Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
James David Graham (born August 5, 2006 [1]) is a Filipino-American actor. He is known for the role as Louie Castor in GMA Network 's murder mystery crime drama series Royal Blood (2023) and Widows' War (2024–present).
James Graham (artist) (born 1961), founding director of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Tucson, Arizona; James Graham (playwright) (born 1982), British playwright; James Graham (singer) (born 1996), singer and member of the band Stereo Kicks; James Graham (actor) (born 2006), Filippino-American actor
James Graham (born 1982 or 1983) [1] is a British playwright and screenwriter. His work has been staged throughout the UK and internationally, at theatres including the Bush , Soho Theatre , Clwyd Theatr Cymru , Royal Court Theatre, Liverpool and the National Theatre .
James Graham’s output makes your head spin. More than 30 plays in the past 18 years, three TV dramas, a few films, oh, and a Broadway musical or two. There was the break-out hit This House.
Dramatist and screenwriter James Graham has a knack for skewering venerable British institutions, from the royal family in an episode of “The Crown,” to the tabloids in his play “Ink,” to ...
The play won the 2024 Laurence Olivier Awards for Best New Play and Will Close won the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role in a Play for his portrayal of Harry Kane. Playwright James Graham said after the England men lost the UEFA Euro 2024 final to Spain that he would rewrite the ending of Dear England to bring it up to ...
Sherwood is a British television crime drama series created and written by James Graham. It stars David Morrissey and is inspired by real life murders in Nottinghamshire , England in 2004. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The first episode of the six-episode series aired on BBC One on 13 June 2022.
Graham was inspired by a documentary film on the subject by Morgan Neville and Robert Gordon. [3] The play also contains other celebrities from the time such as David Brinkley, Andy Warhol, James Baldwin, and Aretha Franklin. They are used to set context and reflect the theme of how TV debates emerged in this period and have developed.