What is the actors name who is not that famous, has scares on his face and a very unique voice

Possible matches:

  • Tommy Flanagan
  • Seal

Tommy Flanagan was born on 3 July 2024 in Glasgow, Scotland. While growing up, Tommy made his living as a DJ for the local dance clubs. In his early twenties, he became a member of Robert Carlyle's Raindog Theatre Company where he made his stage debut in productions such as 'Wasted I and II', 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest', and 'MacBeth'.

He stars as Filip “Chibs” Telford on the FX hit drama “Sons of Anarchy”

Before Flanagan got into acting, he was a young DJ in Scotland. One night after leaving a pub, he was attacked by a group. The attackers slashed his face from ear to ear, leaving him a scar known as a 'Glasgow Grin' or a 'Glaswegian Smile'.

Seal | Stars with Scars | Comcast.net via kwout

Born Sealhenry Olusegun Olumide Adeola Samuel on February 19, 1963, in London, England, Seal went on to score a major U.K. hit, "Killer," before releasing his 1991 debut album. He's become an internationally renowned singer/songwriter with albums like Human Being and hits like "Crazy," "Prayer for the Dying" and "Kiss From a Rose," which won multiple Grammy Awards. He was married to supermodel and TV host Heidi Klum for several years.

The Grammy award-winning singer's voice is unmistakable. But Seal is also known for very characteristic types of scars on his face and scalp, caused by a skin disease called discoid lupus erythematosus (DLE), a disfiguring disease in which the immune cells attack the skin from underneath, creating inflammatory areas and scarring of the scalp, ears, face, and sometimes chest and arms.

Get tips on reducing scar at WebMD.

Find other celebrities with distinct scars here.

Of interest, insights gleaned from salamanders may help keep people scar-free after surgery, University of Florida researchers say. They're focusing on a type of salamander called the axolotl, which can regenerate lost limbs and re-grow its own spinal cord.

"When axolotls are young and still living together in nature, it seems like their favorite snack is their siblings' appendages. They just nibble them off and they grow right back. They don't even know they were missing," Ed Scott, a professor in the department of molecular genetics and microbiology at the University of Florida's College of Medicine, said in a university news release. Find out more at DoctorsLounge.