
Age: 49
male
Andrew Scott (born 21 October 1976) is an Irish actor. Known for his roles on stage and screen, his accolades include a British Academy Television Award, Silver Bear Berlin International Film Festival, and two Laurence Olivier Awards, along with nominations for three Primetime Emmy Awards and three Golden Globe Awards. Scott first came to prominence portraying James Moriarty in the BBC series Sherlock (2010–2017), for which he won the BAFTA Television Award for Best Supporting Actor. His role as the priest in the second series of Fleabag (2019) garnered him wider recognition. It earned him the Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series. He is also known for his roles in the films Pride (2014), Spectre (2015), and 1917 (2019). He was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor for his starring role in the romantic drama film All of Us Strangers (2023). In 2024, he starred as Tom Ripley in the thriller series Ripley, for which he received Golden Globe and Primetime Emmy Award nominations as well as a Peabody Award. On stage, Scott played the lead role of Garry Essendine in a 2019 production of Present Laughter at The Old Vic, for which he won the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actor. He also won the Laurence Olivier Award for Outstanding Achievement in an Affiliate Theatre in 2005 for his role in A Girl in a Car with a Man at the Royal Court Theatre.

Andrew Scott

Pastor Arthur Beaucarne
for Pastor Arthur Beaucarne in Hunt or be Hunted
Suggested by ianhimmelstein77

The Buffalo Hunter Hunter is a 2025 historical horror novel by Stephen Graham Jones that reimagines vampire lore through the lens of American colonialism and Indigenous history. The story is framed by the discovery of a 1912 diary by a Lutheran pastor, Arthur Beaucarne, which details a massacre of Blackfeet people and the subsequent transformation of a man named Good Stab into a vampire. Told through the pastor's diary and Good Stab's transcribed confessions, the novel explores themes of revenge, identity, grief, and the enduring violence of the American West