Aneirin Hughes

Aneirin Hughes
Born Aneurin Hughes
(1958-05-08) 8 May 1958
Aberystwyth
Occupation Actor, singer
Years active 1980–present

Aneirin Hughes (born Aneurin Hughes, 8 May 1958) is a Welsh actor and singer.

Education

Hughes was born in Aberystwyth, where he studied music at the University College of Wales under Professor Ian Parrott and sang with the soprano Hazel Holt. While a music student he conducted the university chamber choir, the Aberystwyth Elizabethan Madrigal Singers, for several years. As a student Hughes's first acting experience was gained when he appeared in performances of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas under conductor David Russell Hulme. Hughes also studied at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama.

Acting career

Hughes began his acting career in the 1980s in the BBC Wales soap opera Pobol y Cwm. He went on to appear in Blood on the Dole, Casualty, Family Affairs as DI Patrick Grenham, Spooks, Take Me with Robson Green and EastEnders in January and April 2009 as Andy Jones, the adoptive father of Danielle Jones.[1] He reprised the role in June 2016.

Hughes won a Best Actor BAFTA Cymru (or BAFTA Wales) for his appearance as Delme in Cameleon (1997), a Welsh language film.[2][3] He appeared regularly in Judge John Deed as Neil Haughton and in Young Dracula as Graham Branagh. He played Harper in the TV movie Harper and Isles with Hywel Bennett[1] and appeared in the 1998 film The Theory of Flight. More recently, he appeared in the S4C drama Pen Talar and in Holby City as Sir Fraser Anderson,[1] and has also returned to the BBC Wales soap opera Pobol y Cwm as a new character, Moc Thomas, whom he played in 2012-2013. In 2012, he portrayed the politician and Welsh-language campaigner Gwynfor Evans in an S4C docu-drama, titled Gwynfor Evans: Y Penderfyniad? (The Decision?).[4]

In 2013 Hughes appeared in the S4C film Y Syrcas (The Circus)[5] and is a regular in the bilingually-filmed detective series Y Gwyll (Hinterland). In May 2014 he appeared with Tom Jones and Katherine Jenkins in a BBC centenary production of Under Milk Wood by Dylan Thomas.[6][7]

Personal life

Hughes has run several marathons for charity, including the London Marathon in 2009.[8]

Hughes lives in Monmouth with his wife and two children. He is a founding member of the Monmouth Male Voice Choir.[9]

References

External links

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