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  1. Grant Gillespie is an English novelist, screenwriter and actor who lives in Central London. As an actor, his credits include: Television - Will (TNT), Catastrophe, Siblings, the Channel 4 mocumentary Cast Offs, Hollyoaks, Holby City, Eastenders, Doctors, Casualty, Poirot Midsomer Murders; Film - Kingsman - The Golden Circle, Florence Foster ...

  2. Grant Gillespie’s an actor, novelist, and screenwriter living in the West End of London. Though he didn’t create this website, he wrote the content and – though it’s ‘form’ to write in the third person – it’s unnerving, and he can’t sustain it for more than a few sentences…. There, that’s over.

  3. Grant Gillespie's a professional actor, novelist and screenwriter who lives in the beating heart of central London. As well as his film and TV credits, Grant's worked in theatre with notable directors such as Michael Grandage, Jamie Lloyd, Stephen Unwin and Erica Whyman.

    • Actor, Producer, Writer
    • 4 min
  4. May 5, 2010 · Grant Gillespie is an actor, novelist and screen-writer in the beating heart of London. His debut novel The Cuckoo Boy was published in May 2010 by indie publisher, To Hell. The...

    • 299
    • SHARON HENRY MANAGEMENT LIMITED
    • Kirkham Grammar
  5. Grant Gillespie's a professional actor, novelist and screenwriter who lives in the beating heart of central London. As well as his film and TV credits, Grant's worked in theatre with notable directors such as Michael Grandage, Jamie Lloyd, Stephen Unwin and Erica Whyman.

  6. Nov 28, 2020 · Grant Gillespie is currently writing a novel, Nothing Dies, a ghost story set just after WW2. He is also working on a play The Daughters, based on a Katherine Mansfield short story and is co-writing (with Kate Ashfield for the production company Neon Ink) a TV series, Harvest.

  7. writers.coverfly.com › profile › writer-0ea2a7103-73501Grant Gillespie - Coverfly

    Grant Gillespie. London, United Kingdom. I'm an actor-writer in London's Soho. The Guardian described my novel, The Cuckoo Boy, as ‘an emotionally visceral debut.'. The Observer called it 'a savage indictment of hypocrisy and forced social convention.’.