Scot Williams

Scot Williams

Actor

Biography

Scot Williams (born 29 November 1972), is an English actor, writer, and producer for stage, film and television. Williams is a native of Liverpool, Merseyside and grew up around Penny Lane, a street made famous by the Beatles song. He explained in 2014 that he wore trench coats and motorcycle boots as a young unknown actor, and would go to meet like-minded people, with a similar taste in fashion, at the Everyman theatre in Liverpool. Williams worked as an usher at the Everyman venue, selling ice creams for £8 per shift, but he states that his real payment was the ability to also see the theatrical performances—it was this early exposure to acting that served as a foremost inspiration for Williams's acting aspirations. As an actor, Williams made his film debut in the 1994 Iain Softley film Backbeat, in which he played the role of the Beatles' original drummer Pete Best. Subsequently, he later discovered that he was a distant relative of the late Alun Owen, who in 1965 received an Academy Award nomination for his Beatles screenplay "A Hard Day's Night". In 1995, Williams played the lead role of Shaun Caine in the Jonathan Harvey play Rupert Street Lonely Hearts Club. After a regional tour, the play transferred to London's Donmar Warehouse and then onto the Criterion Theatre, Piccadilly. In 1996, Williams was offered the role of Joe Glover in the television drama Hillsborough television drama. Written by Jimmy McGovern, Hillsborough was based on the football stadium disaster of April 1989 in which 96 Liverpool F.C. supporters unlawfully died and was directed by the BAFTA and Emmy winning Charles McDougall. It went on to win dozens of awards around the world, including the 1997 Best Single drama BAFTA award.Williams has also guested in many TV dramas, including "Murder In Mind", "Soldier Soldier", "Heartbeat", "Bliss", "The Golden Collar", "Helen West", "In His Life - The John Lennon Story", "Springhill", "Casualty", "Serious and Organised", "Lock Stock...", "Where The Heart Is", "New Tricks" and "Holby City". As a writer he has notched up ten stage/screen plays to date, receiving one or two award nominations along the way. They are "Growing Young" (1992), "The Herd Of Brutes" (1992), "Get Another Lover Mother" (1993), "The Plastic Daft" (1995), "Level Minus 99" (1995), "The Guilty Guessed" (1995), "Huggermugger" (1997), "Twenty Seven" (2005), "Stranger" (2008), "A Bard Day's Night/book" (2011), "Hope" (2013)."A Bard Day's Night" is a comedy stage musical co-written alongside his Backbeat co-star Chris O'Neill. The show is currently in pre-production with a view to making its West End debut in 2012. Williams has expressed great love for his home city of Liverpool and the foremost cultural aspects that it is famous for. He explains that his home city energises him and he almost feels like he returns to Liverpool to "steal its energy". Williams is a passionate Beatles fan and explained their significance in April 2014: "It's almost tangible—that residual energy of what once was. As an artist, it really-it was inspirational. It really made you feel that you too could do it." He is also a devoted fan of the Liverpool Football Club and attended his first home match at the age of 10. Williams states that he is "privileged" to be a supporter of the club and recalls some of the "greatest nights" of his life spent at the Anfield stadium.

For more information press the link below:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scot_Williams

Filmography
Main Characters
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