Jeff Seymour
Jeff Seymour is an American actor.[1] He is most noted for his role as Kamal Azizi in the Canadian television drama series The Eleventh Hour, for which he won the Gemini Award for Best Actor in a Drama Series at the 18th Gemini Awards in 2003.[2]
Born in Washington, D.C., and raised in Virginia, he began his career in the entertainment industry in 1979. He was seen in such classic shows such as Knots Landing, Hill Street Blues, Bosom Buddies, The Jeffersons, and Eight is Enough. He began teaching acting in 1980. Early on, while working in television as an actor, he designed and built The Gnu Theatre which went on to become one of LA's most awarded and respected theaters. He work in Breakout Kings as Ronald Barnes. Seymour directed and produced all the shows there. He later moved to Canada spending a total of 15 years in Canada working in the film and television industry and starred in The Eleventh Hour, Show Me Yours and Jeff Ltd., which he co-created and co-wrote.[3]
Seymour went on to guest star in such shows as Homeland, The Expanse, Suits and Seal Team. Seymour has been an acting coach for 39 years. He has traveled the country, as well as in Canada and Australia, teaching his "Real Life Actor" approach.
In 2014, Seymour wrote a book on acting, The Real Life Actor. He currently teaches acting classes in Santa Monica, Vancouver, Toronto and New York.
References
- ^ Jim Bawden, "Lovable scoundrel Jeff back with more schemes; Jeff Seymour left L.A. life for Canadian TV. His praised sitcom Jeff Ltd. gets second shot". Toronto Star, February 10, 2007.
- ^ "CTV's Eleventh Hour and 100 Days in the Jungle tops at 2003 Gemini Awards". Peterborough Examiner, October 21, 2003.
- ^ Doug Foley, "Jeff Ltd. is in town; Was that a camel you saw?". Hamilton Spectator, August 31, 2005.
External links
- Jeff Seymour at IMDb
- www.RealLifeActor.com
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1986–2021
- Robert Clothier (1986)
- Eric Peterson and Winston Rekert (1987)
- Pat Mastroianni (1988)
- Eric Peterson (1989)
- Art Hindle (1990)
- Eric Peterson (1991)
- Cedric Smith (1992)
- James Purcell (1993)
- Paul Gross (1994)
- Paul Gross (1995)
- David Cubitt (1996)
- Bruce Gray (1997)
- Patrick McKenna (1998)
- Michael Riley (1999)
- Michael Riley (2000)
- Nicholas Campbell (2001)
- Donnelly Rhodes (2002)
- Jeff Seymour (2003)
- Paul Gross (2004)
- Michael Riley (2005)
- Mark McKinney (2006)
- Paul Gross (2007)
- Louis Ferreira (2008)
- Enrico Colantoni (2009)
- Robert Carlyle (2010)
- Callum Keith Rennie (2011)
- Enrico Colantoni (2012)
- Hugh Dillon (2013)
- Jared Keeso (2014)
- Ari Millen (2015)
- Adrian Holmes (2016)
- Alexander Ludwig (2017)
- Kim Coates (2018)
- Billy Campbell (2019)
- Hamza Haq (2020)
- Hamza Haq (2021)
1986–2021
- Marnie McPhail (1986)
- Dixie Seatle (1987)
- Sonja Smits (1988)
- Stacie Mistysyn (1989)
- Jackie Burroughs (1990)
- Jackie Burroughs (1991)
- Sara Botsford (1992)
- Jackie Burroughs (1993)
- Lally Cadeau (1994)
- Joely Collins (1995)
- Tina Keeper (1996)
- Patricia Harras (1997)
- Sheila McCarthy (1998)
- Arsinée Khanjian (1999)
- Torri Higginson (2000)
- Babz Chula (2001)
- Julie Stewart (2002)
- Marina Orsini (2003)
- Catherine Disher (2004)
- Cara Pifko (2005)
- Martha Burns (2006)
- Martha Burns (2007)
- Hélène Joy (2008)
- Erin Karpluk (2009)
- Caroline Cave (2010)
- Michelle Thrush (2011)
- Meg Tilly (2012)
- Tatiana Maslany (2013)
- Tatiana Maslany (2014)
- Tatiana Maslany (2015)
- Tatiana Maslany (2016)
- Tatiana Maslany (2017)
- Amybeth McNulty (2018)
- Karine Vanasse (2019)
- Crystle Lightning (2020)
- Laurence Leboeuf (2021)
2022–present
- Hamza Haq (2022)
Separate awards were presented by gender prior to 2022; a single unified category for best performance regardless of gender has been presented since.
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