Trevor Laird

Trevor Laird (born 11 July 1957, London, England) is a British actor.

Trevor Laird
Born (1957-07-11) 11 July 1957
OccupationActor

Biography

Born in Islington, London in 1957, Laird trained at the Anna Scher Theatre. Early roles included a 1976 role in a TV adaptation of the Peter Prince novel Playthings, directed by Stephen Frears,[1] and several Play For Todays: Victims of Apartheid by Tom Clarke (1978),[2] Barrie Keeffe's Waterloo Sunset (1979)[3] and The Vanishing Army by Robert Holles (1980).[4]

Laird was a founder member of the Black Theatre Co-operative (now NitroBeat) in 1978 and performed in its inaugural play Welcome Home Jacko by Mustapha Matura the following year.[5] He then had breakthrough roles in the 1979 film Quadrophenia - as Ferdy, a drug supplier for the main character Jimmy - and in Franco Rosso's 1980 cult classic Babylon as Beefy.[6] He played the boy under the car in The Long Good Friday (1980) and appeared in Menelik Shabazz's black British film Burning an Illusion.[7]

Later appearances include the 1986 Doctor Who serial Mindwarp as the guard commander Frax. He later returned to Doctor Who in the role of Clive Jones, father of the Tenth Doctor's companion Martha Jones.

In 1996 Laird played Hortense's brother in the Mike Leigh film Secrets & Lies. He played Wesley Carter in the TV series Undercover Heart, and Trevor in the British gangster film Love, Honour and Obey (2000).[7] He played DI Mike Vedder “End of the Night”, S8:E4 of Waking the Dead (2009).

In 2015, Laird appeared as Vince Thuram in the BBC TV series Death in Paradise. In March 2021, he appeared in an episode of the BBC soap opera Doctors as Samuel Asante.[8]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1979QuadropheniaFerdy
1980BabylonBeefy
1980The Long Good FridayBoy Under Car
1981Burning an IllusionPest
1985WaterPepito
1985De flyvende djævleSepp
1985Billy the Kid and the Green Baize VampireFloyd
1989SlipstreamCommittee Member #2
1996Secrets & LiesHortense's Brother
2000Love, Honour and ObeyTrevor
2011National Theatre Live: One Man, Two GuvnorsLloyd Boateng
2019National Theatre Live: Small IslandMr Philip / GI / Kenneth
2020To Be SomeoneRudy
2021CruellaAsthma Man

References

  1. "Play Things" at IMDb.
  2. "Victims of Apartheid" at IMDb.
  3. "Waterloo Sunset" at IMDb.
  4. "The Vanishing Army" at IMDb.
  5. "Black Theatre Co-operative", Unfinished Histories.
  6. Miguel Cullen, "30 years on: Franco Rosso on why Babylon's burning", The Independent, 11 November 2010.
  7. Alison Donnell (2002). "Laird, Trevor". In Alison Donnell (ed.). Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture. Routledge. p. 173. ISBN 978-1-134-70025-7.
  8. Timblick, Simon. "Doctors spoilers: Can Daniel Granger end the hunger strike?". What's on TV. Future plc. Retrieved 16 March 2021.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.