Michael Obiora
Michael Obiora | |
---|---|
Born |
Camden, London England | 8 October 1986
Occupation | Actor, Writer |
Years active | 1996–present |
Michael Obiora (born 8 October 1986, north London, England) is an English actor and writer.
Career
Michael Obiora was born on 8 October 1986 in north-west London to Nigerian-Igbo parents. As a six-year-old, Obiora was determined to become an entertainer like his idol Michael Jackson and his mother enrolled him in drama lessons.[1]
At the age of nine, he became the youngest actor to have appeared in Grange Hill; he played Max Abassi on the programme for five years.
Just before his 18th birthday Obiora landed a role playing the part of Gunner Jackson Clarke, a soldier in ITV's eight-part series Bombshell, starring opposite Footballers Wives star Zöe Lucker. Shortly after filming Bombshell, Obirora started a seven-month run in the play Elmina's Kitchen, written by Kwame Kwei-Armah, at the Garrick Theatre. He also had a role in the stage play Exclude Me, completing a successful 11-week run on stage at The Chelsea Theatre, and lead roles in the play Fallout at the Royal Court Theatre and Badnuff at The Soho Theatre.
Obiora has had television roles in My Family, Judge John Deed, Misfits, Sea of Souls, ITV1's Afterlife , Doctor Who, Doctors, Powers, The Bill and Holby City. He was in four episodes of EastEnders, the first episode airing on 11 June 2009, in which he played playboy footballer, Ellis Prince.
Obiora played receptionist Ben Trueman in the BBC One drama series Hotel Babylon,[2] which was cancelled after its fourth series. He joined the cast of the long-running BAFTA winning medical drama Casualty for its 26th season playing the part of Lloyd Asike, a nurse. He spent two years on the show.[3]Michael was part of an international ensemble that formed the cast of Sky Atlantic's 2015 epic eleven-part crime thriller, Fortitude.
Personal life
Michael married his long-term partner in a beach wedding ceremony on September 20th 2014, in her native the Seychelles. Obiora is a sports and fitness enthusiast and is a keen Arsenal fan. He has written a novel, Black Shoes, that was released in e-book format in 2009.[1]Michael published his second novel Vivian's Couch in November 2014. For years Obiora suffered from debilitating stomach pains and extreme fatigue, which caused his speech to slur and often hampered his work.[4] In 2008 he was diagnosed with celiac disease and has thus had to control his diet.[5]
Appearances
Year | Show | Role |
---|---|---|
1998–2002 | Grange Hill | Max Abassi |
2002 | Doctors | Adam Charlton |
2003 | The Bill | Nathan Morley |
2003 | Holby City | Perry Green |
2004 | Sea of Souls | Lucas |
2004 | Powers | Tyrone Lewis |
2004 | My Family | Jack |
2005 | Judge John Deed | Jez Balfe |
2006 | Bombshell | Gunner Jackson Clark |
2006 | Afterlife | Terence Olivets |
2006–2009 | Hotel Babylon | Ben Trueman |
2007 | Doctor Who | DI Billy Shipton |
2007 | The MOBOS | Himself; Guest Presenter |
2007 | Children in Need | Ben Trueman |
2008 | Big Brothers Big Mouth | Himself |
2008 | Nuts TV | Himself |
2008 - 2015 | The Wright Stuff | Himself; Guest Panelist |
2008 | Soccer AM | Himself |
2008 | Ready Steady Cook | Himself; Contestant |
2008 | Breakfast | Himself |
2009 - 2015 | OH TV | Himself; Guest Panelist |
2009 | Celebrity MasterChef | Himself |
2009 | EastEnders | Ellis |
2009 | Misfits | Detective Pete |
2011 | Lethal | Andrew |
2011–2013 | Casualty | Lloyd Asike |
2015 | Fortitude | Max Cordero |
2015 | Luther | Errol Minty |
See also
References
- 1 2 Lovejoy, Tim; Louise Redknapp and Simon Rimmer. (28 June 2009). Something for the Weekend (Television production). BBC 2.
- ↑ Morris, Davina (22 February 2006). "'It's Great Acting Gay'". Voice. Retrieved 10 July 2011.
- ↑ "New Nurses For BBC's Casualty". ATV Today. Retrieved 10 July 2011.
- ↑ Cross, Julie (28 October 2009). "How coeliac disease left Hotel Babylon star Michael Obiora slurring his speech". Mail. Retrieved 10 July 2011.
- ↑ Briggs, Helen (9 July 2009). "Hotel Babylon star on coeliac disease". BBC News. Retrieved 10 July 2011.