- Source: Shaun Evans
Shaun Evans (born 6 March 1980) is an English actor. He is best known for playing a young Endeavour Morse in the ITV drama series Endeavour and Coxswain Elliot Glover in Vigil.
Early life
Evans was born on 6 March 1980. He is a Liverpudlian with Irish parents. His father worked as a taxi driver and his mother was a hospital worker. He has a brother who is 11 months his senior. He gained a scholarship to St Edward's College in Liverpool's West Derby suburb, which he attended from 1991 to 1998 and where he began acting in school productions. He completed a course with the National Youth Theatre in London before fully moving to London around the age of 18 to study at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama.
Career
= Acting
=Evans's first major role was that of French teacher John Paul Keating in the Channel 4 comedy-drama Teachers during its second series in 2002. The following year he made his feature film debut in The Boys from County Clare, starring alongside Bernard Hill, Colm Meaney and Andrea Corr.
Additional screen credits include Sam’s Game, Being Julia, The Situation, Cashback, Gone, Boy A, Telstar: The Joe Meek Story, Princess Kaiulani and Clive Barker's horror film Dread.
On television, Evans was featured in the 2002 docudrama The Project and was seen as the Earl of Southampton in the miniseries The Virgin Queen, which premiered in November 2005 on Masterpiece Theatre on PBS in the US before airing on the BBC in January 2006. His stage work includes a UK tour of the award-winning play Blue/Orange by Joe Penhall.
Recent television appearances include Murder City, BBC's Ashes to Ashes, Gentley's Last Stand and the four-part drama The Take from the novel by Martina Cole on Sky1. Evans also starred in Sparkle alongside Bob Hoskins and Stockard Channing (2007). Shaun played Lawrence Elton in the Acorn Series, Inspector George Gently, S1, E1; "Gently Go Man" 2007.
In 2009, he portrayed Kurt Cobain in the Roy Smiles play Kurt and Sid at the Trafalgar Studios opposite Danny Dyer as Sex Pistols bassist Sid Vicious.
In 2012, Evans also played the role of new pupil Daniel in the BBC legal drama Silk alongside Maxine Peake and starred in the ITV series The Last Weekend.
Starting in 2012, Evans played the young Inspector Morse in Endeavour, which focuses on the detective's early career. The initial episode was broadcast on 2 January 2012. Endeavour was then recommissioned for nine further series by ITV.
On 23 May 2022, ITV confirmed that Endeavour would end production after a decade on air with a total of 36 episodes.
In January and February 2015, Evans starred as Alex in the Peter Souter play Hello/Goodbye, with Miranda Raison playing his love interest.
In 2021, Evans starred as Elliott Glover, coxswain of the fictional submarine HMS Vigil, in the TV series of the same name.
In September 2024, it is announced that Evans will portray as John Hughes in the new ITV espionage thriller, Betrayal.
= Directing
=Evans directed three episodes of the BBC medical drama Casualty which aired on 8 July 2017, and 19 and 26 May 2018. He also directed four episodes of Endeavour: 'Apollo' in series 6, which aired on 17 February 2019; 'Oracle' in series 7, which aired on 9 February 2020; and 'Striker' in series 8, which aired on 12 September 2021. On 22 May 2022, he directed 'Prelude', the first episode of the prequel's ninth and final series which aired on 26 February 2023.
Filmography
= Film
== Television
== Theatre
=Awards and nominations
References
External links
Shaun Evans at IMDb
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- War Book
- Kualifikasi Piala Dunia FIFA 2026 – Babak Ketiga AFC
- Princess Kaiulani
- Piala Asia U-23 AFC 2024
- Kualifikasi Piala Dunia FIFA 2026 – Babak Kedua AFC
- Boy A
- Tim nasional sepak bola U-23 Indonesia
- Piala Asia AFC 2023
- Kualifikasi Piala Dunia FIFA 2022 – Babak Ketiga AFC
- Final Piala AFC 2022
- Shaun Evans
- Until I Kill You
- Shaun Evans (disambiguation)
- 2026 FIFA World Cup qualification – AFC third round
- Shaun Evans (referee)
- Shaun
- The Take (TV series)
- List of Endeavour episodes
- Wreckers (film)
- Endeavour (TV series)