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Danial "Danny" Dyer (born 24 July 1977) is an English actor, currently cast in ''EastEnders'', and the previous chairman of Greenwich Borough, a non-League football team. ==Biography== Dyer was born in Canning Town, to Antony and Christine Dyer.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Biography ) (Includes a menu of hyperlinked sections on Dyer's career accomplishments)〕 He now lives in Debden, Epping Forest, Essex, with his longtime girlfriend, Joanne Mas, their daughters Dani and Sunnie, and son Arty. During March 2015, the couple announced their engagement. A lifelong player and fan of football, Dyer is a staunch West Ham United fan. In late December 2007, he became the chairman of Kent League's Greenwich Borough in South East London, appointed by fellow actor Tamer Hassan, president of the football club, stating: "I just love football and the chance of being involved with a club is like a dream come true."〔 The appointment was actually a publicity stunt to raise the profile for the club.〔Revealed in interview on BBC Radio 4 programme ''Loose Ends'' broadcast 12 September 2009 ()〕 Dyer was discovered at a local school by an agent who auditioned him for the part of Martin Fletcher in the Granada Television series ''Prime Suspect 3'' (1993), beginning his acting career at 16.〔 He also appeared on television in episodes of ''Cadfael'' (1994), ''A Touch of Frost'' (1995), ''Loved Up'' (1995), ''Thief Takers'' (1996) and ''Soldier Soldier'' (1997).〔〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Television )〕 In 1995, Dyer also appeared in a television commercial for Coca-Cola.〔(Coca-Cola advert starring Danny Dyer ) on YouTube〕 His many other television roles include appearances in the 2003 Channel 4 drama ''Second Generation'', directed by John Sen;〔 as Malcolm, main character Michelle's stepfather, in ''Skins''; as a football player in the second series of ''Hotel Babylon'' on BBC television; and as Matt Costello in what was supposed to be the pilot episode for ''Breathless'',〔 a BBC two-part television series in development from BBC Northern Ireland, renamed first "Blood Rush" and then ''Kiss of Death'', when it premiered on BBC One as a one-part drama on 26 May 2008. Beginning in 2007, Dyer became the presenter of ''The Real Football Factories'' and ''The Real Football Factories International'', a TV documentary series on Bravo, for which he travels, in the former throughout the United Kingdom and in the latter throughout the world, to meet and interview football club fans and hooligans. ''Danny Dyer's Deadliest Men'', "a gritty and hard-hitting documentary series that sees him venturing into the dark depths of the British underworld and hunting down some of the most notorious and feared men in Britain today", began airing on Bravo in the United Kingdom on 20 October 2008. In April 2009, he turned down a role in ''EastEnders'', claiming that although he thought the role sounded good, he did not think he could cope with the pressure. Dyer was quoted in a May 2011 article in ''NME'' as wanting to headbutt film critic Mark Kermode. Kermode has been a regular critic of Dyer's output and often "impersonates" him on his BBC Radio 5 Live show with Simon Mayo. In 2010, Dyer wrote in ''Zoo Magazine'', in his capacity as an celebrity agony uncle, that a young male reader could get over his recent break-up with a woman by "going on a rampage with the boys" or to "cut your ex's face, and then no one will want her ...". The comment was widely panned in the British media and by members of the public, including the chief executive of the Fawcett Society Ceri Goddard. Dyer for his own part claimed that he was misquoted.〔(Steve Busfield and Mark Sweney, "Danny Dyer advises Zoo reader to 'cut his ex's face'", ) ''The Guardian'', 5 May 2010.〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Danny Dyer」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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