Charlotte McDougall
Acting
Biography
Charlotte McDougall is an Actress and Writer, her theater work includes Oedipus (Northcut Theatre, Exeter), A Midsummer Night’s Dream (British Council Tour), The Deceived (Riverside Studios), Last Letters from Stalingrad (Bridewell), and McDougall & Donkin (Edinburgh Festival). Her television work includes Downton Abbey, Misfits, Summerhill, Speeding, The Bearded Ladies, Dad’s Dead, TLC, and 28 Acts in 28 Minutes. Her film credits include Charlotte Gray (director Gillian Armstrong), Elizabeth (director Shekar Kapur), and Lipstikka (director Jonathan Sagall). Her radio credits include The Bearded Ladies, Miranda Hart’s Jokeshop, and The Bits in Between.
Known For

When five young outsiders on Community Service get caught in a strange storm, they discover that they have developed superpowers.
Misfits

tlc is a darkly surreal farce-like sitcom created and written by Fintan Coyle, set in a fictional NHS hospital called South Middlesex where coffee is traded like drugs and pretty much everyone has a personality complex. Dr Laurence Flynn finds himself thrown in at the deep end when he gets his first job after leaving Medical School (where he failed his finals). Always the butt of jokes by other staff (being called on to revive dead people)he has to cope not only with the patients but mad colleagues too – an ex surgeon now the hospital chaplain and a German theatre assistant with a masochistic kink. The show never confirms what 'tlc' stands for, although it's presumed to be a sarcastic reference to the widely used abbreviation for 'tender loving care', but could equally refer to the alternative yet related abbreviation 'total lack of concern'.
tlc

This is a drama set in Nazi-occupied France at the height of World War II. Charlotte Gray tells the compelling story of a young Scottish woman working with the French Resistance in the hope of rescuing her lover, a missing RAF pilot. Based on the best-selling novel by Sebastian Faulks.
Charlotte Gray

Comedy drama about the beginnings of Jimmy Perry and David Croft's writing partnership and their struggles to get Dad's Army on the screen in 1968.
We're Doomed! The Dad's Army Story

Our narrator looks fondly back at his childhood in Liverpool and the antics of his best friend Johnno. Well known for being a showman and a keen one for joking and the like, Johnno starts to change for the worse after he announced that his father has died.