Joe Armstrong

Actor

Popular As Joe Armstrong (actor)

Birthday October 7, 1978

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace London, England

Age 45 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#19408 Most Popular

1978

Joe Armstrong (born 7 October 1978) is an English actor.

His television roles include Allan A Dale in three series of Robin Hood, Hotspur in Henry IV, Part I, Ashley Cowgill in Happy Valley and Bairstow in The Village.

1993

He attended Elliott School in Putney from 1993 to 1997.

1998

He then studied at the University of Bristol, where he acted in The Brecht Project—a collection of scenes from the works of Bertolt Brecht—in 1998 and Women Beware Women in 1999.

He is a fan of AFC Wimbledon.

Performing with the National Youth Theatre, Armstrong's roles included Gerry Evans in Dancing at Lughnasa in 1998 and Lieutenant Stedna in They Shoot Horses, Don't They? in 2000.

He also played Wackford Squeers in Nicholas Nickleby.

2003

Joe Armstrong's first television role was a bit part in a 2003 episode of The Bill, followed by a brief appearance in the ITV mini-series Between the Sheets starring his father Alun Armstrong.

In 2003, Armstrong had the dual roles of Adam and Jeff in Protection by Fin Kennedy at the Soho Theatre.

2004

In the 2004 BBC film Passer By, he had a supporting role as one of two men accused of assaulting a woman on a train.

He guest starred in the 2004 Waking the Dead episode "Fugue States" as a young man who reappears with amnesia after being abducted as a child.

Also in 2004, he played the son of a murdered farmer in the Foyle's War episode "They Fought in the Fields."

Other television credits include guest spots in Midsomer Murders (2004), Blackpool (2004), Rose and Maloney (2005), another episode of The Bill (2005), The Inspector Lynley Mysteries (2006), Party Animals (2007), The Last Detective (2007) and The Whistleblowers (2007).

He appeared in How Love Is Spelt by Chloe Moss at the Bush Theatre in 2004 and in A Night at the Dogs by Matt Charman at the Soho Theatre in 2005.

2006

In 2006, Armstrong was cast in the BBC series Robin Hood as Allan—based on the legendary figure Alan-a-Dale—who joins Robin's band of outlaws in Sherwood Forest.

Allan later becomes allied with the sympathetic villain Guy of Gisborne but has a change of heart and rejoins his friends.

Armstrong appeared in all three series from 2006 to 2009.

The series was filmed on location in and around Budapest.

2009

Armstrong portrayed Norman Heatley in the 2009 BBC Four film Breaking the Mould about the team who turned penicillin into a viable medicine.

At the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2009, he played Liam in the Dennis Kelly play Orphans.

2010

In 2010, he co-starred with Billie Piper in the two-part drama A Passionate Woman as the husband of a woman who has an affair.

His father Alun Armstrong played the older version of his character.

2011

On stage, he played the lead role in D. C. Moore's The Empire and appeared in the 2011 revival of Flare Path.

He co-starred with Maxine Peake in Miss Julie at the Royal Exchange and with Louise Brealey in a touring production of Constellations.

Armstrong was born and raised in London, the son of Sue (née Bairstow) and actor Alun Armstrong.

He has an older brother, Tom, and a younger brother, Dan, who was in the band Clock Opera.

He guest starred in an episode of Hustle in 2011, and he was a regular cast member in the third series of Land Girls.

2012

He appeared in Public Enemies starring Daniel Mays and Anna Friel in 2012.

Armstrong played Hotspur in Richard Eyre's 2012 production of Henry IV, Part I—one of four films in the BBC Two Shakespeare cycle The Hollow Crown.

He employed a Geordie accent for the role.

Jeremy Irons played Henry IV, with Tom Hiddleston as Prince Hal and Alun Armstrong as Hotspur's father, the Earl of Northumberland.

2013

In the 2013 drama The Village, depicting life in a Derbyshire village in the early 20th century, he played Stephen Bairstow, a detective scarred by his experiences at the Front in World War I.

The character was originally a minor one, but writer Peter Moffat expanded the role because he was impressed with Armstrong.

2014

He reprised his role in the second series in 2014.

Armstrong played drug dealer-turned-kidnapper Ashley Cowgill in Sally Wainwright's 2014 crime drama Happy Valley, starring Sarah Lancashire.

2016

In December 2016 he also appeared as William Allison in Wainwright's To Walk Invisible, a television biopic about the lives of the Bronte family.

In 2016, he appeared in "Hated in the Nation", an episode of the anthology series Black Mirror.

2018

In 2018, he appeared as series regular Gildas in Britannia, Jez Butterworth's historical drama about the Roman conquest of Britain.

The following year he played Samuel Washington in the BBC/HBO co-production Gentleman Jack, written by Sally Wainwright.

In 2023, Armstrong appeared in the Harlan Coben Netflix adaptation of 'Fool Me Once' as Alexander Dosman, ex-boyfriend of Claire Walker and father to their son Louis.