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Siôn Daniel Young
Welsh actor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Siôn Daniel Young is a Welsh stage, television and film actor.
Early life
Born in Cardiff, Young began performing at a Welsh language festival in Cardiff called Eisteddfod in which he described "schools actively encourage their pupils to perform, be it music, singing or acting".[1] He trained as an actor at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.[2]
Career
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Stage
His first professional role was appearing in Daf James play Llwyth (Tribe), which was the first play about gay characters written by a queer person on a Welsh-language stage. He played the role of Albert Narracott in War Horse at the Royal National Theatre, London in 2013.[3][2][1]
In 2015, he had the lead role of Christopher Boone in the stage play adaptation of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time at the Gielgud Theatre in London.[4]
In 2018, he appeared in the World Premiere production of Barney Norris’s play Nightfall at the Bridge Theatre, London, alongside Claire Skinner and Ophelia Lovibond.[5][6]
Film & Television
He appeared in the 2012 war film Private Peaceful.[1] In 2014, he appeared in World War One-centenary series Our World War alongside Theo Barklem-Biggs.[7][8]
He had the lead role in 2019 television film drama The Left Behind.[9] For the role he was nominate for Best Actor at the 2020 BAFTA Cymru awards.[10] The film won BAFTA and Royal Television Society awards for Best Single Drama.[11][12]
In 2020, he appeared as Gareth in the third series of S4C drama Keeping Faith. He also had a role in Aberystwyth-set crime noir Hinterland. In 2021, he could be seen in Channel 4 miniseries Deceit playing real-life character Colin Stagg, a man wrongly accused of murder in 1992, described as one of the gravest miscarriages of justice in British legal history.[2][13]
In series three of Apple TV+ espionage thriller Slow Horses, he played Douglas, an MI5 records keeper.[3] He also appeared in Channel 5 crime thriller Witness Number 3.[14]
In 2024, he had a lead role in BBC One drama Lost Boys and Fairies. Written by Daf James, it was BBC One’s first primetime gay adoption drama.[2] That year, he was cast in Cardiff-set BBC One series The Guest.[15][16]
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Personal life
He is a first-language Welsh speaker.[3][2] He was a long-time flatmate of fellow actor Jack Lowden.[17]
Filmography
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References
External links
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