Declan Lowney

Declan Lowney

Two words define Irish director Declan Lowney's recent career: TED and LASSO. Declan has Directed 8 episodes of the global smash hit TED LASSO, and was a Supervising Producer for all 12 episodes of Season 2. Much like the players in Coach Lasso's charge, Declan found his involvement with the show to be a life changing experience! He enjoyed an excellent working relationship with Jason Sudeikis, who entrusted Declan to helm the epic Season 3 Finale. Declan was nominated for an Outstanding Directing Emmy for that episode, and got his first Directors Guild of America Award nomination too. For his work on the first two seasons of the show, Declan received another Emmy nomination for Outstanding Directing (107) and won an Emmy for Outstanding Comedy. He also won a Producers Guild of America Award for his work on Season 2. But even before Ted Lasso, Declan was a very funny Irish Film and Television Director. He has directed many of the UK's best-loved TV comedies, from the cult hit Father Ted (another Ted!), to the comedy juggernauts Little Britain and Cold Feet. He's a six-time BAFTA Nominee, a two-time BAFTA winner for Comedy Direction. Declan's work is characterized by a light comic touch, and warm, sparkling performances that capture the emotional beats of a story, while still keeping it funny. Declan has a parallel career in advertising, directing high-end comedy and celebrity-performance commercials. His long-running Warburtons bread campaign in the UK has featured performances from Sylvester Stallone, The Muppets and Robert De Niro, the latter channeling his Goodfellas/Casino personas to great effect in a British bagel war. The Guardian newspaper called it De Niro's "best work in living memory"! George Clooney and Samuel L Jackson were the latest Hollywood stars to lend their names to the bread campaign. Last year Declan Executive Produced and Directed Sarah Goldberg in her Irish-set, dark, edgy comedy, SisterS, which has just aired on AMC. Meantime Declan directed the Season 2, two-part finale of Apple's THE BIG DOOR PRIZE starring his old pal Chris O'Dowd. He also Directed the Season 1 two-part finale. All available now on Apple tv+.
Declan O'Dwyer

Declan O'Dwyer

In 1977, aged 8, Declan was taken to the cinema for the first time. He queued for hours. Once eventually inside, he began, as he thought you were supposed to, to run up and down the aisles playing airplanes with a total stranger. The film started and as the Star Destroyer chased the Rebel blockade-runner across the screen, he became transfixed, mesmerized by the spectacle. Star Wars was his introduction into cinema. Poor Declan! Intellectually we must admit, he was not of much importance. He never said a brilliant or even ill-natured thing in his life. Ultimately he became nothing, a delightful, ineffectual young man with a perfect profile and no profession. Obviously, realizing his own shortcomings he made the natural and seamless transition into directing. After a much deserved divorce, and with no qualifications, Declan returned to education at the tender age of 26 by going to drama school. However, this only convinced him the world wasn't yet ready for his unique anti-acting style, so after this brief incarceration and whilst still remaining painfully under educated and overdressed, he graced his presence upon Bournemouth Film School. Earning a place on the prestigious The Fuji Film Scholarship allowed Declan to make his first narrative film; A Frozen Chicken Saves the Soaps Day - the film was honored to be invited to many of the major European film festivals. He is also rumored to have directed the satirical homage 'Potemkin: The Runner's Cut', starring Charles Dance, which also became entrenched in the International festival circuit. A commission to co-pen two historically drama epics kept Declan in Liquorice Allsorts. Brittania (about Boadicea) and Conqueror (unsurprisingly about William the Conqueror). With his dirty baseball cap at a jaunty angle, Declan took a directing secondment into network television drama on UK cop show The Bill - which resulted in a short-listing in the New Director (Fiction) category at the BAFTA Television Craft Awards which undoubtedly helped Declan become a regular director on several prime-time continuing dramas across all UK terrestrial networks. He then moved into 'Single Dramas' with feature length psychological thriller Wire in the Blood and an adaptation of an Andy McNab novella The Grey Man. BBC's flagship Robin Hood fulfilled his schoolboy mentality before he exchanged (the now VERY dirty) baseball cap for a stetson and went hunting serial killers in Texas with Prayer of the Bone. On the return from distant shores he began cohabiting with vampires, werewolves and ghosts in the pilot of the hit show Being Human and battling dragons and Greek mythological monsters in Merlin and Atlantis. The invention of the spell-checker eventually seduced Declan back into writing - resulting in the whiskey soaked revenge thriller, Broken Cove, (Black List 2014). Despite the typos, the script was also a Nicholl Scholarship quarter finalist. His follow-up script, Numb, was a Final Draft Big Break quarter finalist and Page Finalist (2015). In 2018 he was nominated for an Emmy for directing on Free Rein - which is obviously better than not being nominated.

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