Tom Colley was born in Harlow and grew up in Essex. He trained at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, and graduated in 2010. His first television credit after training was in the first series in Call the Midwife in 2012, and has been very active in film and television since. The Happy Prince is his second project about Oscar Wilde, and has worked with Rupert Everett on both occasions.
Tom Collingwood is known for A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon (2019).
Tom Collins has just completed shooting Penance. With funding support from Northern Ireland Screen and the Irish Film Board and and Irish Broadcaster, TG4. http://www.irishfilmboard.ie/irish_film_industry/news/Production_begins_on_Tom_Collins_PENANCE_with_LOVE-HATE_Actor_Peter_Coonan_in_Lead_Role/3164 The film builds on the success of the feature cut of the successful TV Series and feature film, An Bronntanas (The Gift) which was Ireland's entry in the Foreign Language Oscars 2015, and is doing a healthy tour of festivals, recently picking up the Jury prize at the Boston Irish Film Festival. Lagardere represents the film in Europe with sales to over twelve networks and Broadcasters. Collins' new Feature film project Priest Hunter has received financial support from the Irish Film Board and is presently in development. He is presently completing production of an animation on the classic Irish novel - The Poor Mouth (An Béal Bocht) with Tommy Tiernan.. He is known for the multi award winning feature film Kings, the film was Ireland's choice for Oscar nomination in the Best Foreign Language Film category, as well as nominated for a record 14 IFTA'S and won Collins the Director's Guild of America / Ireland New Finders Award in 2007. Kings won the Gold Torc at the 2008 Celtic Film and Media Awards; picked up a Special Commendation at Prix Europa Best Drama 2008; won Best Cinematography Award at the Hampton's Film Festival 2007; was awarded Best Film at the Weschester Film Festival 2007. The film stars prominent Irish talent such as Colm Meaney, Donal O'Kelly, Barry Barnes, Brendan Conroy. His first production credit was as cameraman on the controversial documentary Mother Ireland (1986), which won him a Femme Cathodique Cinematography award. His first major drama production was the multi award winning feature film - Hush-a-Bye Baby (1989) with Sinéad O'Connor and Emer McCourt. His other work as producer includes - The Bishop's Story (1994) with the late Donal Mc Cann. His directorial debut was the successful Bogwoman ( Combat D'une Mere) (1997) with Rachael Dowling and Peter Mullan, other features include - Dead Long Enough (2006) with Michael Sheen. His documentary credits include - Teenage Kicks - The Undertones (2006), a widely acclaimed 'rockumentary' on the Derry band The Undertones. The film was presented by John Peel. The film received a five-star review from the Times. He has produced or directed 13 documentaries including More than a Sacrifice, (1996). First Love, (1997.) Cambat D'une Mere, (1998) A Mother's Story, (1999) The Johnie Walker Story (2000) plus Donal Mc Cann - It Must Be Done Right.(2000). He directed The Boys of St Columb's (2009), a documentary for BBC and RTÉ in 2009 which featured the late Nobel prize winners Seamus Heaney and John Hume. He wrote the The Guard based on Ken Bruin's Jack Taylor novels the feature length pilot was for Magma Films/ TV3 and RFL Germany.
Tom Collins (1913-73): Born in Chicago, Collins was also a well-known radio actor known for his appearances as "Chandu the Magician." He was a favorite of Carlton Morse and played Reggie Yorke in "I Love Adventure and Nick Lacey" in "One Man's Family." He also provided the voice for Frank Race in the program "The Adventures of Frank Race" for 22 episodes.
Tom Conder is an actor, known for The Secret Life of Bees (2008), Outer Banks (2020) and Swamp Thing (2019).
Tom Conlan is an actor and director, known for Synced (2021), Hollywood Hostel (2016) and The Dare (2019).
Tom Connolly is an actor and writer, known for Lost (2004), The Ambassador (1998) and Boys Night (2019).
Tom Conroy is an actor, known for Nailbiter (2013) and The Empty Acre (2007).
Tom Constanten was born on March 19, 1944 in Long Branch, New Jersey, USA. He is a composer, known for The Love Song of Charles Farberman (1972), Playboy After Dark (1969) and Elvis: The Rebirth of the King (2017).
Preferring contemporary over classical theatre (with nary a Shakespeare stage credit in sight), one of West End theatre's most enduring and popular faces of the past four decades has been that of Tom Conti. He was born Thomas Antonio Conti on November 22, 1941, in Paisley, Scotland, to a pair of hairdressers. His father, Alfonso, was an Italian immigrant, and his mother, Mary (McGoldrick), was Scottish, though of Irish descent. A student at Hamilton Park Catholic School (for boys), he initially trained for a musical career as a classical pianist but switched gears while attending the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama. Conti's acting credits began with the Citizen's Theatre's 1959 production of "The Roving Boy" at age eighteen. Throughout the 1960s he tried to make ends meet on the Glasgow and English repertory stages but gained little momentum despite some scattered TV appearances in between. Unable to find the break to sustain himself, he considered leaving the arts at one point for a steadier career in medicine. While performing in the 1972 play "The Black and White Minstrels" at the Traverse Theatre for the Edinburgh Festival, however, he was spotted and cast in the TV series Adam Smith (1972), thus beginning a more promising streak of work. He would return to the play in 1974 at the Hampstead Theatre, where he also performed in "Other People" (also 1974) and as the title role of "Don Juan" (1976). An earlier London stage debut in 1973 with the acclaimed Christopher Hampton play "Savages" also helped move things along. Following a number of successful Engish mini-series roles, particularly his slothful Charles Bovary in Madame Bovary (1975), Jewish novelist Adam Morris in The Glittering Prizes (1976), and ever-conquesting Norman in "The Norman Conquest" trilogy by Alan Ayckbourn, Tom reaped huge career rewards under the theatre lights starring as a paralyzed sculptor in both the London and Broadway mountings of the right-to-die play "Whose Life is it Anyway?" in 1979. Among the reaps were the Tony, Outer Critics Circle, Laurence Olivier, and Variety Club Awards; among the rewards was a 1980s film career in starring roles. Despite losing out on recreating his "Whose Life..." role on film (Richard Dreyfuss was granted that opportunity in 1981), Tom absolutely wowed American audiences with his scene-stealing work in Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence (1983) and Reuben, Reuben (1983). He was given the National Board of Review award for his participation in both films, and earned a "leading actor" Oscar nomination for the latter in which he played an alcoholic Scottish writer. To date, he has not received another Oscar nomination or, arguably, been handed comparative film roles since. Continuing in American films with the lesser-received American Dreamer (1984) and Saving Grace (1986), he failed to nab what seemed quite inevitable -- Hollywood screen stardom. He did, however, venture off to find other film projects to star or co-star in over the years -- both here and abroad. These have included Shirley Valentine (1989) opposite Pauline Collins, Someone Else's America (1995), Out of Control (1998), Paid (2006), O Jerusalem (2006), A Closed Book (2009) with Daryl Hannah, a gender-bending version of The Tempest (2010) (as Gonzalo), City Slacker (2012), Paddington 2 (2017) and the sci-fi horror yarn Peripheral (2018). Not one to frequent pubs himself, he nevertheless earned glowing reviews disappearing into the lives of two notorious celebrity tipplers -- columnist Jeffrey Bernard in "Jeffrey Bernard Is Unwell" (1990, 2000, 2006) and bon vivant actor John Barrymore in "One Helluva Life" (2002) -- in separate one-man stage shows. A writer as well, the versatile Conti published the thriller novel "The Doctor" in 2004. He has long been married to Scottish actress Kara Wilson (since 1967), who has appeared with him on stage ("Present Laughter" and "The Last of the Red Hot Lovers", both of which he also directed) as well as TV and film. Daughter Nina is an actress and ventriloquist. The couple maintain residence in London.