Joe Gilgun | |
---|---|
Born | Joseph William Gilgun 9 March 1984 Chorley, Lancashire, England |
Occupations |
|
Years active | 1994–present |
Joseph William Gilgun (born 9 March 1984) is an English actor and producer known for several roles, including that of Vinnie O'Neill in the Sky Max series Brassic , which he also co-created, Marcus in Hollyoaks , Eli Dingle in the ITV soap opera Emmerdale , Jamie Armstrong in the long-running ITV soap opera Coronation Street , Woody in the film This Is England (2006) and its subsequent spin-off series, and Rudy Wade in E4's Misfits . From 2016 to 2019, he starred in the AMC television adaptation of the Vertigo comic Preacher as the Irish vampire Cassidy. [1]
Gilgun was born in Chorley, Lancashire, to Judith and Andrew Gilgun. He grew up in Rivington, Lancashire, as part of a working-class family with his two younger sisters, Jennie Seddon and Rosie Thomson. [2] Gilgun attended Rivington VA Primary School and Southlands High School. He has dyslexia and ADHD, which he describes as the "biggest pain of [his] life" and in interviews has openly discussed depression and anxiety. [3] He started drama workshops at the age of eight, following advice from an educational psychologist, and was described as having "exceptional talent". He also trained at the Laine Johnson Theatre School and the Oldham Theatre Workshop. [4] When he was 10, he got his first TV acting role in Coronation Street . He stayed with the show until he was thirteen years old.
Gilgun studied A-Levels at Runshaw College. [5] Outside of odd jobs and a few roles in small theatre productions, Gilgun worked as a plasterer until returning to acting full-time with Emmerdale in 2006.
As a child actor, Gilgun played little tearaway Jamie Armstrong in Coronation Street between 1994 and 1997. He left the soap when the actress playing his on-screen mother left the show. Gilgun revisited the set in an ITV special The Kids from Coronation Street in 2004. In 1998, when he was 14 years old, he presented a feature on Wish You Were Here...? where he visited Phantasialand, one of Germany's largest theme parks. [6]
Gilgun took a break in his teens, acting part-time in local and national stage productions including the Salford-based Hanky Park the Musical at The Lowry. [7] [8] He played Charlie Millwall in a critically acclaimed tour of the stage play Borstal Boy , which ended at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. [9]
Gilgun found the break from acting difficult, telling The Guardian in December 2011 that "[I] went off the fucking rails" and became confused about what to do with his life. He ended up working as a plasterer. [10]
He returned to acting full-time in 2006, when he won the roles of both trouble-prone Eli Dingle in long-running soap opera Emmerdale and kind-hearted skinhead Woody in This Is England , his debut as a film actor. This Is England was released in the UK on 27 April 2007 and subsequently won several awards including a BAFTA for Best British Film in 2008. [11] [12] [13] [14]
In 2007, Gilgun starred alongside welterweight boxing champion Michael Jennings in a locally produced feature-length documentary entitled Chorley: Where People Go to Fight. All proceeds went to Derian House Children's Hospice, with Gilgun helping to present the cheque. [15] Additionally, he appeared in a Dingle-centred episode of Ghosthunting with... hosted by Yvette Fielding.
Gilgun was granted time off from Emmerdale to shoot the 2009 British crime thriller Harry Brown , where he played drug dealer Kenny Soames. [16] [17] [18] [19] Gilgun announced he would leave Emmerdale on 10 November 2009, feeling the time was right to move on. His last appearance was on 30 April 2010. An Emmerdale representative said the programme had not ruled out a future return for the character. [20] Gilgun later indicated he currently had no such plans. [21]
Gilgun reprised the character of Woody for three Channel 4 TV spin-off series of This Is England, called This Is England '86 . [22] and This is England '88 [23] and This Is England '90 , which aired in September 2010, December 2011 and 2015 respectively. In 2010, This is England writer-director Shane Meadows referred Gilgun to star in longtime collaborator Paul Fraser's music video for the song "Dead American Writers" by Tired Pony. [24]
On 9 May 2011, it was announced that Gilgun had been cast as newcomer Rudy Wade in the third series of Misfits . The character Rudy can manifest a clone of himself that roughly represents his conscience. He appeared in the first episode of the third series in late October 2011. [25] He replaced as lead the character of Nathan following the departure of Robert Sheehan. An online short called Vegas Baby covered Nathan Young's exit and Rudy's arrival. [26] Gilgun said that replacing Sheehan had "been frightening... You'd think that it'd be a total ballache, what with being new and stuff and Rob doing such a good job". [10]
In the following years, Gilgun appeared in the 2012 American science fiction film Lockout, co-written and produced by Luc Besson and starring Guy Pearce, [27] the 2013 BBC series Ripper Street as a Fagin-type character, Carmichael, as well as starring in the final two series of Misfits. [28] He appears in the music video for "Tiny Legs" by Then Thickens, released in 2014. Having been friends with a few members of the band from growing up around Chorley, Joe agreed to star in the video. It involved him having makeup, flour and eggs applied to his face amongst other things and took several, messy takes to get right. [29]
In 2015, Gilgun played Ellic in Breck Eisner's The Last Witch Hunter alongside Michael Caine, Vin Diesel, and Elijah Wood.
In March 2015 Gilgun earned the role of drug-addicted, Irish vampire Cassidy, one of the main characters in the AMC series Preacher . [30] Speaking of the casting of Gilgun, Preacher executive producer Seth Rogen said: "It's one of those things that happens only a few times throughout your career, where you just go 'Oh, it's you. You're the character that is written on the page'... You could tell Joe's lived like 100 lifetimes, and he's probably done some shit you do not want to hear about, but at the same time, he's one of the most fun, loving people you'll ever be around. And it was exactly what the character needed to be." [31]
In Spring 2015, Gilgun both filmed the pilot episode of Preacher, as well as The Infiltrator , a 2016 crime thriller film starring Bryan Cranston.
Gilgun was part of the main cast of all four series of Preacher which premiered on 22 May 2016 and concluded on 29 September 2019. Additionally, Gilgun was also an executive producer of the show, producing half of its third series and all of its fourth.
In 2019, Gilgun created, executive produced, and starred in the Sky One comedy series Brassic . Gilgun stars as Vinnie, a working-class petty criminal living in Northern England. The six-episode series premiere on 22 August 2019. The series was well-reviewed and received a second series renewal before the first series had aired. [32] [33] The show's third series was broadcast in October 2021. Filming for Brassic's 4th series started in August 2021. [34] In August 2021, prior to the airing of the third series, a fourth began filming and premiered on 7 September 2022. In August 2022, the series was renewed for a fifth series, and started filming that month to premiere in 2023.
Gilgun has developed a close relationship with his co-stars from the This Is England stories, referring to them in interviews as "the gang". [10]
He has opened up in podcasts and various media sources about his bipolar disorder and the effects that it has had on his life. He has stated that many of the stories within the show Brassic are based upon his life. [35] [36]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2006 | This Is England | Richard "Woody" Woodford | |
2009 | Harry Brown | Kenneth "Kenny" Soames | |
2010 | Top of the Range | Joe | Short (10 minutes) |
2011 | Screwed | Karl | |
2012 | Lockout | Hydell | |
2013 | Tennis | Jerry | Short (23 minutes) |
2014 | Pride | Mike Jackson | |
2015 | The Last Witch Hunter | Ellic | |
2016 | The Infiltrator | Dominic |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1994–1997 | Coronation Street | Jamie Armstrong | Series regular (107 episodes) |
1998 | Wish You Were Here...? | Guest Presenter | Guest |
2004 | Hollyoaks | Marcus | |
2005 | Shameless | Rico | Season 2, episode 2 |
Big Dippers | Carl | Television film | |
2006 | Sorted | Car Mechanic | Season 1, episode 5 |
2006–2010 | Emmerdale | Eli Dingle | Series regular (400 episodes) |
2010 | This Is England '86 | Richard "Woody" Woodford | TV series (4 episodes) |
2011 | This Is England '88 | TV series (3 episodes) | |
2011–2013 | Misfits | Rudy Wade | TV series (series 3–5) |
2013 | Ripper Street | Carmichael | Season 1, episode 2 |
Coming Up | Martin | Series 8, episode 1 | |
2015 | This Is England '90 | Richard "Woody" Woodford | TV series (4 episodes) |
2016–2019 | Preacher | Cassidy | Main character, also executive producer |
2019–present | Brassic | Vincent "Vinnie" O'Neill |
Year | Result | Award | Category | Film or series | Character |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2006 | Nominated | British Independent Film Awards | Best Supporting Actor/Actress | This is England | Richard "Woody" Woodford |
2007 | Nominated | British Soap Awards | Best Newcomer | Emmerdale | Eli Dingle |
Nominated | National Television Awards | Most Popular Newcomer | |||
Nominated | TV Quick and TV Choice Awards | Best Soap Newcomer | |||
2008 | Nominated | Digital Spy Awards | Villain of the Year | ||
2012 | Won | Virgin Media TV Awards | Best Newbie | Misfits | Rudy Wade |
Won | SFX Awards | Breakout Star | |||
Nominated | BAFTA Television Awards | Leading Actor | This Is England '88 | Richard "Woody" Woodford | |
2021 | Won | RTS North West Awards | Best Performance in a Comedy | Brassic | Vincent "Vinnie" O'Neill |
Nominated | BAFTA Television Awards | Male Performance in a Comedy Programme | |||
2022 | Nominated | BAFTA Television Awards | Male Performance in a Comedy Programme | ||
2023 | Nominated | BAFTA Television Awards | Male Performance in a Comedy Programme | ||
2024 | Nominated | BAFTA Television Awards | Male Performance in a Comedy Programme |
Emmerdale is a British television soap opera that is broadcast on ITV. The show is set in Emmerdale, a fictional village in the Yorkshire Dales. Created by Kevin Laffan, Emmerdale Farm was first broadcast on 16 October 1972. Interior scenes have been filmed at the Leeds Studios since its inception. Exterior scenes were first filmed in Arncliffe in Littondale, and the series may have taken its name from Amerdale, an ancient name of Littondale. Exterior scenes were later shot at Esholt, but are now shot at a purpose-built set on the Harewood estate.
Kenneth William Morley is an English actor and comedian, best known for portraying the role of Reg Holdsworth in the ITV soap opera Coronation Street from 1989 to 1995. He also played General Leopold von Flockenstuffen in the BBC sitcom 'Allo 'Allo! from 1988 to 1991.
Sam Dingle is a fictional character from the British television soap opera Emmerdale, played by James Hooton. He made his first appearance in the episode broadcast on 14 February 1995.
James Hooton is an English actor, best known for his role as Sam Dingle on the ITV soap opera Emmerdale, a role he has played since 1995.
Proinsias Cassidy, also known mononymously simply as Proinsias or Cassidy, is a fictional character and antihero in the Garth Ennis comic book series Preacher and The Boys, respectively co-created with Steve Dillon and Darick Robertson, and the former's spin-off prequel Cassidy: Blood and Whiskey. Introduced as a drug-and-alcohol-addicted Irish vampire en route to Dallas to open a bar called "The Grassy Knoll", Cassidy ultimately joins Jesse Custer and Tulip O'Hare on their search for God, becoming Jesse's best friend and falling in love with Tulip. After Jesse's apparent death, Cassidy and Tulip form a romance, which ends on Jesse's return, with their rivalry leading to a duel. Wishing to atone for all that he has done in life, Cassidy walks into the sunlight to die. However, having made a deal with God before his confrontation with Jesse, in order to allow Genesis to be destroyed, Cassidy ensures that both he and Jesse will be resurrected, before God himself is killed by the Saint of Killers. As Jesse leaves looking for Tulip, the redeemed Cassidy watches his first sunset in years as a human being, pledging to act like a man. In an epilogue in the fourth volume of The Boys, set years later, a more heavyset Cassidy has finally opened his "The Grassy Knoll" bar. Closing his bar on St. Patrick's Day so that he and fellow former alcoholic and friend Billy Butcher can speak in peace, the two discuss their struggles with addiction before Butcher's protégé Hughie Campbell arrives, and Cassidy closes up his bar, smiling.
Eli Dingle is a fictional character from the British ITV soap opera Emmerdale, played by Joe Gilgun. He first appeared on screen in the episode which aired on 13 July 2006 and made his last appearance on 30 April 2010. He is the younger brother of Marlon Dingle.
Dominic Adam Brunt is an English actor, director and producer, best known for portraying the role of Paddy Kirk in the ITV soap opera Emmerdale. For his role as Paddy, Brunt has been nominated in various categories at the British Soap Awards, Inside Soap Awards and the National Television Awards. As well as acting, Brunt also produces and directs horror films alongside Joanne Mitchell; he also co-hosts an annual zombie film festival with Emmerdale co-star Mark Charnock.
Matthew Wolfenden is an English actor best known for his role as David Metcalfe in the British soap opera Emmerdale.
Marco "Marc" Silcock is an English former actor, best known for his portrayal of Jackson Walsh in the British soap opera Emmerdale.
Lizzie Lakely is a fictional character from the British ITV soap opera Emmerdale, played by Kitty McGeever. Lizzie is Emmerdale's first blind character, and was played by a blind actress. She made her first on-screen appearance on 28 April 2009. Lizzie's last appearance was on 28 March 2013. McGeever had health problems, but, in June 2013, producer Kate Oates stated there had been plans for her to return. McGeever died in August 2015, however, without having returned to the series.
Rudy Wade is a fictional character from the British Channel 4 science fiction comedy-drama Misfits, portrayed by Joe Gilgun. After Robert Sheehan, who played Nathan Young, announced his departure, it was announced a new character called Rudy would join the show as a replacement. Casting for Rudy was announced soon after, with Gilgun cast in the role. Rudy was created as the "new funny man" of the show, a role previously held by Nathan. Rudy first appears in an online special titled "Vegas Baby!" Rudy has the ability to split into multiple personalities. While two of these personalities are originally introduced, it is later revealed that there is a third Rudy who was imprisoned prior to Rudy's introduction in the series.
Damien Molony is an Irish actor. He is best known for his television roles as Hal Yorke in BBC Three's Being Human, DC Albert Flight in the BBC's Ripper Street, DS Jack Weston in Channel 5's Suspects, Jon in Channel 4's GameFace and Dylan in Sky One Original comedy Brassic.
Ross Barton is a fictional character from the ITV soap opera Emmerdale, portrayed by Michael Parr. He made his first appearance in episode 6600 of the soap, broadcast on 9 July 2013. Ross first appears as the carjacker of Laurel Thomas, before being revealed to be the nephew of Moira Barton. The character is initially characterised as a bad boy and a "nasty piece of work". The softer side of Ross' personality is explored when he enters a secret relationship with police officer Donna Windsor, who has terminal cancer. When Donna dies, Ross bonds with her daughter April Windsor.
Brassic is a British comedy-drama television series created by Joe Gilgun and Danny Brocklehurst for Sky One. The series follows the lives of Vinnie O'Neill (Gilgun) and his friends in the fictional town of Hawley. Other primary cast members include Michelle Keegan, Damien Molony, Tom Hanson, Aaron Heffernan, Ryan Sampson, Parth Thakerar and Steve Evets.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty |title=
(help)[ dead link ]