David Schaal

David Schaal

Known For:Acting
Gender:Male
Birthday:1963-05-27
Place of Birth:Albuquerque, New Mexico
Also Known As: David Schall /
Known For: Acting Gender: Male Birthday: 1963-05-27 More

Biography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.   David Schaal (born 27 May 1963 in Albuquerque, New Mexico) is an English actor best known for playing the roles of "Taffy" in The Office and "Terry Cartwright" in The Inbetweeners. Schaal studied Theatre Arts at Rose Bruford College of Speech and Drama (1985–1988) and has worked in television, film and theatre. His television credits include Missing, Casualty, The Wrong Door, Beautiful People, Hancock and Joan, Ashes To Ashes, The IT Crowd, Deceit, Doc Martin, Peak Practice, Silent Witness and Dangerfield. His film credits include Kidulthood, Mr. Nobody, Clubbed and Dirty Weekend. Schaal also appeared as "Norm", Shirley Carter's seedy landlord, in EastEnders and played troubled father "Tom Hargreaves" in Grange Hill. Other notable credits include playing "DS Bevan" in Paul Greengrass' The Murder of Stephen Lawrence, playing opposite William Baldwin in the film Relative Values, and appearing in Philip Davis' English football hooligan film I.D. Schaal also played "Eric" in Ben Wheatley's domestic British gangster film Down Terrace. Schaal wrote the short films Poppy's Present (directed by Chris Jury) and Half Time (directed by Duncan Roe). He also co-wrote the play Reality Chokes and appeared in it as "Rob" in London and directed a production of the play at the Edinburgh Festival in 2010.  Other writing credits include the plays Shame, No Hiding Place, The Legacy of Colonel Ash and Baby Blue. Description above from the Wikipedia article David Schaal  , licensed under CC-BY-SA,full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
More »

Acting

More
Members Club
Horror Comedy
A Gangster's Kiss
Comedy Crime Thriller
The Can
Thriller
The Bystanders
Comedy Fantasy
Demon
Drama Comedy Horror
Knuckledust
Action Thriller
A Call to Spy
History Crime Drama
Ghosts
Comedy Sci-Fi & Fantasy
The Fitzroy
Science Fiction Comedy
Fallen
Drama Fantasy Romance
Just Desserts
Comedy Drama
The Strain
Sci-Fi & Fantasy Drama Mystery
Tied
Thriller Drama
The Great Ghost Rescue
Family Fantasy Horror
Hysteria
Comedy Romance
Mr. Nobody
Science Fiction Drama Romance
Hancock & Joan
Comedy Drama TV Movie
Ashes to Ashes
Crime Sci-Fi & Fantasy Action & Adventure Drama
Hustle
Comedy Crime Drama Mystery
Jack of Diamonds
Action Adventure Crime
Jim's Gift
Family Adventure Comedy Fantasy TV Movie
The Big Game
Drama TV Movie
I.D.
Crime Drama
Dirty Weekend
Thriller Drama
  • name:David Schaal
  • Known For:Acting
  • Gender:Male
  • Birthday:1963-05-27
  • Place of Birth:Albuquerque, New Mexico
  • Also Known As: David Schall ·
  • Biography:From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.   David Schaal (born 27 May 1963 in Albuquerque, New Mexico) is an English actor best known for playing the roles of "Taffy" in The Office and "Terry Cartwright" in The Inbetweeners. Schaal studied Theatre Arts at Rose Bruford College of Speech and Drama (1985–1988) and has worked in television, film and theatre. His television credits include Missing, Casualty, The Wrong Door, Beautiful People, Hancock and Joan, Ashes To Ashes, The IT Crowd, Deceit, Doc Martin, Peak Practice, Silent Witness and Dangerfield. His film credits include Kidulthood, Mr. Nobody, Clubbed and Dirty Weekend. Schaal also appeared as "Norm", Shirley Carter's seedy landlord, in EastEnders and played troubled father "Tom Hargreaves" in Grange Hill. Other notable credits include playing "DS Bevan" in Paul Greengrass' The Murder of Stephen Lawrence, playing opposite William Baldwin in the film Relative Values, and appearing in Philip Davis' English football hooligan film I.D. Schaal also played "Eric" in Ben Wheatley's domestic British gangster film Down Terrace. Schaal wrote the short films Poppy's Present (directed by Chris Jury) and Half Time (directed by Duncan Roe). He also co-wrote the play Reality Chokes and appeared in it as "Rob" in London and directed a production of the play at the Edinburgh Festival in 2010.  Other writing credits include the plays Shame, No Hiding Place, The Legacy of Colonel Ash and Baby Blue. Description above from the Wikipedia article David Schaal  , licensed under CC-BY-SA,full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Search history
delete
Popular search