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Cyril Ikechukwu Nri // ⓘ (born 25 April 1961) is a Nigerian-born English actor who is best known for playing Superintendent Adam Okaro in the police TV series The Bill. Cyril Nri plays the role of Lord Danbury in the Netflix series Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story (2023).
Cyril Nri played Superintendent Adam Okaro from 2002 to 2006, initially replacing the deceased Tom Chandler as Superintendent before accepting a promotion to Borough Commander in 2006. He was the highest ranking black officer in the series' history.
The Bill is a British police procedural television series that ran from 1984 to 2010. The show, whose name is derived from "old bill"—a British slang term for police officers—was unusual among police dramas in that it focused on the lives and work of one shift of police officers, rather than on any particular aspect of police work.
Lenny Henry as Clint Donovan and Cyril Nri as Parker in "Missing You." Netflix By the end of "Missing You," Kat learns that her father was a corrupt officer working for Calligan (James Nesbitt), a ...
The show also focused on modernising their set as the entire station was redeveloped: CID was the first to change as it was moved to the zone above the front office, the old community safety unit demolished to accommodate a larger CID, new briefing room and expanded DI's office; the admin offices for Superintendent, DCI and intelligence that ...
At the end of Netflix's 'Missing You,' Detective Kat Donovan solves both her father's murder and an ongoing missing persons case
The first half of series 21 remained a soap opera styled show, focused primarily on the personal lives of the characters with policing secondary at times, more so than recent years with big plots focused on the characters directly rather than their job, such as DC Jim Carver's bid to win back estranged wife Sergeant June Ackland, PC Honey Harman's romance with a murderer she met through a case ...
The Bill was originally conceived in 1983 by Geoff McQueen, then a new television writer, as a one-off drama.McQueen had originally titled the production Old Bill. [2] It was picked up by Michael Chapman for ITV franchise holder Thames Television, who retitled it Woodentop as part of Thames's Storyboard series of one-off dramas and broadcast on ITV under the title Woodentop on 16 August 1983. [2]