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- Actor
- Producer
Andrew Gower is a British actor and singer/songwriter who is probably best known for his role as "Bonnie Prince" Charles Edward Stuart in "Outlander" and playing Nick Cutler, the vampire solicitor in season 4 of "Being Human". Andrew was born in Aintree (near Liverpool, UK) and he has been acting - and singing - since his school days.
He joined a drama group while studying for his A-Levels and graduated from the Oxford School of Drama in 2010, winning the Spotlight Prize in July of the same year.
His other acting projects include the lead role of Victor Frankenstein in BBC Three's live musical production of "Frankenstein's Wedding", and portraying Roman emperor Caligula in the TV mini series "A.D. - The Bible Continues". He appeared in the season 4 episode "Crocodile" of science fiction anthology series "Black Mirror" and plays Ezra Spurnrose in the fantasy-noir series "Carnival Row" on Amazon Prime. He can also be seen as Rupert Parker in the new Victorian crime drama "Miss Scarlet and The Duke".
Andrew's stage credits include Seiffert in "Conquest of the South Pole" at the Arcola Theatre (touring to the Rose Theatre in Kingston) and Charlie in "Terror Tales" at the Hampstead Theatre. In 2016 he made his West End debut in London playing the lead role of Winston Smith in a stage adaptation of "1984". He played William/Lupin in the radio production of "The Diary of a Nobody" and Lucian in the BBC 4 Radio production "Dangerous Visions: Speak". He also gave his voice to the character Mudlark in the animated short film "The Tall Tales of Urchin".
Andrew recorded several songs with his former band Emerson and sang live on stage during "Frankenstein's Wedding". He has written some tracks for "Humpty Fu*king Dumpty" with fellow actor Stephen Walters, and is involved in the music project The Gustaffsons.- Actor
- Producer
- Writer
Neil Buchanan is an affable, fast-talking Liverpudlian who left school with 5 0-Levels (including art) after being turned down by Liverpool Art College. He knew little of the ways of television until a short-lived career as a rock star in the mid-seventies collapsed in the inevitable morass of litigation and bad debt. When looking for a job, one advert in particular caught his eye, "Have You Ever Had Breakfast With A Gorilla?" It was advertising for acts on a new TVS Saturday morning children's show and, although he didn't get the part of the presenter, he was offered a spot on the anarchic kids' TV show, No 73, as a caricaturist.
The rest as they say is history; Buchanan has since presented many children's TV programs including No 73, Motormouth (1988), Finders Keepers (1991) and ZZZap! (1993). He then collaborated with Tim Edmunds to invent, present and produce Art Attack (1990), ITV's acclaimed children's art show. In the past five years, few of ITV children's shows have been as consistently successful as "Art Attack" and, as a home grown British show, it is also very popular with parents. Despite increased competition from dedicated children's channels such as Nickelodeon and The Children's Channel, "Art Attack" continues to command a loyal following of around five million viewers each week and is the most popular television program made especially for children! It is popular with TV bodies too and has won various awards from the likes of New York International Film and TV Festival, the Prix Danube, the Prix Jeunesse, The Royal Television Society and BAFTA.
"Art Attack" is currently in its 10th series for the ITV network and there have been three Christmas specials.- Director
- Producer
- Location Management
Gordon Parry was born on 24 July 1908 in Aintree, England, UK. He was a director and producer, known for Third Time Lucky (1949), Innocents in Paris (1953) and Twilight Women (1952). He was married to Luisa. He died on 6 May 1981 in Rambouillet, Yvelines, France.