Scott Neal Movies
British actor Scott Neal is best known for his moving portrayal of abused and sexually confused teen Ste Pearce in Hettie MacDonald's Beautiful Thing (1996). Neal received formal acting training when he joined the Anna Scher Theatre School at age 17. Before deciding to make acting his full-time career, he studied Leisure and Tourism. Neal's first professional acting job was in Channel 4's The Listening. ~ Sandra Brennan, RoviMichael Dorn directed this episode, which originally aired June 9, 1997. A depressed Sisko can't seem to shake his deep blue funk, especially when Kai Winn arrives on the station to negotiate with the Dominion. Hoping to lift his dad's spirits, Jake Sisko goes to herculean lengths -- including the depletion of Nog's life savings -- to purchase a mint-condition Willie Mays baseball card. This aptly titled installment was scripted by Ronald D. Moore, from a story by Trudy Clark and Scott Neal. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
In this alternately somber and witty coming-of-age drama, a pair of teenage boys growing up in a working-class neighborhood become aware of their homosexuality. Introspective Jamie (Glen Berry) is the son of Sandra (Linda Henry), a tough but warm-hearted barmaid who lives in a public housing block in a rough-and-tumble section of South London. Living a few doors away is Jamie's classmate Ste (Scott Neal), an athletic type who often has to take a beating from his hard-drinking father and hard-headed brother. One night, Jamie and Sandra discover that Ste has been kicked out of the apartment and has nowhere to spend the night; Jamie lets him stay at his place, and a casual closeness eventually stirs sexual feelings. While both were vaguely aware they might be gay, neither had ever acted on their impulses, and once Jamie and Ste decide that they're attracted to each other, neither is sure just what to do. Tony (Ben Daniels), Sandra's boyfriend, doesn't know what to think about Jamie's new lifestyle. Meanwhile, Jamie and Ste are themselves a bit puzzled by their neighbor Leah (Tameka Empson), a teenager obsessed with the life and music of Mama Cass Elliott. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
- Starring:
- Andrew Fraser, Linda Henry, (more)
For the fourth installment of the BBC crime series Prime Suspect, the producers experimented with the show's format. Instead of following police detective Jane Tennison (Helen Mirren) through a single murder investigation over the course of four hours, Prime Suspect 4 includes three 90-minute, stand-alone mysteries. In "The Lost Child," Tennison investigates the disappearance of a child whose mother is unwittingly dating a convicted sex offender. In "Inner Circles," she traces the connection between the residents of a brutal housing development and the well-heeled denizens of an exclusive country club whose manager is brutally murdered. And "The Scent of Darkness" returns to the serial-killer investigation that made Tennison's career (in Prime Suspect 1) as additional murders with the same modus operandi bring up the possibility that she apprehended the wrong man. In addition to its new format, Prime Suspect 4 also depicts, in "The Lost Child," the first non-murder investigation of Tennison's career. Prime Suspect 4 originally aired April 30, May 7, and May 15, 1995, in the United Kingdom. ~ Brian J. Dillard, Rovi
- Starring:
- Helen Mirren, Glen Berry, (more)




