Kenny Boyle

Coinneach Iain "Kenny" Boyle (born 13 May 1984) is a Scottish actor, playwright and novelist.

Kenny Boyle
Born
Coinneach Iain Boyle

(1984-05-13) 13 May 1984
NationalityScottish
Alma materRoyal Conservatoire of Scotland
Occupation(s)Actor, playwright, novelist
Years active2010–present
Known forStar of Lost at Christmas (2020)
Notable workKnock of The Ban-Sìthe (BBC Radio 4 drama) An Isolated Incident (play), The Tick and the Tock of the Crocodile Clock (novel)

Education and career

Boyle was born in Stornoway on the Isle of Lewis and grew up in Cromore. He was trained as an actor at Royal Conservatoire of Scotland. He also holds a degree from Strathclyde University.[1]

He is the star, alongside Natalie Clark, of Ryan Hendrick's multi-award winning short film Perfect Strangers (2015) and of the same director's feature-film version Lost at Christmas (2020).[2] He plays the role of Detective Marvin Starke in BBC Scotland comedy sitcom Scot Squad (2022). [3] His plays include Eerie Isles, Playthrough and An Isolated Incident,[4] and in 2021 he received a New Playwrights Award from the Playwrights’ Studio, Scotland.[5] His debut radio play Knock of The Ban-Sithe was broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in August 2022 and made BBC Sounds drama of the week on the 19th Aug 2022. On the 7th February 2023 Boyle, for his writing on Knock of The Ban-Sithe, was named a finalist for the Imison Award as part of the BBC Audio Drama Awards 2023, [6] and shortlisted for the Celtic Media Festival’s award for Drama (Sound) on the 17th of March 2023 [7]


In 2021 he was nominated in the Scottish Emerging Theatre Awards under the following categories: The Flourish Award, The New Writing Award, The Digital Award, and Artist of The Year [8]

His debut novel The Tick and the Tock of the Crocodile Clock, about an aspiring writer from the Southside of Glasgow, was published by Lightning Books in May 2022.[9] Inspired by Peter Pan, the novel was written during the COVID-19 pandemic after Boyle was diagnosed with anxiety and depression.[10] He has said of it: 'The book is about not wanting to grow up into what society hopes for adults to be and having that conflict of interest between your younger self and the adult you’re growing up to be.'[11] In July 2023 the book was named a finalist in the Book Bloggers' Novel of The Year Award [12]

In February 2022 he sought help from the public to find the inspirational primary school teacher who had made him promise to send her his first book when it was published. Twenty-six years on, he managed to find her when the story went viral on social media and was then picked up on TV, radio and in the press.[13]

Private life

He is married to wife Claire.[14]

References

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