Army Story as TV producer David Croft. The comedy drama retells the creation of the popular BBC sitcom Dad’s Army as well as the relationship between Croft and Jimmy Perry who became successful TV comedy writers.

Dormer is married to theatre director Rachel O’Riordan.

James Frain
James Frain
James Frain

TCM Overview:

Actor James Frain was a quintessential chameleon. Regardless of the role he portrayed – whether it was a sinister Spaniard in “Elizabeth” (1998), a classical pianist in “Hilary and Jackie” (1998), or a soft-spoken librarian in “Where the Heart Is” (2000) – Frain always extracted hidden layers of his characters’ emotions and brought them to the forefront. Frain also delivered strong performances on the action drama “24” (Fox, 2001-2010) as well as on the critically acclaimed Showtime miniseries “The Tudors” (2007-2010), as a commoner who rises to power as King Henry VIII’s ally. But it was Frain’s impressive turn as a psychotic vampire obsessed with a human on the award-winning HBO series “True Blood” (2008- ) that put him on the map and successfully showcased his range as a performer.

The above TCM overview can also be accessed online here.