Paul Higgins

Acting

Paul Higgins

Overview

Known for
Acting
Gender
Male

Paul Higgins

Known For

Brian and Maggie
3h 0m
TV Show 2025

Brian and Maggie

A dramatization of the story behind and occasion of Thatcher’s...

Kill
1h 34m
Movie 2024

Kill

The story centres on three brothers and their violent father...

Meat Puppet
0h 12m
Movie 2024

Meat Puppet

Oz, an irresponsible man baby, nearly misses his girlfriend’s Graduation...

The Ipcress File
TV Show 2022

The Ipcress File

As the Cold War rages, ex-smuggler turned reluctant spy Harry...

Greed
1h 40m
Movie 2019

Greed

A retail billionaire's 60th birthday party is celebrated in an...

The Party's Just Beginning
1h 31m
Movie 2018

The Party's Just Beginning

In a bleak Inverness midwinter, Luisaidh is careening off the...

Apostle
2h 10m
Movie 2018

Apostle

In 1905, a man travels to a remote island in...

Victoria & Abdul
1h 52m
Movie 2017

Victoria & Abdul

Queen Victoria strikes up an unlikely friendship with a young...

Charlie Cloudhead
0h 8m
Movie 2016

Charlie Cloudhead

A tragic comedy drama about a man who bottles up...

Couple in a Hole
1h 45m
Movie 2016

Couple in a Hole

A middle-aged couple who have renounced civilization to live in...

Biography

Paul Higgins is a Scottish actor, best known for appearing in the British television series The Thick of It, Utopia and Line of Duty. Higgins was born in Lanarkshire, Scotland. He was raised as a Roman Catholic, but now he considers himself a lapsed Catholic. As a teenager, he trained to be a priest, but gave his training up aged 17 when he began dating. Higgins has appeared onstage in Paul and Black Watch, and in the film Complicity. He played Alan in Staying Alive, a hospital drama on ITV. He has also played Jamie McDonald, an aggressive press officer, in the BBC show The Thick of It and its spin-off feature-length film, In the Loop. In 2009, he appeared as Gil Cameron on the BBC drama Hope Springs. He played Michael Dugdale in Channel 4's acclaimed conspiracy thriller Utopia. In 2013 he appeared in series 1 of the BBC series Line of Duty and returned for season 4 in 2017. He wrote a play titled Nobody Will Ever Forgive Us, which was performed at the Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh in a co-production with the National Theatre of Scotland in November 2008.