Andy Nyman

Andy Nyman
Born (1966-04-13) 13 April 1966
Leicester, Leicestershire, England, UK
Residence London
Nationality British
Ethnicity Russian/Polish[1]
Education Guildhall School of Music and Drama[2]
Spouse(s) Sophie Abbott[3]
Children Preston and Macy[4]
Website AndyNyman.com

Andy Nyman (born 13 April 1966) is an English actor and magician.

Life and career

Nyman was born in Leicester, Leicestershire. His first noteworthy performance was in 2000 as Keith Whitehead in "Dead Babies",[5] an adaptation of the 1975 Martin Amis novel. He worked with Jon Voight, David Schwimmer and Leelee Sobieski in Jon Avnet's 2001 Emmy award winning film Uprising (NBC)[6] as a Polish freedom fighter. His next film role was in the 2003 film Coney Island Baby as a gay French gun dealer. 2006 saw the release of the Severance, "Wild Romance" and "Are You Ready for Love?", and Nyman won the award for best actor at the 2006 Cherbourg-Octeville Festival of Irish & British Film for his role as Colin Frampton in Shut Up and Shoot Me.[7] In 2007, Nyman appeared as one of the leads in the Frank Oz film "Death at a Funeral," starring opposite Matthew Macfadyen, Ewen Bremmer and Keely Hawes. In 2008, he appeared as Patrick, a sleazy reality show producer in Charlie Brooker's E4 horror satire "Dead Set",[8] then in December 2008 he appeared in BBC Four's supernatural drama series Crooked House.[9] He played the recurring character Jonty de Wolf in Channel 4's semi-improvised show Campus. In 2013, Nyman appeared in Kick Ass 2: Balls To The Wall, as "The Tumor." He did voice over work for the series Sarah and Duck and "Chuggington", and played a young Winston Churchill, in the Netflix Original Programing drama Peaky Blinders (TV series). In 2014 Nyman played the role of Charles Guiteau in the Stephen Sondheim musical Assassins (musical) at the Menier Chocolate Factory, and appeared in the film "Automata" with Antonio Banderas and Dylan McDermott.

In August 2014, Nyman was one of 200 public figures who were signatories to a letter to The Guardian opposing Scottish independence in the run-up to September's referendum on that issue.[10]

Work with Derren Brown

As an accomplished magician and mentalist, Nyman has frequently collaborated with magician Derren Brown. He is the co-creator and co-writer of theTV shows Derren Brown – Mind Control and Trick of the Mind. He and Brown wrote Russian Roulette, Séance, and Messiah, as well as three series of Trick of the Mind. He also co-wrote and co-directed four of Brown's stage shows,[11] all of which have toured and played the West End. For Something Wicked This Way Comes they were awarded the 2006 Olivier Award for Best Entertainment. Their fourth show Enigma was also nominated for Olivier Award 2010, and he was nominated for the Lew Grade Award at the 2007 BAFTA Awards for his work on Derren Brown: The Heist (alongside collaborators Derren Brown, Simon Mills and Ben Caron).[9] Nyman shares some of his magic "know-how" in the DVD, Insane. Their latest collaboration is entitled "Miracle" and is set to open in March 2015 in England.

Ghost Stories

Nyman is co-creator of the long-running horror stage-play Ghost Stories. The show opened at the Liverpool playhouse on 4 February2010; from there it moved to the Lyric theatre Hammersmith before transferring to the Duke of Yorks theatre in the West End, opening on 25 June 2010. Since then it has played in Moscow and Toronto, and was nominated for two Olivier Awards in 2011, Best Sound & Best Entertainment. Nyman and Jeremy Dyson co-wrote the show and co-directed it along with Sean Holmes. The stage play Ghost Stories finished after 1000 Shows in the Duke of York's Theatre, on 15 March 2015.[12]

Filmography


Television

Television work includes:

Film

Film work includes:

Awards

References

External links

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