Wil Johnson

Actor

Birthday April 18, 1965

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Muswell Hill, London, England

Age 58 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 5 ft 9 in (1.75m)

#61251 Most Popular

1965

Wilbert Charles Johnson (born 18 April 1965) is an English actor, who has had notable television roles in Waking the Dead and Babyfather, and on stage in Othello.

1980

For the rest of the 1980s he made minor appearances in television series such as Casualty and London's Burning, before playing detective Stevie Johnson in the London Weekend Television series Anna Lee.

1985

Johnson's first professional acting role came in the play Four Seasons at the 1985 Edinburgh Festival Fringe.

1994

From 1994 to 1995 he played the supporting role of Detective Constable Michael Skelton in Cracker.

Between roles, Johnson worked for a local undertakers, driving the hearse and acting as a pallbearer.

2000

In 2000, he appeared in the BBC One television pilot Waking the Dead, as Detective Sergeant Spencer Jordan, a member of a specialised police unit tasked with investigating "cold cases".

From 2000 to 2002, he appeared as Steve Robinson in Paul Abbott's popular drama series Clocking Off.

2001

Waking the Dead returned for a complete series in 2001, and Johnson was a main cast member until the series ended in 2011.

From 2001 to 2002, he appeared as a main cast member in two series of the BBC's Babyfather.

2004

In 2004, Johnson played the title character in the Royal Lyceum Theatre Company's Othello.

He also played Marcus Kirby in the BBC One school-based drama Waterloo Road.

He departed in the second half of the series.

2006

The film was originally shot in 2006.

2010

In 2010, he appeared in In a Better World (film) as 'Dr. Najeeb'.

He also performed in a play, called The Swallowing Dark at the Liverpool Playhouse and Theatre503.

2011

In 2011, he also starred as gangster boss Big Mike in Anuvahood and in 2008 as Big Man in Adulthood

In November 2011, Johnson appeared as 'Sean Dolan' a Consultant paediatrician in BBC One's Holby City.

2012

He played Dom Andrews in Emmerdale from 2012 to 2014.

Johnson was born in Muswell Hill, London, and raised in Tottenham.

His mother invested in stocks and his father worked for UPS.

Johnson had no interest in music while he was in primary school, but after he filled in a role for an absent drummer, he changed his mind.

He went to Mountview Drama School in Crouch End, London.

He also joined another drama group at the Haringey Theatre.

He also went to a dance group and learned ballet, contemporary dancing, and break dancing, which he performed for about seven years.

He also attended National Youth Theatre for three years.

In 2012, it was announced that Johnson would be joining Emmerdale as single father Dominic "Dom" Andrews in the later part of the year.

2013

In 2013, he appeared as a gangster in a film thriller called Life Outside.

He also was a special guest DJ at a 'MonologueSlam' event (actors showcase) at 'The Green Carnation' cocktail lounge, Soho.

In 2013, he also co-produced with Christian Ashaiku a film called Disorientated Generation (about a Nigerian man living in London).

The film was partially funded by Enfield Council, with a small grant from UK Film Council.

2014

On 23 February 2014, it was announced that he would be leaving the show later that year following the death of his character's daughter, Gemma (Tendai Rinomhota).

Johnson married his wife Camilla in 2014.

2016

In 2016, Johnson was cast as the Earl of Kent in the Talawa Theatre Company and Royal Exchange Manchester co-production of King Lear.

Johnson received praise for his performance, with The Guardian writing "giving depth to straight simplicity" and the Manchester Theatre Awards saying that "... wrongest servant Kent is played with passion and often with humour by Wil Johnson".

In 2016, Johnson received the British Urban Film Festival honorary award from fellow actor Charles Venn for 30+ years outstanding contribution to film and television.

He is an advocate of colour-blind casting in British television:

There are a lot more black and Asian actors who the nation knows by name, which is fantastic [...] [Colour-blind casting] happens regularly in theatre, but in mainstream television it could be implemented a lot more.

I'm tentative to use the word 'stereotyping', because a lot of the black roles emerging on television I wouldn't categorise as stereotypical: my role in Waking the Dead certainly wasn't.

Johnson has six children.

His eldest daughter is composer, singer, songwriter and cellist Ayanna Witter-Johnson.