Victor Burke

Victor Burke is an Irish-born actor, voiceover artist, and screenwriter from Dublin. He is also a fluent Irish language speaker.

Victor Burke
Born
Victor Burke

1980 (age 3940)
OccupationActor
Years active–present

He made his stage debut at Dublin's Abbey Theatre, aged 13, in The Devils Disciple. He went on to become a well-established actor in Ireland by playing the character of Wayne Molloy in soap opera Fair City for more than seven seasons in his first spell in the show. He returned to the show in 2009.

As one of Ireland's leading voiceover artists , in 2002 he was the official voice of Compaq Computers worldwide for both radio and TV commercials.

His stage credits include The Last Apache Reunion, The Plough and The Stars, MacBeth, and Tarry Flynn. Victor also starred in Seán O'Casey's Juno and the Paycock at the Royal Lyceum Theatre in Edinburgh. He is also a screenwriter with several screenplays currently in development.[1]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1997HomeboyHomeboy (Michael)
1998Saving Private RyanSoldier on the Beach #4
2000Northern LightsLeading MaleShort
2005Welcome to SeptemberDrew McCullough
20088.5 HoursEoin

Television

  • Rasaí na Gaillimhe TG4 2009 Irish language comedy/drama
  • Butterfly Collectors (1999) (TV) as Liam
  • Fair City (1988–1996) / (2009–Present) RTÉ TV series as Wayne Molloy (The character reappeared after Burke's departure, though played by another actor)

Video games

... aka Den lengste reisen: Drømmefall (Norway: dubbed version) ... aka Drømmefall: Den lengste reisen (Norway: PC version)

Awards

Burke received the Award for Best Actor in a Short Film at the Edinburgh Film Festival for his critically acclaimed role in Turnaround.[2]

gollark: No, I either use NetworkManager or don't have very complex config anyway.
gollark: It's AMD's brand name for (most of) their consumer CPUs based on the Zen series of architectures.
gollark: I'm not sure all the pinging is necessary.
gollark: Wow, you could open five Chrome tabs with that!
gollark: I wonder if it would be possible to fully or near-fully power it off when not in use without really long boot times somehow, since they're quite power hungry.

See also

References

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