Stephen Finlay

Stephen Finlay (30 November 1956 – 14 February 2004) was an English actor, writer and artist. He trained as an artist at the Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts and then as an actor at the Central School of Speech and Drama in London. He is the son of actor Frank Finlay.

Stephen Finlay
Born
Stephen Finlay

Bolton, England, UK
OccupationActor, writer, artist

Actor

Film and television credits include; The Jokers, AD, What Is The Capital of Madagascar?, The Pleasure Principal, Return of the Soldier, Sons and Lovers, The Pickwick Papers, Coriolanus, Elizabeth Alone and The Bill.[1] In the theatre, Stephen appeared in Nicholas Nickleby for the Royal Shakespeare Company,[2] An Ideal Husband, All My Sons, Hunting Stuart, Death Trap, The Promise, The White Scourge, The Will and many other plays.

Writer

As a writer his first play, The Games Rule (co-written with John Wheatley) was performed in the Royal Shakespeare Company Festival in Stratford-upon-Avon. Subsequent productions include the King's Head, The New Inn, The Waterman's Arts Centre, The Chelsea Centre, The Edinburgh Festival, and the Brighton Festival. The Games Rule has been performed as far away as Sydney, Australia. Other plays include Richer in Spirit, The Ironing Board Man and Screaming Inside. The radio adaptation of Screaming Inside was Awarded the 1999 Independent Radio Drama Award and was broadcast with Stephen playing the lead role of Stuart Pearce. The inaugural stage production was in the 2012 Brighton Fringe Festival by the Brighton Theatre Collective starring Shane Armstong and featuring the voices of Frank Finlay, Cathy Finlay and James Coombes. It was directed by Daniel Finlay.[3] The production won an Argus Angel Award and was nominated for best new play by New Writing South. Other writing includes; Aftermath for Japanese television, The River – a film short and The Treehouse Gang – a children's TV adventure story.

Artist

Finlay worked in a variety of mediums but is best known for his works with Cow Parade these pieces include "Beefeater – It Ain't Natural" and "Ermintrude", both were part of the 60 most spectacular cows of Cow Parade London 2002. Both were was sold at a gala auction to benefit Child Line on 10 October 2002 at Sotheby's Olympia.[4]

gollark: Surely most people *have* experienced batteries in, say, TV remotes running out.
gollark: There was an art thing on display at my school where someone had made some on wood using a conductive solution of some sort.
gollark: Would chainmail work?
gollark: And most people here are probably not watching styro do, I don't know... celebrity things, but interesting sciency content.
gollark: On the one hand, it might be interesting, but on the other hand... tiktok.

References

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