Leo Woodall was "so bad" at working in retail. The 28-year-old actor had two oridnary jobs before he broke into showbusiness ...
Starring Leo Woodall of One Day fame, the eight-part series follows Cambridge postgrad and maths genius Edward Brooks, who is on the verge of a breakthrough when his research into prime numbers ...
Leo Woodall's new thriller series Prime Target has earned a meagre score on Rotten Tomatoes. After the success of The White Lotus season 2 and One Day, Woodall's latest TV endeavour didn't ...
Said genius, Edward Brooks, is played by One Day star Leo Woodall, while Quintessa Swindell, Stephen Rea, David Morrissey, Martha Plimpton and Harry Lloyd all play crucial roles. But who else ...
One Day's Leo Woodall has explained why his role in Apple TV+'s new thriller Prime Target "felt like a challenge" he wanted to take on. The new series, which released its first two episodes on the ...
Instead, audiences are left wondering about background characters and unanswered questions. Woodall and Swindell do their best to navigate the storylines and dialogue in front of them to no avail.
British star Leo Woodall ... pizza and a blue heart. The pair were also seen strolling arm in arm and sharing a kiss on a date night in New York back in November last year. Woodall previously ...
Apple TV Plus has another new dramatic conspiracy thriller called Prime Target hitting the streaming service this week where rising star Leo Woodall plays the lead. Episode 1 of Prime Target is ...
Led by rising star Leo Woodall (The White Lotus) and boasting an award-winning cast, packed with high-octane action, you can catch this propulsive thriller with our guide below explaining how to ...
Leo Woodall is the actor of the moment, but he can’t save the absolute gubbins that is Prime Target (Apple TV+). It’s a conspiracy thriller in which he plays a brilliant Cambridge postgrad who ...
For those who number ourselves among the algebraically impaired, higher math is like outer space—a forbidding frontier; a sphere of unknowns, peril and, as has been proved often enough, drama ...