A fact from Krysty Wilson-Cairns appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 30 January 2020 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
Did you know... that Scottish screenwriter Krysty Wilson-Cairns, who co-wrote the Academy Award–nominated screenplay for the World War I film 1917, once wrote a short story about killer guinea pigs?
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Hi, I'm Kingsif, and I'll be doing this review. This is an automated message that helps keep the bot updating the nominated article's talkpage working and allows me to say hi. Feel free to reach out and, if you think the review has gone well, I have some open GA nominations that you could (but are under no obligation to) look at. Kingsif (talk) 18:44, 23 June 2020 (UTC)Reply
Infobox good, but I don't see why there's both 'education' and 'alma mater' - the latter is used for two schools, while it normally applies to only one (undergraduate university). With three schools, they could all easily go under 'education'
tables good, but the filmography key could be moved above the table. Could be improved with image, but not needed at the moment.
Though it is a different job, following the discussion of her writing role on Penny Dreadful with "Her first writing commission was..." feels jarring, perhaps a segue is needed (like "After this," or just "In YEAR, she got her first writing commission. This was...")
Penny Dreadful, a show he had been an executive producer on sounds like the reader hasn't been introduced to Penny Dreadful, but they have, so it would read better as "Penny Dreadful, for which he was an executive producer"
A lot of the prose seems to be short and simple sentences that would read much easier if connected. The worst is Wilson-Cairns co-wrote the screenplay for Mendes' World War I film 1917 (2019). It was her feature film debut. – "Wilson-Cairns co-wrote the screenplay for Mendes' World War I film 1917 (2019) as her feature film debut." flows much better