
John Grillo
Acting
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia John Grillo (born 29 November 1942, Watford, Hertfordshire) is a British actor and playwright who has appeared in many film and television productions. He was educated at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, and while there was actively involved in student theatre. He performed with Footlights in their annual revue. After Cambridge, he was awarded an Arts Council Playwrighting Bursary and his plays were performed at Nottingham, Glasgow, Oxford and Dublin as well as at the ADC Theatre in Cambridge. He played Mr. Samgrass in the ITV series Brideshead Revisited, and Phillip Marriott QC in Crown Court. He had minor parts in other shows, including Blackadder II ("Bells"), Bergerac, Taggart and Rumpole of the Bailey. In 1997 he appeared as Mr Carkdale, the English teacher who spoke only in Anglo-Saxon, in two series of Steven Moffat's school-sitcom Chalk. In 2008, he contributed to the audio commentary for the DVD release. He is represented by Michelle Braidman Associates. Description above from the Wikipedia article John Grillo,licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Known For

1985
EastEnders
1985 · tv

1970
Play for Today
1970 · tv

2002
Foyle's War
2002 · tv

1984
The Bill
1984 · tv

1975
Rumpole of the Bailey
1975 · tv

1983
Blackadder
1983 · tv

1983
Taggart
1983 · tv

1986
Lovejoy
1986 · tv

1993
Cracker
1993 · tv

1992
Between the Lines
1992 · tv

1981
Brideshead Revisited
1981 · tv

1991
The Darling Buds of May
1991 · tv

1982
Shine on Harvey Moon
1982 · tv

1979
Dick Turpin
1979 · tv

1980
Lady Killers
1980 · tv

1980
Cribb
1980 · tv

1997
The Grand
1997 · tv

1986
A Very Peculiar Practice
1986 · tv

1985
Brazil
1985 · movie

1988
The Modern World: Ten Great Writers
1988 · tv

1999
Oliver Twist
1999 · tv

1985
Three Up, Two Down
1985 · tv

2002
Shackleton
2002 · tv

1983
Brass
1983 · tv

1984
Freud
1984 · tv

1982
Firefox
1982 · movie

1998
Maisie Raine
1998 · tv

1992
Orlando
1992 · movie

1987
A Little Princess
1987 · tv

1995
Johnny and the Dead
1995 · tv