Eddie Toll
Acting
Biography
Eddie Toll is an accomplished, award-winning actor whose career has spanned film, television and theatre. His credits include numerous television productions for the BBC, Starz, and Channel 4 as well as film productions for Paramount and Potboiler productions. Eddie is a British actor of Russian descent. His first film role was in the Marc Forster directed zombie thriller 'World War Z', and he has since worked on numerous television and film productions including: 'We Were The Lucky Ones', 'MotherFatherSon', and 'McMafia', working with many highly esteemed directors such as Charles Sturridge, and Lenny Abrahamson. His theatre work has included productions at the Hampstead Theatre, the Young Vic, and on the West-End. He is also very proud to have been part of a benefit production in aid of military veterans at the Palace Theatre in London. Was awarded 'Best Actor' at the Stuttgart Independent film festival.
Known For

Two cousins work through the Atlanta music scene in order to better their lives and the lives of their families.
Atlanta

In 1977 Moscow, two "PONIES" ("persons of no interest") become CIA operatives and uncover a Cold War conspiracy their husbands were killed for.
PONIES

Hezekiah and Alec, two friends from Jamaica, finds themselves thrust into the criminal underbelly of London's East End. Here they meet Mary Carr, Queen of an all-female criminal gang known as the Forty Elephants, and run afoul of Sugar Goodson, criminal kingpin and notorious boxer.
A Thousand Blows

Alex Godman, the English-raised son of Russian mafia exiles, has spent his life trying to escape the shadow of their past, building his own legitimate business and forging a life with his girlfriend Rebecca. But when a murder forces his family's past to return to threaten them, Alex is drawn into the criminal underworld and must confront his values to protect those he loves.
McMafia

In a dusty post-war summer in rural Warwickshire, a doctor is called to a patient at lonely Hundreds Hall. Home to the Ayres family for over two centuries, the Georgian house is now in decline. But are the Ayreses haunted by something more sinister than a dying way of life?
The Little Stranger

Liverpool, 1947. Two British soldiers are kidnapped and murdered in Mandate Palestine. In the aftermath of the so-called ‘Sergeants Affair’, a wave of antisemitic riots sweep across the UK. Louis Scholnick, a British-Jewish World War Two veteran, is forced to defend his family’s shop from a violent mob.