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TV advert cast

Who is the actor or actress in that UK advert?

Identifications of cast members in popular UK TV adverts, with embedded videos where available. From Compare the Market to Aldi, Trivago, Sky and beyond.

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A guide to tv advert cast

There is a particular frustration that comes from watching a TV advert, recognising a face or a voice, and being unable to place it. It happens to most viewers at some point, and it has turned advert casting into one of the more searched-for topics on the British internet. Whether it is a familiar actress promoting home security, a comedian doing voiceover work for a supermarket, or a Hollywood name lending credibility to a fragrance campaign, the question of who exactly is in that advert is entirely reasonable.

UK television advertising is a substantial industry. Ofcom's Communications Market Report notes that commercial TV remains one of the most significant advertising channels in the country, with billions of pounds spent annually on broadcast spots. Behind each of those spots is a casting process that can involve unknown talent agents, established character actors, pop stars, and occasionally A-list film names. The range is enormous, which is part of why identifying a specific performer can be surprisingly difficult.

This page surveys the landscape of UK TV advert casting: how it works, why brands make the choices they do, and what resources exist when you are trying to put a name to a face. Individual articles on this site cover specific adverts in detail, from insurance and retail to fragrance and home goods.

How advert casting actually works in the UK

Most UK TV adverts are cast through specialist commercial casting directors, who work alongside the advertising agency and production company handling the campaign. Casting briefs are sent to talent agencies, which submit clients for consideration. Screen tests or self-tape auditions follow, and the final decision typically involves the brand's marketing team as well as the director. The whole process can move extremely quickly, sometimes completing within a week for a straightforward brief.

For lower-profile campaigns, the cast will often consist of professional actors who are not widely recognisable to the general public. This is deliberate: brands sometimes prefer a face that does not carry the baggage of a well-known role. In other cases, the entire point is recognition. Casting a former soap actor, a sports personality, or a chart musician signals something specific about the brand's target audience and its budget. Kennedy Casting, Brown and Mills, and similar agencies are frequently credited in production notes when cast details do emerge.

Celebrity and recognisable faces in UK advertising

High-profile casting decisions attract the most public curiosity. Andrew Garfield appearing in Sky Glass adverts, Dwayne Johnson fronting a Boss fragrance campaign, and Gillian Anderson representing L'Oreal Paris are all examples where the celebrity's existing profile is central to the advert's strategy. For L'Oreal in particular, the use of well-known women over 50 has been a long-running editorial choice; you can read more about the current campaign in {post:who-is-in-the-latest-loreal-advert}. Similarly, the Sofology campaign featuring Owen Wilson represented a significant investment, with the brand reportedly committing around £20 million to the partnership.

Fragrance advertising has its own casting conventions. Luxury houses tend to cast globally recognised names or rising cultural figures to anchor their campaigns. Miley Cyrus fronting Gucci Flora and Elle Fanning appearing in the Paco Rabanne Fame advert are recent examples of this approach. Details on both are covered in {post:who-is-the-girl-in-the-gucci-flora-advert} and {post:who-is-in-the-new-paco-rabanne-fame-advert}. The logic is straightforward: a fragrance cannot be experienced through a screen, so the campaign sells an aspiration, and the cast is the primary vehicle for that.

TV presenters and personalities as brand ambassadors

A distinct category of advert casting involves television presenters rather than actors. Presenters bring a sense of familiarity and trust that is different from what a dramatic actor offers. The People's Postcode Lottery has built its entire advertising identity around this approach, using Amanda Holden, Davina McCall, and Emma Willis to front its campaigns. The combination of three well-liked presenters creates a sense of communal endorsement rather than a single spokesperson relationship. More detail on that casting is available in {post:who-are-the-presenters-on-postcode-lottery-advert}.

Insurance and financial services brands have also leaned heavily on presenter-style casting. Martin Kemp taking over from Richard Ridings as the SunLife brand ambassador is a good illustration of how these relationships evolve over time. Paddy McGuinness fronting On the Beach adverts is another example of a comedian-presenter whose warmth and northern English identity aligns with the brand's positioning. These are not accidental choices; they reflect significant research into which personalities audiences associate with honesty and approachability.

Voiceover artists: the faces you never see

A substantial portion of advert casting curiosity concerns voices rather than faces. Voiceover work is a significant professional specialism in the UK, and many of the country's most-heard voices belong to people who are not household names. Tristan Bird voices McDonald's UK adverts, Rob Rackstraw is the voice of Aldi's Kevin the Carrot, and Diane Morgan provides the voiceover for Specsavers. Full details on the Aldi voiceover work are in {post:who-does-the-voiceover-for-the-aldi-advert}, and the Specsavers casting is covered in {post:who-are-the-actors-in-the-specsavers-advert}.

At the prestige end of the spectrum, brands will sometimes commission a recognisable actor specifically for their voice. Richard E. Grant narrating Cunard's television campaign is a clear example: his voice carries connotations of refinement and wit that suit a luxury cruise brand. David Tennant providing voiceover for Chase Bank adverts works similarly, lending a sense of intelligence and dry humour. The voice is cast as carefully as any on-screen face, and the fee structures reflect that.

Why cast details are often hard to find

Brands are not legally required to publish the names of actors in their adverts, and many choose not to. There are several reasons for this. Talent contracts sometimes include clauses that restrict the performer from publicising the association, particularly if the brand wants to avoid the advert feeling like a personal endorsement rather than a professional engagement. Agencies also sometimes prefer that the focus remain on the brand rather than the individual performer. This is why databases such as iSpot.tv, which tracks commercial airings in the US and to some extent the UK, often list production credits without naming on-screen cast members.

Social media has changed this dynamic considerably. Viewers who recognise an actor will frequently post about it, and the actor themselves may confirm the role on Instagram or TikTok. Talent agencies sometimes list commercial credits on their websites. For adverts where the cast is genuinely unverified, the most reliable approach is to check the production company's credits or to contact the brand's press office directly. The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) does not maintain a cast database, but its public register of adjudications can occasionally surface production details when complaints have been investigated.

Recurring characters and long-running campaigns

Some of the most recognisable faces in UK advertising are not celebrities at all but recurring characters tied to a single brand. Go Compare's Gio Compario, played by Welsh tenor Wynne Evans, is perhaps the most extreme example: a character so embedded in the advertising landscape that the performer became genuinely famous through the role alone. The current state of Go Compare's casting is covered in {post:who-is-the-actress-in-the-go-compare-advert}. Compare the Market's meerkats occupy a similar space, though they are animated rather than performed by human actors on screen.

Long-running human cast relationships also exist. Tim Williams served as the Trivago spokesman from 2016 onwards, becoming closely identified with the brand in the same way that a presenter becomes associated with a programme. When these relationships end or evolve, it tends to generate genuine public interest, which is itself a measure of how effectively the original casting worked. The nature of these long-term arrangements means that when a new face appears in a familiar campaign, the question of who replaced whom becomes almost as searched-for as the original casting question.

Key facts

£5.6 billion
UK TV advertising revenue in 2023, the most recent full-year figure · Thinkbox / Ofcom Communications Market Report 2024
Over 30,000
Distinct TV adverts estimated to air in the UK in a typical year across all channels · Clearcast (UK advert clearance body) annual statistics
97%
Proportion of UK adults who watch broadcast or on-demand TV at least once a week, meaning advert exposure remains near-universal · Ofcom Media Nations UK 2023 report
Top 5
Advert-related searches consistently appear among the top entertainment search queries in the UK, according to Google Trends seasonal data · Google Trends UK, reported by Campaign magazine
£1 million+
Typical production budget for a high-profile UK TV advert campaign, excluding media spend · IPA (Institute of Practitioners in Advertising) industry benchmarks
ASA
The Advertising Standards Authority regulates UK TV adverts and maintains a public register of rulings, though it does not verify or publish cast details · ASA (asa.org.uk)

Frequently asked questions

How can I find out who is in a specific UK TV advert?

The most reliable methods are checking the brand's official social media accounts, searching the production company's credits, or looking up the talent agency that represents the actor you recognise. Platforms such as iSpot.tv track some UK commercial airings, and the actor may have confirmed the role on their own social channels. If the advert is recent, a search combining the brand name with 'advert actor 2025' or '2026' will often surface forum discussions or press coverage.

Are brands required to say who is in their adverts?

No. UK law does not require brands to disclose the identity of performers in their advertising. The Advertising Standards Authority regulates content for accuracy and harm, but not casting transparency. Some talent contracts actively restrict performers from publicising their involvement.

Why do some adverts use unknown actors rather than celebrities?

Using an unfamiliar face means the viewer focuses on the product rather than the performer's existing associations. It can also be significantly cheaper. Many brands deliberately cast professional actors who are skilled on camera but not widely recognisable, particularly for campaigns aimed at creating a sense of everyday relatability.

Who does the voiceover for the Aldi adverts?

Rob Rackstraw voices Kevin the Carrot in Aldi's UK adverts, while Emma Clarke voices Katie the Carrot in Christmas campaigns. Full details are covered in the dedicated article on the Aldi advert voiceover.

Do actors earn a lot from TV advert work?

Fees vary enormously. A session fee for a lesser-known actor in a regional campaign might be a few hundred pounds, while a celebrity fronting a national campaign for a major brand can command hundreds of thousands. Equity, the UK performers' union, sets minimum rates for commercial work, but most high-profile deals are negotiated well above those minimums.

Why do some advert cast details remain unverified?

Brands sometimes prefer not to publicise cast details, and talent contracts can include confidentiality clauses. For smaller campaigns, there may simply be no press coverage or official credits published anywhere publicly accessible. In those cases, even specialist tracking services cannot confirm names with certainty.

What is the difference between a brand ambassador and an advert actor?

A brand ambassador has an ongoing contractual relationship with the brand, often appearing across multiple campaigns over months or years and representing the brand at events or on social media. An advert actor may appear in a single campaign or even a single spot with no broader relationship. The distinction matters commercially because ambassador deals typically include exclusivity clauses that prevent the individual from working with competitors.

The curiosity that drives people to search for advert cast details is not trivial. Advertising is one of the most widely shared visual experiences in British culture, and the faces and voices that populate those thirty-second spots become genuinely familiar over time. Knowing who they are is a reasonable thing to want. This site's individual articles cover dozens of specific campaigns in detail, from the Verisure alarm advert featuring Angela Scanlon to the Pure Cremation campaign with Gemma Whelan, and from Vodafone's ensemble cast to the long-running Trivago spokesman. Each article attempts to verify cast details from primary sources rather than speculation.

Where cast information remains genuinely unconfirmed, that uncertainty is noted rather than papered over with guesswork. The advert industry moves quickly, campaigns change, and the same brand may have used different talent across different years. If you are looking for a specific advert and cannot find it covered here, the brand's own press office or official social media accounts remain the most authoritative source of cast information available to the public.