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Canadian actor Bruce Greenwood appeared in over 70 film and television productions during the 1980s, ‘90s, and into the new millennium, but the steadily working actor curiously remained one of those types whose name still did not ring a bell for most audiences. His more high profile achievements included the acclaimed indie “The Sweet Hereafter” (1997), “Thirteen Days” (2000) in which he was recognized for his portrayal of President John F. Kennedy, and starring roles in short-lived TV dramas “Nowhere Man” (UPN, 1995-96) and “John from Cincinnati” (HBO, 2007)....

Filmography

Spoils - ( Major Jack Durant / / Announced / )
Star Trek - ( Captain Christopher Pike / 2008 / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
Mao's Last Dancer - ( - Cast / / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
Weapon - ( Simon Hart / / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
I'm Not There - ( Garrett/Keenan Jones / 2007 / Released / )
National Treasure: Book of Secrets - ( The President / 2007 / Released / )
Deja Vu - ( Jack McCready / 2006 / Released / )
Eight Below - ( Davis McClaren / 2006 / Released / )
Firehouse Dog - ( Connor Fahey / 2006 / Released / )
The World's Fastest Indian - ( Jerry / 2006 / Released / )
Capote - ( Jack Dunphy / 2005 / Released / )
Racing Stripes - ( Nolan Walsh / 2005 / Released / )
The Last Sign - ( / 2005 / Released / )
Being Julia - ( Lord Charles / 2004 / Released / Sony Pictures Home Entertainment )
I, Robot - ( Lawrence Robertson / 2004 / Released / )
The Republic of Love - ( Tom / 2004 / Released / Seville International )
Hollywood Homicide - ( Bennie Macko / 2003 / Released / )
The Core - ( Commander Robert Iverson / 2003 / Released / )
Ararat - ( Martin/Clarence Ussher / 2002 / Released / Alliance Atlantis Releasing )
Below - ( Brice / 2002 / Released / )
Swept Away - ( Anthony Leighton / 2002 / Released / )
The Lost Son - ( Friedman / 2001 / Released / )
Cord - ( / 2000 / Released / )
Here on Earth - ( Earl Cavanaugh / 2000 / Released / )
Rules of Engagement - ( National Security Advisor William Sokal / 2000 / Released / Gaga Entertainment )
Thirteen Days - ( John F Kennedy / 2000 / Released / Nippon Herald Films, Inc )
Double Jeopardy - ( Nick / 1999 / Released / )
Disturbing Behavior - ( Dr. Caldicott / 1998 / Released / Roadshow Pictures )
Fathers' Day - ( Bob Andrews / 1997 / Released / Village Roadshow Pictures Worldwide )
The Sweet Hereafter - ( Billy Ansell / 1997 / Released / AMA Productions )
Dream Man - ( / 1995 / Released / )
Exotica - ( Francis / 1995 / Released / Alliance Releasing )
The Companion - ( / 1995 / Released / )
Paint Cans - ( Vittorio Musso / 1994 / Released / Libra Films )
Passenger 57 - ( Stuart Ramsey / 1992 / Released / )
Dean R. Koontz's Servants of Twilight - ( Charlie Harrison--Private Investigator / 1991 / Released / )
Wild Orchid - ( Jerome / 1990 / Released / Nippon Herald Films, Inc )
Another Chance - ( John Ripley / 1989 / Released / )
The Bikini Shop - ( Todd / 1987 / Released / Samuel Goldwyn Company )
The Climb - ( Herman Buhl / 1987 / Released / Cineplex Odeon )
First Blood - ( 5th Guardsman / 1982 / Released / Sovexportfilm )
Bear Island - ( Technician / 1979 / Released / )
Mee-Shee: The Water Giant - ( Sean Campbell / / Released / )
TV Credits
John from Cincinnati ( 2007 / Released ): Actor
TV Episode Mitch Yost

TV Episode Mitch Yost

TV Episode Mitch Yost

TV Episode Mitch Yost

TV Episode Mitch Yost

The Mermaid Chair ( 2006 / Released ): Actor
Saving Milly ( 2005 / Released ): Actor
Meltdown ( 2004 / Released ): Actor
The Riverman ( 2004 / Released ): Actor
The Magnificent Ambersons ( 2002 / Released ): Actor
A Girl Thing ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
Haven ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
Melissa Gilbert ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
Thick As Thieves ( 2000 / Released ): Actor
The Color of Courage ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
The Soul Collector ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
Sleepwalkers ( 1997 / Released ): Actor
Tell Me No Secrets ( 1997 / Released ): Actor
The Absolute Truth ( 1997 / Released ): Actor
Danielle Steel's "Mixed Blessings" ( 1995 / Released ): Actor
Judith Kranz's Dazzle ( 1995 / Released ): Actor
Naomi & Wynonna: Love Can Build a Bridge ( 1995 / Released ): Actor
Nowhere Man ( 1995 / Released ): Actor
Bitter Vengeance ( 1994 / Released ): Actor
Hardball ( 1994 / Released ): Actor
Heart of a Child ( 1994 / Released ): Actor
The Companion ( 1994 / Released ): Actor
Treacherous Beauties ( 1994 / Released ): Actor
Adrift ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
Rio Diablo ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
The Larry Sanders Show ( 1992 / Released ): Actor
Perfect Crimes ( 1991 / Released ): Actor
The Great Pretender ( 1991 / Released ): Actor
Veronica Clare ( 1991 / Released ): Actor
Summer Dreams: The Story of the Beach Boys ( 1990 / Released ): Actor
The Little Kidnappers ( 1990 / Released ): Actor
Spy ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
Twist of Fate ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
In the Line of Duty: The FBI Murders ( 1988 / Released ): Actor
Destination: America ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
Peyton Place: The Next Generation ( 1985 / Released ): Actor
Legmen ( 1984 / Released ): Actor
St. Elsewhere ( 1982 / Released ): Actor
Knots Landing ( 1979 / Released ): Actor
Full Biography (Back to top)

Canadian actor Bruce Greenwood appeared in over 70 film and television productions during the 1980s, ‘90s, and into the new millennium, but the steadily working actor curiously remained one of those types whose name still did not ring a bell for most audiences. His more high profile achievements included the acclaimed indie “The Sweet Hereafter” (1997), “Thirteen Days” (2000) in which he was recognized for his portrayal of President John F. Kennedy, and starring roles in short-lived TV dramas “Nowhere Man” (UPN, 1995-96) and “John from Cincinnati” (HBO, 2007). Greenwood enjoyed a big screen profile boost with “I, Robot” (2004), “Capote” (2005) and “Eight Below” (2006) which led to a casting victory in “Star Trek XI” (2008) where he would play a long-forgotten Captain Pike.

Bruce Greenwood was born on Aug. 12, 1956, in Noranda, Quebec, Canada. Growing up, the family regularly relocated to pursue geophysics professor Hugh Greenwood’s academic appointments and research trips, spending years in Princeton, NJ, and Bethesda, MD, before returning to their native Canada when young Bruce was 11 years old. Greenwood was outgoing and active in sports, aspiring to be a professional skier. He was thrilled when his father landed a sabbatical in Switzerland, but unfortunately, a bad knee injury ruled out a professional career on the slopes.

The adventuresome teen graduated from a Zurich high school and spent a year exploring Europe on his own before returning to Vancouver and the University of British Columbia, where his father was chair of the geology department and his mother was a nurse. Greenwood filled his schedule with a heady load of economics and philosophy classes and, on a whim, augmented one semester schedule with an acting course. He was pleasantly surprised at how well-suited he was for the stage, and began to appear in school and regional productions. He left college a year shy of receiving a degree and the adventurer went back to Europe, where he worked on a sailboat off the coast of Greece for a year, checking out the theater scene in London.

Back in Vancouver, he was offered a job in the touring company of the musical “Cruel Tears,” parlaying that into more Canadian stage roles and his film debut in “Bear Island” (1980). Greenwood furthered his dramatic training with a year at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York and his professional career got a boost with “Rambo: First Blood” (1982), though the actor’s dozen lines were edited out. Greenwood landed a guest spot in the ABC thriller series “The Hitchhiker” (1983) and while working in Los Angeles, he scored a recurring TV role in the short-lived "Legmen" (NBC, 1984), co-starring as a college student earning extra money by working for a seedy private detective (Claude Akins). Having made such a promising start, he moved to Los Angeles.

Although a key role in the NBC TV-movie "Peyton Place: The Next Generation" (1985) and several schlocky teen films followed, Greenwood first went wide playing Dr. Seth Griffin, a brash doctor who finds religion when he contracts AIDS, in the medical drama "St. Elsewhere" (NBC, 1982-88). More movies-of-the-week followed, including "Summer Dreams: The Story of the Beach Boys" (ABC, 1990), in which he played Dennis Wilson. Greenwood enjoyed a one-year stint on "Knots Landing" (CBS, 1979-93) as Pierce Lawton, a man seeking revenge for losing all his money in a business scheme, before returning to the big screen in a co-starring part as a security officer coping with a hijacked plane in "Passenger 57" (1992).

A career highlight followed with the lead in Canadian director Atom Egoyan's "Exotica" (1994), where Greenwood played a tax inspector obsessed with a stripper. The film marked Greenwood’s first tour of the festival circuit, with the film nominated for the Palm D’Or at Cannes and named Best Canadian Feature Film at the Toronto International Film Festival.

Greenwood had earned some art house screen cred, but quickly resumed the exhaustive schedule of a working actor’s bread and butter. Rugged and athletic, he was well-cast to headline the baseball sitcom "Hardball" (Fox, 1994) as a wisecracking veteran pitcher. In 1995, he starred in two miniseries: "Naomi & Wynonna: Love Can Build a Bridge" (NBC), as Naomi Judd's husband; and "Judith Krantz's 'Dazzle'" (CBS). He was also featured as a first-time father-to-be in the NBC TV movie "Danielle Steel's 'Mixed Blessings'" (1995). The same year, Greenwood landed the title role in "Nowhere Man" (UPN, 1995-96), the first drama for the fledgling UPN Network. The show earned a cult following and he became a TV star thanks to his role as Thomas Veil, a documentary photographer who appears to have his entire identity erased, forcing him to begin a desperate and dangerous quest to discover who was behind it.

Reteaming with Egoyan, Greenwood took on the dramatic role of a father of two children killed in a tragic bus accident in the superlative "The Sweet Hereafter" (1997). The highly-praised film earned the Jury Grand Prize at Cannes and swept that year’s Genie Awards – the Canadian equivalent of the Academy Awards – earning a Best Motion Picture trophy among others. Next, Greenwood turned villainous as a doctor who "treats" unruly teenagers in the thriller "Disturbing Behavior" (1998); played Ashley Judd's plotting spouse in "Double Jeopardy" (1999); and starred as a nefarious government official in "Rules of Engagement" (2000).

The year 2001 was a turning point, of sorts, when Greenwood essayed a heroic, nuanced portrayal of U.S. President John F Kennedy negotiating the Cuban Missile Crisis and its fallout in the riveting "Thirteen Days" (2000). Because he not only nailed the “Bahston” accent, as well as JFK’s mannerisms – all without benefit of really looking like him, sans the helmet hair – the actor was catapulted to a new level of respect. Avoiding caricature, Greenwood depicted Kennedy as a flawed human who managed to rise to the necessary level of heroism to lead the country in a time of crisis. When the film premiered, Oscar buzz went round – both for Greenwood and his onscreen brother, Steven Culp, who played Attorney General, Robert F. Kennedy – but in the end, both crossed one another out come awards season.

Hot off “Thirteen Days,” Greenwood stepped into Joseph Cotten's shoes to undertake inventor Eugene Morgan in "The Magnificent Ambersons" (A&E, 2001), which utilized Orson Welles' original 1942 screenplay. He stayed in a 1940s time warp to helm the sturdy WWII submarine thriller "Below" (2002), which was not nearly as high-profile as the 2004 Madonna vehicle "Swept Away" which only swept the Razzie Awards. He fared much better In “I, Robot” (2004), Alex Proyas’ adaptation of Isaac Asimov’s classic book of sci-fi short stories. Greenwood appeared as the megalomaniacal CEO of U.S. Robotics who is suspected of murder by a distrustful detective (Will Smith). The film was a bona fide box office hit and a profile boost for the hard-working actor. He went on to play the dashing paramour of an aging actress (Annette Bening) in “Being Julia” (2004), which was a success with critics but only received a limited theatrical release.

Continuing to enjoy his busiest decade yet, Greenwood put his outdoorsy athleticism to good use playing a Kentucky horse trainer in the live-action/animated family film, “Racing Stripes” (2005), before a challenging about-face as the long-time lover of Truman Capote (Philip Seymour Hoffman) in “Capote” (2005), an intriguing biopic about the eccentric author’s research into a quadruple murder case in Holcomb, KS that led to the writing of In Cold Blood. He followed up with another high profile feature “Déjà Vu” (2006), appearing alongside Denzel Washington and Val Kilmer in the sci-fi thriller that earned a great deal of attention for filming on the Gulf Coast after the devastation of Hurricane Katrina. Further North, Greenwood was well-cast in Disney’s “Eight Below” (2006), an arctic dog rescue adventure that was a $100 million-plus hit with family audiences.

Back on the small screen, Greenwood co-starred opposite Kim Basinger in the Lifetime movie about a wife’s mid-life awakening, “The Mermaid Chair” (2006) before landing the lead in the HBO series “John from Cincinnati” (HBO, 2007). The actor was delightful as the levitating patriarch of a dysfunctional California family of surf bums, but despite a steadily increasing fan base the show was cancelled, following its season finale. Never absent from screens for long, Greenwood could be seen later that year as a journalist in Todd Haynes’ Dylan biopic “I’m Not There” (2007). In 2008, he was slated to appear in the highly-anticipated film “Star Trek XI.” His character, Captain Christopher Pike, was known by Trekkies for appearing in the show’s pilot and only one subsequent episode, and this film would mark his first major presence in the franchise.


Profession(s):
Actor, singer, musician, factory worker, diamond driller
Sometimes Credited As:
Stuart Bruce Greenwood
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Family
father:Hugh John Greenwood (Taught at Princeton University; retired)
mother:Mary Sylvia Greenwood
sister:Kelly Louis Greenwood (Younger)
sister:Barbara Lynn Greenwood (Younger)
wife:Susan Greenwood (Had first date when both were 15 years old; married in 1985)

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Education
University of British Columbia Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada philosophy and economics
Central School of Speech and Drama London, England
American Academy of Dramatic Arts New York, NY 1980
Awards (Back to top)
Golden Satellite Award Best Supporting Actor in Motion Picture (Drama) "Thirteen Days" 2000
Gemini Award Best Guest Actor in a Series "Road to Avonlea" 1995

Milestones (Back to top)
2007 Cast as the patriarch of a surfing family in the HBO series, "John From Cincinnati"
2007 Co-starred in Todd Haynes' film, "I'm Not There" a film reflecting the life of musician Bob Dylan
2006 Co-starred with Denzel Washington in director Tony Scott's, "DéjÀ Vu"
2004 Starred in the FX original movie "Meltdown"
2004 Cast in "Being Julia," based on the novel "Theatre," by W. Somerset Maugham
2003 Cast in writer-director Ron Shelton's detective thriller "Hollywood Homicide" starring Harrison Ford
2002 Again collaborated with Egoyan on "Ararat"
2002 Played leading role in the thriller "Below"
2002 Co-starred with Madonna in the Guy Ritchie feature "Swept Away"
2000 Cast as a National Security Advisor in "Rules of Engagement"
2000 Portrayed President John F Kennedy in "Thirteen Days"
1999 Co-starred as Ashley Judd's nefarious husband in the hit "Double Jeopardy"
1998 Undertook villainous role in "Disturbing Behavior"
1997 Cast in the short-lived NBC drama "Sleepwalkers"
1997 Reteamed with Atom Egoyan for "The Sweet Hereafter"
1995 Played Thomas Veil, the "Nowhere Man" (UPN)
1994 Starred in Atom Egoyan's feature "Exotica"
1994 Played lead in the short-lived Fox sitcom "Hardball"
1992 After ten years, returned to the stage in Los Angeles production of "Deconstructing Romance"
1991 Played Pierce Lawton on "Knots Landing" (CBS)
1989 Starred in USA Network movie, "Spy"
1986 - 1988 Joined cast of NBC medical series "St. Elsewhere" as Dr Seth Griffin
1984 TV series debut as regular, "Legmen" (NBC)
1983 Moved to Los Angeles after being cast in the pilot of the HBO series "The Hitchhiker"
1982 Appeared in "First Blood"; role was whittled down in the editing from a moderate speaking part to essentially a walk-on
1982 Last stage appearance for a decade "A State of Grace"
1981 Acted in Vancouver production of "Bent"
1980 Feature acting debut, "Bear Island"
1977 Had leading role in the stage musical "Cruel Tears"
1976 Made professional debut as performer on stage in Vancouver in "Scapino"
1967 Moved to Vancouver with his family at age 11 (date approximate)
Injured his knee; abandoned career as skier
Was as a singer/guitarist with a Canadian rock band
Appeared as a life-size puppet in friend Norman Foote's stage shows for children
Born in Quebec, Canada
Alternated living in Princeton, New Jersey, and Bethesda, Maryland,
Lived for 13 months in Switzerland with family; graduated high school and began pursuing career as professional skier


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