Harri Grace

Commonly regarded as the face of First One To Die Loses, it is somewhat ironic that Harri Grace was in fact born without a face. Aged five, this was rectified when Harri underwent the first ever face-transplant surgery, giving him the chiselled, rugged looks for which he is now famous. Unfortunately, his early years were blighted by these looks, primary schools not being a place where chiselled, rugged looks are commonplace, or indeed admired.
Harri first developed a taste for acting aged 10, when he took the role of ‘Third King’ in the school nativity play. Despite forgetting the Myrrh backstage, Harri was widely acclaimed as the best ‘Third King’ of recent years.
Always on the cusp of greatness, his teen years were spent establishing himself as one of South Wales’ great supporting actors, before finally landing the title role in Waiting For Godot. It was during the opening night, while Harri was waiting backstage, that he first met Reg Noyes. Reg was looking for the lead in his new play about a man in Hiroshima who wakes from a coma ten minutes before the bomb falls. On the basis of his ‘Chinaman’ impression, Harri was cast immediately in ‘That’s Gotta Sting’, which had a three night run at St Donat’s Arts Centre before the local Japanese community burned the theatre down.
Two years later, Reg and Harri reunited once more to film First One To Die Loses, which launched Harri’s career once and for all.

Harri Grace is the face of Censored aftershave, and is currently preparing himself, mentally, for reprising the role of Flash Del Montay in the upcoming First One To Die Loses Part VIII.

 Contact Harri at harri.grace@gmail.com