Stephen Walters

Actor

Birthday May 22, 1975

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Liverpool, Merseyside, England

Age 48 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 5ft 8in

#25395 Most Popular

1970

The role dealt with Tomlinson's incarceration during the 1970s builders' strike.

Walters was nominated for an RTS Award as Best Actor in a single drama – and garnered praise from Tomlinson – for his performance.

1975

Stephen Walters (born 22 May 1975) is an English actor.

A regular in British television and film, he has played a wide range and variety of character roles in both drama and comedy.

Walters is most commonly associated with unpredictable, complex figures.

1989

In 1989, while at St. Wilfrids secondary school, Walters was cast in ITV's British Children's anthology series Dramarama where he portrayed Corporal Tomkins in the series seven episode entitled "Ghost Story".

1990

Walters' second professional role was in season five of another anthology series, BBC's drama Screenplay. He was featured in Jimmy McGovern's episode Needle (1990), which was based upon the needle exchange programme and heroin epidemic in 1980s Liverpool.

After obtaining of a BTEC in Performing arts at Southport College (1990–1992), Walters went on to gain a place at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School (1994–1996).

1994

In 1994 he starred as Joey Jackson, a poetic soul searching for the meaning of life, in Jim Morris' television film Blood on the Dole, part of the Alan Bleasdale Presents series for Channel 4.

The performance garnered critical acclaim for Walters and on the advice of Bleasdale he decided to apply for drama school.

1996

Upon completion of drama school Walters appeared as Ian Glover in Jimmy McGovern's acclaimed television drama Hillsborough (1996), based upon the Hillsborough disaster at the 1989 FA Cup Semi-finals.

Hillsborough went on to win a BAFTA for best drama.

His next performance was the role of Jamie Johnson on ITV's drama series Springhill (1996), though Walters did not return for the second series.

1997

In 1997 he would once again work with "Ghost Story" director Julian Jarrold in ITV's police drama Touching Evil. Walters would portray lead guest character Jack McCaffrey, a slippery cockney, in the two-part series one finale written by Paul Abbott.

It was the second time Walters had worked with series star Robson Green, the first being ITV's 1997 drama Touching Evil.

1998

Between 1998 and 2000, Walters appeared in several episodic performances such as BBC's Pie in the Sky, opposite the late Richard Griffiths, Mikey Sullivan in Jimmy McGovern's crime drama Liverpool 1, Technician Fifth Grade John McGrath in HBO's WWII miniseries Band of Brothers (based upon historian Stephen E. Ambrose's 1992 book of the same name), and Scott in the BBC drama Nice Guy Eddie.

2001

In 2001, Walters starred as Knockoff in the BBC television production of writer Jim Cartwright's comedy Strumpet, opposite Christopher Eccleston.

Directed by Danny Boyle, the film was a contrast to the dramatic work Walters had done to date.

2002

He was then cast as a series lead, in the role of prison psychiatrist Nick Vaughan, alongside Lennie James in the eight-part drama series Buried (2002).

The Channel 4 series, from producer Tony Garner, was awarded the BAFTA for Best Drama.

2004

Walters would go on to portray the guest starring role of Dylan Forbes in the premiere episode of ITV's drama Murder City (2004), directed by Sam Miller, before a turn as Lord Gilbert Gifford in the BBC's 2005 dramatic mini-series The Virgin Queen.

2007

After a two-year hiatus from television, Walters featured in BBC 3's six-part comedy series The Visit (2007), which was set in a prison waiting room.

Walters portrayed Splodge Costello, a troublesome yet likeable inmate.

Later that same year he played the memorable character Maddison Twatter (AKA Mad Twatter) in a three-episode stint for E4's cult smash Skins.

2008

In 2008's two-part series six finale of ITV's crime drama Wire in the Blood, Walters played serial-killer-on-the-loose James Williams.

2012

Walters would go on to play gangster Callum Rose, opposite fellow actor Stephen Graham, in BBC's 2012 production Good Cop. The series, written by Stephen Butchard and directed by Sam Miller, won the RTS award for Best Drama in 2013, though it only ran for one season.

2013

He was nominated for a Royal Television Society Best Actor award in 2013 for his role in the Sky Arts drama Ragged and in 2023 for a Supporting Actor (Male) award for his role in the ITV drama Anne.

In the spring of 2013, Walters starred as real-life actor and activist Ricky Tomlinson in Ragged, a one-off drama for the Sky Arts Presents series, directed by comedian Johnny Vegas.

2013 also brought Walters lead roles in two television series.

First was the comedy Great Night Out, from Jimmy Mulville's Hat Trick Productions, where Walters played Daz Taylor.

Second was The Village, where he portrayed Crispin Ingham, a sadistic teacher from Derbyshire.

Walters also reunited with previous co-star Sean Bean in "Tracie's Story", a critically acclaimed episode of 2013's The Accused, penned by Jimmy McGovern.

2014

These episodes were directed by Philip John who would later direct Walters in Outlander (2014–2016).

Though a second series of The Village was commissioned, Walters was unable to reprise his role due to a scheduling conflict with filming Outlander (2014–2016).

Walters worked extensively with director Brian Kelly in 2014.

He filmed three episodes of NBC's dramatic series Dracula, opposite Jonathan Rhys Meyers, as Hungarian detective Hackett.

In a departure from the novel, the series was set in Victorian England, though it was filmed in Budapest, Hungary.

From 2014 to 2016, opposite Sam Heughan, Caitriona Balfe and Graham McTavish, Walters portrayed the featured role of Angus Mhor in the television adaptation of Diana Gabaldon's best-selling Scottish time travel novel Outlander.

2015

Kelly then cast Walters as Simon the Sorcerer in NBC's series AD the Bible Continues, a sequel to Producers Mark Burnett and Roma Downey's miniseries The Bible (2015).

The series was filmed in Morocco to preserve authenticity.