A multi-talented actor and director, Andrew Lincoln currently stars as Rick Grimes in AMCs "The Walking Dead." Lincoln earned a nomination for Best Actor in a Drama Series at the 2011 Saturn Awards for his work on the series.
Lincoln made his television debut in the 1994 series "Drop the Dead Donkey." His first major role was Edgar Egg Cook, one of the lead characters in BBCs successful drama "This Life." Since then, his multiple television credits include "This Woman in White," "Bomber," "A Likeness in Stone," "Trevors World of Sport," "The Canterbury Tales," "Whose Baby?" and "Lie with Me."
In addition to starring as Simon Casey in the popular British television sitcom "Teachers," a comedy-drama that follows the exploits of school staff both in and out of the classroom, Lincoln also made his directorial debut on the series. "Teachers" was nominated for six BAFTA Awards between 2002 and 2004 and was nominated for Best British Comedy Show at the British Comedy Awards in 2003. Additionally, Lincoln earned a BAFTA TV Award nomination for Best New Director (Fiction) for his work on the series.
More recently, Lincoln has played major roles in Stephen Volk's "Afterlife," for which he won a Golden Nymph Award for Outstanding Actor in a Drama Series, and "Strike Back," a six-part British television series based on the novel of the same name, written by best-selling author and former soldier of the Special Air Service, Chris Ryan.
Lincoln made his big screen debut as Ted in Paul Hill's 1995 drama "Boston Kickout." However, he is perhaps best known to film audiences for his role in "Love Actually," a 2003 British romantic comedy film written and directed by Richard Curtis. The film delves into different aspects of love as shown through multiple and separate relationships, many of which become intertwined as the movie progresses. Lincoln plays Mark, a distant and romantic character, who we learn is secretly in love with his best friends wife. Other film credits include "Enduring Love," "Human Traffic," "These Foolish Things," "Hey Good Looking!," "Scenes of a Sexual Nature," "Heartbreaker" and "Made in Dagenham." In addition, he played Mike Collins in "Moonshot," a film about the Apollo 11 landings for American television, and Edgar Linton in Wuthering Heights for ITV.
A gifted veteran of the theater, Lincoln has also starred in many theatrical productions. He tackled the role of Dale in Jez Butterworth's "Parlour Song" at Londons Almeida Theatre. Unlike many of his previous television and movie roles, Dale is a cocky and brash 40-year-old man who must face his anxieties about aging. Among his many additional stage credits include Joe Penhall's Blue/Orange at the National Theatre (with Bill Nighy and Chiwetel Ejiofor), Jonathan Harvey's AIDS drama, "Hushabye Mountain," and Sam Shepard's "The Late Henry Moss."
With over a decade of experience in the theatre, Lincoln established himself as the go-to guy for very modern, mildly flawed heroes.
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