Bruce Greenwood Net Worth
Publish date: 2024-06-07
Bruce Greenwood net worth is
$10 Million
Bruce Greenwood Wiki Biography
Stuart Bruce Greenwood was born on the 12th August 1956, in Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec, Canada, and is an actor and a producer, widely known for his roles in Hollywood blockbusters such as “I, Robot” (2004), “Star Trek” (2009) and its sequel “Star Trek Into Darkness” (2013), as well as in popular TV series “Class of the Titans”, “The River”, “Young Justice”, “Mad Men” and “American Crime Story”.
Have you ever wondered how much wealth this talented actor has accumulated so far? How rich Bruce Greenwood is? According to sources, it is estimated that the amount of Bruce Greenwood’s net worth, as of early 2017, exceeds $10 million, acquired through his professional acting career which began in 1977.
Bruce Greenwood Net Worth $10 million
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Bruce was born into the family of a nurse, Mary Sylvia and Princeton University professor, Hugh John Greenwood. He grew up in the states of New Jersey and Washington D. C. as well as in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, where he attended the University of British Columbia before enrolling at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. He debuted on the small screen as an actor in 1977, when he appeared in two episodes of “The Beachcombers” TV series. His big screen debut occurred in 1979 when he had a minor role in the action movie “Bear Island”. These engagements helped Bruce Greenwood to enter the world of movie-making and provided the basis for his current net worth.
In 1984, Bruce was cast for the leading role of Jack Gage in the “Legmen” TV series, but the real breakthrough in his professional acting career occurred in 1986, when he was chosen for the role of Dr. Seth Griffin in NBC’s medical drama “St. Elsewhere”. He reprised this role through the shows’ next three seasons, appearing in 45 episodes. In 1989, Bruce made a memorable performance as Jerome McFarland in Zalman King’s romantic drama “Wild Orchid”. These engagements helped Bruce to establish himself in the demanding world of moviemaking, as well as to add a significant sum to his net worth.
Through the 1990s, he managed to maintain a continuous streak of acting engagements including notable appearances in Atom Egoyan’s drama “Exotica” (1994) as well as in the TV series “Avonlea” (for which he was honored with a Gemini Award), “Knots Landing”, “Nowhere Man” and “Sleepwalkers”. However, his career received an even greater uplift through the 2000s, as Bruce secured several roles in Hollywood blockbuster films such as “Thirteen Days” (2000), “Ararat” (2002), “The Core” (2003), “I, Robot” (2004) as well as “Capote” (2005), “The World’s Fastest Indian” (2005), “Eight Below” (2006) and “Déjà Vu” (2006). Apart from movies, Greenwood also added several notable TV roles to his portfolio in the same period, including appearances in “Class of the Titans” and “John from Cincinnati”. It is certain that all these achievements increased his popularity and boosted the size of his revenues.
In 2009, Bruce Greenwood was cast as Captain Christopher Pike in the famous sci-fi franchise – “Star Trek” TV series, and he reprised the role in 2013 in “Star Trek Into Darkness”. Apart from these, he also made notable appearances in “Conan”, “The River”, “Young Justice” and “Mad Men” TV series, as well as in movies such as “Truth” and “Fathers & Daughters”, both in 2015 and Netflix’s 2016 sci-fi thriller “Spectral”. Doubtlessly, all these ventures have helped Bruce Greenwood to further increase his wealth.
When it comes to the personal life of Bruce Greenwood, there are no any relevant data except that since 1985 he has been married to Susan Devlin with whom he has one child. With his family, Greenwood resides in the world’s capital of the movie-making industry – Los Angles, California.
Full Name | Bruce Greenwood |
Net Worth | $10 Million |
Date Of Birth | August 12, 1956 |
Place Of Birth | Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec, Canada |
Height | 1.8 m |
Profession | Voice Actor, Film producer, Musician |
Education | American Academy of Dramatic Arts |
Nationality | Canadian |
Spouse | Susan Devlin |
Children | Breana Chloe Greenwood |
Parents | Hugh John Greenwood, Mary Sylvia Ledingham |
Siblings | Kelly Greenwood, Lynn Greenwood |
IMDB | http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0339304/ |
Allmusic | http://www.allmusic.com/artist/stuart-bruce-greenwood-mn0002508260 |
Awards | Independent Spirit Robert Altman Award, Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Cast, Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actor – Drama, Gemini Award for Best Guest Performance in a Series by an Actor |
Nominations | Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Acting Ensemble, Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture, Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series, Gemini Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Supporting Ro... |
Movies | Endless Love 2014 I, Robot 2004 Star Trek Into Darkness 2013 Eight Below 2006 Thirteen Days 2000 |
TV Shows | Nowhere Man, American Crime Story, St. Elsewhere, John from Cincinnati, The River, Legmen, Young Justice, Huckleberry Finn and His Friends, Hardball, Sleepwalkers, The Summit, A Marriage |
# | Trademark |
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1 | Bold light blue eyes |
2 | Deep smooth voice |
3 | Often plays sneering villains |
# | Quote |
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1 | [on undertaking the role of Dr. Emmett Code in The River (2012)] I've played a lot of people who have hidden agendas or have reached bottom, who are not particularly savoury. This is a guy who believes deeply in his love for his wife, his son, and is just happy to wake up in the morning. |
2 | [on his digitally-coded performance in Super 8 (2011)]: It's not your typical acting exercise at all, because you're really the only person in this room with all the cameras in it. It was a very weird thing to offer up all this big emotion while the rest of the people in the room are picking away at the craft services table. |
3 | [on performing in the horror movie Cell 213 (2011)]: I was only on the set for about 10 days but I was trying for some edgier stuff, some different decisions. I asked the director what this guy was about, what he does, and he said 'He smells people'. So there were scenes where I really did a lot of sniffing. I spent a lot of time breathing people in and flaring my nostrils. |
# | Fact |
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1 | Has played President John F. Kennedy in Thirteen Days (2000), and the unnamed fictional President in National Treasure: Book of Secrets (2007). |
2 | First became interested in acting when he saw Brad Dourif's performance as Billy Bibbit in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975). He debuted as an actor swinging across stage à la Tarzan in a theater production at UBC. Bruce began his professional acting career in the theatre in Vancouver and didn't decide to act for sure until after his first professional play. |
3 | Parents are Hugh John Greenwood and Mary Sylvia Ledingham. |
4 | Born in Noranda, Quebec, because his Vancouver-born father was working on a mining project there at the time. Bruce spent the first three years of his life in Princeton, New Jersey, where his father got his graduate degrees, the next three years in Washingon, D.C. and Maryland, and the three after that back in Princeton. |
5 | Has two younger sisters: Kelly (a nurse) and Lynn (a mother and an activist). |
6 | Had the nickname "Greendog" while growing up. |
7 | When Bruce was a child, he rarely watched television since it was rationed, and he saved up his half-hours to view ABC's Wide World of Sports (1961) on weekends. Bruce dislikes scary films and -- as a child -- was even frightened by the monkeys in The Wizard of Oz (1939). |
8 | Was raised mostly in Vancouver, where his family moved when he was 11. Bruce went to Magee secondary school in the Kerrisdale area of Vancouver. He attended the University of British Columbia for three years where his father was Head of the Geology Department and his mother was a nurse in the extended care unit. Bruce never lived in one place longer than four years. He studied philosophy and economics at UBC and only took his first drama class for an easy credit. |
9 | During his year with Nowhere Man (1995), Bruce became an enthusiastic golfer and occassionally participates in celebrity tournaments. |
10 | Is an avid outdoorsman who skis, skydives, sails and hikes. |
11 | Lost a front tooth in a tussle some years ago and cheerfully removed it for his role in The Sweet Hereafter (1997). |
12 | Graduated from high school in Zurich, Switzerland, where his family lived for 13 months while his father did research. Afterwards, Bruce lived on his own, exploring the European ski circuit. He planned on becoming a professional skier until he injured his knee when he was 16. This has resulted in a total of six operations on his right knee, the last one early in 1997. Bruce always wears a brace on his right knee for skiing and other sports. He participated in celebrity ski tournaments during his two seasons with St. Elsewhere (1982). |
13 | Had his first big screen role in the pilot of the HBO series The Hitchhiker (1983). He came to Los Angeles in 1983 to dub dialog in The Hitchhiker (1983), where he "conditionally" acquired his first agent and got the lead in Legmen (1984) -- all within a week. He auditioned for the lead in Falconer in 1984 but was dubbed too youthful looking for the role. |
14 | Originally had 12 lines in the Sylvester Stallone film First Blood (1982), and even though his speaking role was cut to a walk-on, he still got listed in the credits. |
15 | Bruce attended the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City for a full year in 1980-1981. He lived on Bleecker Street in Greenwich Village and used a skateboard as transportation. |
16 | Once worked as a diamond driller in the Northwest Territories to earn money to study at the London Central School of Speech and Learning. He left college one year short of graduation to visit Greece and work on a sailboat -- still his favorite job, ever. He bought a motorcycle the year after that to cruise the United States. |
17 | Has played a life-sized puppet in best friend Norman Foote's earliest shows for children. |
18 | Broke his leg during a dance routine in the touring company of "Cruel Tears". He damaged the same leg in a motorcycle accident three days after the cast came off, a little stunt that left him on crutches for eight more months. |
19 | Was working on a drilling crew in Northern Alberta when a director called with a part in the musical "Cruel Tears". |
20 | Was supplementing his theatrical career with a job in a chemical factory when he unexpectedly got the role in his first movie, Bear Island (1979). |
21 | Auditioned in 1982 for an important role in the horror sequel Psycho II (1983). |
22 | Dated his wife for the first time when they were both 15 (around 1971). Bruce has been married since 1985 and has known his wife since the early 1970s. |
23 | Lived in a two-bedroom apartment in Laurel Canyon after moving to Los Angeles and drove a 1972 Toyota pick-up truck. Bruce did not own an operable television set for many years after his move to Los Angeles. |
24 | Had a year-long contract with Warner Brothers to do television pilots in 1984. |
25 | Initially, Bruce refused his breakthrough role in St. Elsewhere (1982) because he was filming the movie Another Chance (1989) but managed to work on both jobs simultaneously for several weeks. |
26 | Broke his ankle in 1985 filming The Climb (1986) while on location in the mountains of Pakistan. |
27 | Won a Gemini for Best Performance by an Actor in a Guest Role for his performance of Caleb Stokes in Avonlea (1990) in 1995. Bruce was also nominated for a Gemini for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role for his performance of Dr. Willem Hooft in The Little Kidnappers (1990) in 1990. |
28 | Filmed a public service message for Northwest Medical Teams on the plight of Romanian orphans while on Nowhere Man (1995). |
29 | Loves to pepper his speech with sound effects and foreign accents. |
30 | Began making talking books in 1996, which employs his penchant for dialects. |
31 | Owns the tuxedo he wore in Treacherous Beauties (1994). |
32 | Stopped smoking after the pilot of Nowhere Man (1995). |
33 | Auditioned for the roles of Dr. Jeffrey Geiger on Chicago Hope (1994) and Mike Ryan on Almost Perfect (1995). |
34 | Bruce was in grade school in Bethesda, Maryland during the Cuban Missile Crisis and remembers the preparations for possible war vividly. |
35 | Is an avid musician and relaxes by singing and playing his electric guitar. |
All pictures
Actor
Title | Year | Status | Character |
---|
Dirty Dancing | 2017 | TV Movie post-production | Dr. Jake Houseman |
Felt | 2017 | post-production | Sandy Smith |
Gerald's Game | 2017 | post-production | Gerald Burlingame |
Kodachrome | 2017 | post-production | |
Gold | 2016/I | completed | |
Terra Infirma | | pre-production | Gallagher |
Spectral | 2016 | | General Orland |
Four Stars | 2016 | TV Movie | General Buckley |
Home | 2016 | TV Movie | Leonard |
American Crime Story | 2016 | TV Series | Gil Garcetti |
Rehearsal | 2015 | | Turner Horatio Longfellow |
Bob's Broken Sleigh | 2015 | TV Movie | Fishface |
Fathers & Daughters | 2015 | | William |
Truth | 2015 | | Andrew Heyward |
Wet Hot American Summer: First Day of Camp | 2015 | TV Series | Bill Martinson |
Mad Men | 2015 | TV Series | Richard Burghoff |
Wildlike | 2014 | | Bartlett |
Elephant Song | 2014 | | Dr. Toby Green |
Good Kill | 2014 | | Lt. Colonel Jack Johns |
The Captive | 2014 | | Vince |
Endless Love | 2014 | | Hugh Butterfield |
Westside | 2013 | TV Movie | Gordy Nance |
Lost Luck | 2013 | | Mark |
Feynman: The Challenger | 2013 | TV Movie | Narrator (voice) |
Young Justice: Legacy | 2013 | Video Game | Bruce Wayne Batman (voice) |
The Unexplained Files | 2013 | TV Series | Narrator |
Devil's Knot | 2013 | | Judge Burnett |
Star Trek Into Darkness | 2013 | | Pike |
And Now a Word from Our Sponsor | 2013 | | Adan Kundle |
The Challenger Disaster | 2013 | TV Movie | General Kutyna |
Young Justice | 2010-2013 | TV Series | Bruce Wayne Batman Eduardo Dorado Sr. ... |
Flight | 2012/I | | Charlie Anderson |
The Place Beyond the Pines | 2012 | | Bill Killcullen |
For Greater Glory: The True Story of Cristiada | 2012 | | Ambassador Dwight Morrow |
The River | 2012 | TV Series | Dr. Emmet Cole |
Theatrical Trailer for the River | 2012 | Short | Emmett Cole |
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 | 2011 | Video Game | Overlord (voice) |
Donovan's Echo | 2011 | | Finnley Boyd |
Cell 213 | 2011 | | Warden |
Super 8 | 2011 | | Cooper |
Conan | 2011 | TV Series | Flaming C |
Meek's Cutoff | 2010 | | Stephen Meek |
Dinner for Schmucks | 2010 | | Lance Fender |
Batman: Under the Red Hood | 2010 | Video | Batman Bruce Wayne (voice) |
Barney's Version | 2010 | | Blair |
A Dog Named Christmas | 2009 | TV Movie | George McCray |
Mao's Last Dancer | 2009 | | Ben Stevenson |
Star Trek | 2009 | | Pike |
Hitler's Stealth Fighter | 2009 | TV Movie documentary | Narrator (voice) |
Cyborg Soldier | 2008 | Video | Simon Hart |
The Summit | 2008 | TV Mini-Series | Richard Adderly |
National Treasure: Book of Secrets | 2007 | | The President |
I'm Not There. | 2007 | | Keenan Jones Garrett |
John from Cincinnati | 2007 | TV Series | Mitch Yost |
Firehouse Dog | 2007 | | Connor Fahey |
Deja Vu | 2006 | | Jack McCready |
Class of the Titans | 2006 | TV Series | Chiron |
The Mermaid Chair | 2006 | TV Movie | Hugh Sullivan |
Eight Below | 2006 | | Davis McClaren |
Nowhere Man: Fact or Fiction? - True Stories of CIA Mind Control Techniques | 2005 | Video short | Thomas Veil |
The World's Fastest Indian | 2005 | | Jerry |
Capote | 2005 | | Jack Dunphy |
Mee-Shee: The Water Giant | 2005 | | Sean Cambell |
Saving Milly | 2005 | TV Movie | Mort Kondracke |
Racing Stripes | 2005 | | Nolan Walsh |
The Riverman | 2004 | TV Movie | Robert Keppel |
The Life | 2004 | TV Movie | Arnie |
Being Julia | 2004 | | Lord Charles |
I, Robot | 2004 | | Lawrence Robertson |
Meltdown | 2004 | TV Movie | Agent Tom Shea |
The Republic of Love | 2003 | | Tom Avery |
Hollywood Homicide | 2003 | | Lt. Bennie Macko |
The Core | 2003 | | Commander Richard Iverson |
Below | 2002 | | Brice |
Swept Away | 2002 | | Tony |
Ararat | 2002 | | Clarence Ussher / Martin |
The Magnificent Ambersons | 2002 | TV Movie | Eugene Morgan |
Haven | 2001 | TV Movie | Myles Billingsley |
A Girl Thing | 2001 | TV Movie | Frank |
Thirteen Days | 2000 | | John F. Kennedy |
Rules of Engagement | 2000 | | National Security Advisor Bill Sokal |
Here on Earth | 2000 | | Earl Cavanaugh |
Cord | 2000 | Video | Jack |
The Soul Collector | 1999 | TV Movie | Zacariah |
Double Jeopardy | 1999 | | Nick |
The Lost Son | 1999 | | Friedman |
Thick as Thieves | 1999 | | Bo |
The Color of Courage | 1998 | TV Movie | Benjamin Sipes |
Disturbing Behavior | 1998 | | Dr. Edgar Caldicott |
Sleepwalkers | 1997-1998 | TV Series | Dr. Nathan Bradford |
The Larry Sanders Show | 1997-1998 | TV Series | Roger Bingham |
The Sweet Hereafter | 1997 | | Billy |
Fathers' Day | 1997 | | Bob Andrews |
The Absolute Truth | 1997 | TV Movie | Jake Slaughter |
Tell Me No Secrets | 1997 | TV Movie | Don Shaw |
Nowhere Man | 1995-1996 | TV Series | Thomas Veil |
Mixed Blessings | 1995 | TV Movie | Andy Douglas |
Dazzle | 1995 | TV Movie | Casey Nelson |
Dream Man | 1995 | Video | Tom |
Naomi & Wynonna: Love Can Build a Bridge | 1995 | TV Movie | Larry Strickland |
The Companion | 1994 | TV Movie | Geoffrey |
Treacherous Beauties | 1994 | TV Movie | Jason Hollister |
Paint Cans | 1994 | | Vittorio Musso |
Bitter Vengeance | 1994 | TV Movie | Jack Westford |
Exotica | 1994 | | Francis |
Heart of a Child | 1994 | TV Movie | Fred Schouten |
Avonlea | 1994 | TV Series | Caleb Stokes |
Hardball | 1994 | TV Series | Dave Logan |
Woman on Trial: The Lawrencia Bembenek Story | 1993 | TV Movie | Fred Schultz |
Adrift | 1993 | TV Movie | Nick Terrio |
Rio Diablo | 1993 | TV Movie | Jervis Walker |
Passenger 57 | 1992 | | Stuart Ramsey |
Knots Landing | 1991-1992 | TV Series | Pierce Lawton |
Perfect Crimes | 1991 | TV Movie | Faulkner |
Servants of Twilight | 1991 | | Charlie Harrison |
The Great Pretender | 1991 | TV Movie | Earle Brattigan |
Veronica Clare | 1991 | TV Series | Lieutenant Gil Reed |
The Little Kidnappers | 1990 | TV Movie | Willem Hooft |
Summer Dreams: The Story of the Beach Boys | 1990 | TV Movie | Dennis Wilson |
Spy | 1989 | TV Movie | Richard Berk |
Wild Orchid | 1989 | | Jerome McFarland |
Perry Mason: The Case of the All-Star Assassin | 1989 | TV Movie | Stewart Horton |
Another Chance | 1989 | | John Ripley |
Twist of Fate | 1989 | TV Mini-Series | SS-Obersturmbannfuhrer Helmut von Schraeder / Daniel Grossman |
In the Line of Duty: The F.B.I. Murders | 1988 | TV Movie | Agent Jerry Dove |
St. Elsewhere | 1986-1988 | TV Series | Dr. Seth Griffin |
Jake and the Fatman | 1987 | TV Series | Carson Warfield |
Matlock | 1987 | TV Series | Mitchell Gordon |
Destination America | 1987 | TV Movie | Corbet St. James V |
The Malibu Bikini Shop | 1986 | | Todd |
Danger Bay | 1986 | TV Series | Jeff Storey / Sam Hayes |
The Climb | 1986 | | Hermann Buhl |
Striker's Mountain | 1985 | TV Movie | Paul Striker |
Peyton Place: The Next Generation | 1985 | TV Movie | Dana Harrington |
Jessie | 1984 | TV Series | Det. Roy Moss |
Legmen | 1984 | TV Series | Jack Gage |
The Hitchhiker | 1983 | TV Series | Jeff Boder |
First Blood | 1982 | | Guardsman #5 |
Huckleberry Finn and His Friends | 1980 | TV Series | Bob Grangerford |
Bear Island | 1979 | | Technician |
The Beachcombers | 1977-1978 | TV Series | |
Producer
Title | Year | Status | Character |
---|
Donovan's Echo | 2011 | executive producer | |
The Republic of Love | 2003 | executive producer | |
Thanks
Title | Year | Status | Character |
---|
The Biggest Schmucks in the World | 2011 | Video short special thanks | |
COC Elite | 2009 | TV Series special thanks - 1 episode | |
Self
Title | Year | Status | Character |
---|
Project: Comic-Con | 2010 | TV Series | Himself - Interviewee |
A First Look at Batman: Under the Red Hood | 2010 | Video documentary short | Himself |
The Thanksgiving Day Parade on CBS | 2009 | TV Movie | Himself |
Star Trek: Aliens | 2009 | Video documentary short | Himself |
Star Trek: A New Vision | 2009 | Video documentary short | Himself |
Star Trek: Ben Burtt & the Sounds of Star Trek | 2009 | Video documentary short | Himself |
Star Trek: Casting | 2009 | Video documentary short | Himself |
Star Trek: Gene Rodenberry's Vision | 2009 | Video documentary short | Himself |
Star Trek: Planets | 2009 | Video documentary short | Himself |
Star Trek: Props & Costumes | 2009 | Video documentary short | Himself |
Star Trek: Score | 2009 | Video documentary short | Himself |
Star Trek: Starships | 2009 | Video documentary short | Himself |
Star Trek: The Gag Reel | 2009 | Video short | Himself |
Star Trek: To Boldly Go | 2009 | Video documentary short | Himself |
Starz Inside: Unforgettably Evil | 2009 | TV Movie documentary | Himself |
Up Close with Carrie Keagan | 2007-2009 | TV Series | Himself - Guest |
Special zu 'Star Trek XI' | 2009 | TV Movie documentary | |
NT2: Set in History | 2008 | Video documentary short | Himself |
NT2: Crafting the Presidents' Book | 2008 | Video documentary short | Himself |
Only in LA | 2005 | TV Series | Himself |
Robot Revolution: The Making of 'I, Robot' | 2004 | TV Movie documentary | Himself |
HBO First Look | 2004 | TV Series documentary | Himself |
Day Out of Days: The 'I, Robot' Production Diaries | 2004 | Video documentary | Himself |
Bringing History to the Silver Screen | 2001 | Video documentary short | Himself |
Thirteen Days: The Making of a Crisis | 2000 | TV Movie documentary | Himself |
Behind the Rules of Engagement | 2000 | Video documentary short | Himself |
The Making of 'Double Jeopardy' | 2000 | Video documentary short | Himself |
The Directors | 1997 | TV Series documentary | Himself |
The 39th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards | 1987 | TV Special | Himself - Audience Member |
Bookaboo | 2016 | TV Series | Himself |
Inside Look: The People v. O.J. Simpson, American Crime Story | 2016 | TV Mini-Series documentary | Gil Garcetti |
Made in Hollywood | 2010-2014 | TV Series | Himself |
Sidewalks Entertainment | 1995-2013 | TV Series | Himself - Guest / Himself |
The Hour | 2010-2013 | TV Series | Himself |
Long Story Short: CBC Turns 75 | 2011 | TV Special | Himself |
31st Annual Genie Awards | 2011 | TV Special | Himself - Presenter |
The Biggest Schmucks in the World | 2011 | Video short | Himself |
Biography | 2010 | TV Series documentary | Himself |
Making a Scene | 2010 | TV Movie | Himself |
Archive Footage
Won Awards
Year | Award | Ceremony | Nomination | Movie |
---|
2015 | LAIFF June Award | Los Angeles Independent Film Festival Awards | Best Actor | Wildlike (2014) |
2015 | NIFF | Naperville Independent Film Festival | Best Actor | Wildlike (2014) |
2015 | Twister Award | Twister Alley International Film Festival | Best Actor - Feature Film | Wildlike (2014) |
2009 | BSFC Award | Boston Society of Film Critics Awards | Best Ensemble Cast | Star Trek (2009) |
2009 | DFCS Award | Denver Film Critics Society | Best Acting Ensemble | Star Trek (2009) |
2008 | Robert Altman Award | Independent Spirit Awards | | I'm Not There. (2007) |
2001 | Golden Satellite Award | Satellite Awards | Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role, Drama | Thirteen Days (2000) |
1995 | Gemini | Gemini Awards | Best Guest Performance in a Series by an Actor | Road to Avonlea (1990) |
Nominated Awards
Year | Award | Ceremony | Nomination | Movie |
---|
2016 | Chlotrudis Award | Chlotrudis Awards | Best Actor | Wildlike (2014) |
2016 | Actor | Screen Actors Guild Awards | Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series | Mad Men (2007) |
2015 | Canadian Screen Award | Canadian Screen Awards, CA | Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role | Elephant Song (2014) |
2015 | VFCC Award | Vancouver Film Critics Circle | Best Supporting Actor in a Canadian Film | Elephant Song (2014) |
2013 | BTVA Television Voice Acting Award | Behind the Voice Actors Awards | Best Male Vocal Performance in a Television Series in a Supporting Role - Action/Drama | Young Justice (2010) |
2012 | BTVA Television Voice Acting Award | Behind the Voice Actors Awards | Best Vocal Cast in a Television Series | Young Justice (2010) |
2011 | VVFP Award | Village Voice Film Poll | Best Supporting Actor | Meek's Cutoff (2010) |
2010 | Gemini | Gemini Awards | Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Dramatic Program or Mini-Series | The Summit (2008) |
2010 | Gold Derby Award | Gold Derby Awards | Ensemble Cast | Star Trek (2009) |
2009 | WAFCA Award | Washington DC Area Film Critics Association Awards | Best Ensemble | Star Trek (2009) |
2006 | Actor | Screen Actors Guild Awards | Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture | Capote (2005) |
2005 | ACCA | Awards Circuit Community Awards | Best Cast Ensemble | Capote (2005) |
2005 | Genie | Genie Awards | Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role | Being Julia (2004) |
2005 | VFCC Award | Vancouver Film Critics Circle | Best Supporting Actor - Canadian Film | Being Julia (2004) |
2003 | VFCC Award | Vancouver Film Critics Circle | Best Supporting Actor - Canadian Film | Ararat (2002) |
2001 | Gemini | Gemini Awards | Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Supporting Role in a Dramatic Program or Mini-Series | Haven (2001) |
2000 | Blockbuster Entertainment Award | Blockbuster Entertainment Awards | Favorite Supporting Actor - Suspense | Double Jeopardy (1999) |
1997 | Genie | Genie Awards | Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role | The Sweet Hereafter (1997) |
1992 | Gemini | Gemini Awards | Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role | The Little Kidnappers (1990) |
Known for movies
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