Ģ012 brought Cree a recurring role on BBC Three's groundbreaking drama Lip Service. 2011 saw Cree feature in the supernatural thriller film The Awakening and in director Tom Harper's short film The Swarm. He was then featured in award-winning Kurdish director Chiman Rahimi's sort film Rojin.
E4's teenage science-fiction drama Misfits saw Cree return to episodic television with a season two guest spot that same year. Cree worked with actor/director Noel Clarke twice in 2010 as he was featured in the thriller 4.3.2.1., which followed four friends targeted by a smuggling ring, and the comedy Huge, which focused on a would-be stand-up comedy duo. He was then cast in episode five of ITV's six part mini-series Identity, a crime drama following a newly formed police unit investigating identity left cases. In 2009, Cree made the transition from television to feature films by starring as Antonio Vivialdi in Condor Pictures' Vivaldi, the Red Priest and director Craig Lyn's short film Closing Doors. Cree returned to BBC's Doctors in 2007 with a second guest role in series nine, and he had a guest role in series eleven of the popular crime drama Silent Witness. 2006 saw Cree guest star in BBC's medical drama Holby City and Sky 1's football drama Dream Team. He went on to guest star in an episode of BBC's medical drama Doctors in 2002, and ITV's prison drama Bad Girls in 2003.
Career Ĭree began his professional career in 2001 with the guest starring role of Gerry in an episode of CBBC's weekly comedy series G-Force. at RSAMD, he was signed by a London Talent agent and moved to the city after completing school. Upon completion of Secondary School, he attended Langside College in Glasgow for a year before applying, and being accepted to, the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama (now known as the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland). Cree was born in Kilmarnock, East Ayrshire, Scotland, the son of a local kitchen and bathroom fitter.