
Gary Shail
Gary Shail began work in TV and film in 1977 and is best known for his roles as Spider in the 1979 cult classic film Quadrophenia and as Steve, the punky teenager in The Metal Mickey TV Show. Shail appeared in the 1980 series The Further Adventures of Oliver Twist and also played Oscar Drill in Shock Treatment the 1981 follow-up to The Rocky Horror Picture Show and as Guy Raines in the 1983 BBC production Johnny Jarvis. He wrote the original songs and theme music for this production, for which he received a nomination for the Ivor Novello Awards. In 1988, Shail appeared as the tough pimp "Billy White" in the TV mini-series of Jack the Ripper, starring Michael Caine. He has also made appearances in the TV series The Bill and in Casualty and The Professionals. In 1995 Shail began working with music production company Natural Sound Source in London, producing music for television, film and advertising. In 2004 he produced the Arabic fusion album Infinity in Dubai. In 2010 Shail was back in the recording studio working on his autobiographical self-penned album 'Daze Like This.' A collection of new songs interspersed with some re-workings of some Johnny Jarvis themes. The album received critical success, but failed to reach a wider audience mainly due to Shails reluctance to embrace the new 'download' generation. In October 2015 Shail's memoir I Think I'm On The Guest List was published by New Haven Publishing Ltd.
Filmography (16)
MOVIE★ 3.8To Be Someone2021as Charlie
MOVIEReady For My Close Up2019as Luigi
MOVIE★ 4.6Day of the Stranger2019as Loomweather
MOVIE★ 5.9Jekyll & Hyde1990as Sailor
MOVIE★ 5.8Death of a Son1989as DJ
MOVIE★ 5.4The Bride1985as 1st Circus Hand
TV★ 6.6Dempsey and Makepeace1985as Eddie
MOVIEA Visitor from Outer Space1983as Flipper
MOVIEEasy Money1982as Terry- MOVIEThe Bed1982as Steve
MOVIE★ 5.8Shock Treatment1981as Oscar Drill
MOVIE★ 7.0Quadrophenia1979as Spider
MOVIE★ 10.0The Music Machine1979as Aldo
TV★ 7.6The Professionals1977as Jimmy
TV★ 7.0Playhouse1974as Terry- MOVIEClan of the Raven—as King of Britons