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Callum Keith Rennie

 
Actor: Callum Keith Rennie
  • Born: Sep 14, 1960
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '90s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Thriller
  • Career Highlights: Last Night, Falling Angels, Whole New Thing
  • First Major Screen Credit: Curtis's Charm (1995)

Biography

One of Canada's fastest-rising actors, Callum Rennie (also known as Callum Keith Rennie) came into the business at an age when most actors are considered to be heading steadily over the hill. Rennie had his breakthrough when he was 34, starring alongside Sandra Oh in Mina Shum's acclaimed Double Happiness (1994). Nominated for a Genie (Canada's equivalent of the Oscar) for his portrayal of Mark, the endearingly geeky guy who falls in love with Oh's character, Rennie was effectively introduced to audiences across Canada, many of whom wondered where he had been for so long.

Born in Sunderland, Tyne-and-Wear, England, on September 14, 1960, Rennie moved to Edmonton, Alberta, with his family when he was barely out of diapers. Raised as the second of three sons in a middle-class family, he first thought about becoming an actor at the age of 18 and began appearing in local theatre productions. Unfortunately, any career aspirations he had took a back seat to an addiction to alcohol, one that would control his life until he was 33. Drinking heavily, Rennie continued his involvement with the theatre, appearing in a number of stage productions, but his work -- which often met with substantial acclaim -- was largely overshadowed by his addiction.

Things finally began to change for Rennie in 1993, when he got into a bar fight that resulted in glass in his left eye and a vow to quit drinking. His ensuing sobriety was accompanied by a change in his career, marked by an increasing number of supporting roles on various TV programs, including a recurring spot on the CBC's My Life as a Dog, for which he won a Genie. Rennie's 1994 screen breakthrough in Double Happiness opened the door for more screen work, including Bruce McDonald's wickedly good but woefully little-seen Hard Core Logo (1997), a pseudo rock documentary that cast Rennie as an aging punk rocker. He also landed a starring role on Due South, an popular Canadian TV series that cast him as a hard-bitten Chicago cop.

In 1998, Rennie won one of the most important roles of his career to date in Don McKellar's Last Night. An acclaimed film about the end of the world, it cast the actor as a man intent on trying every possible sexual variation imaginable in the time he has left. Rennie won a Genie for his performance, which imbued the character with more charm than smarm and captured both his efficacious self-assurance and surprising awkwardness. The film also allowed the actor to collaborate again with Sandra Oh, as well as director David Cronenberg; the following year, Cronenberg cast him in a substantial role in eXistenZ. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
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Callum Keith Rennie

Callum Keith Rennie, August 2008
Born September 14, 1960 (1960-09-14) (age 49)
Sunderland, England

Callum Keith Rennie (born September 14, 1960) is a Canadian television and film actor. He started his career in Canadian film and television projects, where his portrayal of Ray Kowalski in the TV series Due South was his first international success. After years acting in over ninety Canadian and international projects he became widely known for his portrayal of the Cylon Leoben Conoy in the reimagined Battlestar Galactica, and following that, his role as record producer Lew Ashby in the Showtime TV series Californication. Over the course of his career, he has collected several awards for his acting work (won seven awards and had eight nominations).

Contents

Biography

Rennie was born from Scottish parents in Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, an industrial city in North East England. When he was four years old, the family emigrated to Canada. Rennie was raised in middle-class Edmonton, Alberta, as the second of three boys.[1][2][3] He graduated from Strathcona High School, where he met and befriended Bruce McCulloch (from Kids in the Hall).[4][5] He dropped out from college and took up all sorts of odd jobs instead, leaving Edmonton for brief stays in Vancouver and Toronto before eventually settling in Vancouver.[4][5] After a serious bout with alcoholism in his youth, Rennie managed to get his addiction under control in at the age of 33, during what he called his "Christ year", and was then able to commit to his acting career.[1][6]

He likes painting and admires abstract expressionist artists such as Basquiat, Motherwell and Pollock (the Champion spark-plug logo tattoo on his right arm is a homage to Stuart Davis).[1] An enthusiast mountain climber in his youth,[7] Rennie still practices a lot of sports. He loves a game of hockey[2] but is above all an avid golfer.[3] He resides alternately in Vancouver and Los Angeles.

Career

1985 - 1993

Working at the campus radio of Edmonton university led Rennie to discover acting at the age of 25.[1] He started his career on stage, performing at the A.B.O.P. Theatre in Edmonton in Amerika, a play adapted from Franz Kafka's novel and followed with the critically acclaimed American Buffalo during the Edmonton International Fringe Festival. After attending Bruhanski Theatre Studio in Vancouver, he had his first professional theatrical performance in 1989 in Sally Clark's Lost Souls and Missing Persons, a Touchstone Theatre production. This earned him an invitation to work at the Shaw Festival where he appeared in Man and Superman and in Pinero's Trelawny of the Wells.[1]

1993 - present

In 1993 Rennie began to take small roles in television (Highlander, Forever Knight, The Outer Limits). After his first appearance in The X-Files he was offered[5] the role of Alex Krycek but turned it down because he did not want to commit to a television series at that time. His career gained momentum quickly and larger roles in Canadian films followed (Frank's Cock by Mike Hoolboom, and Mina Shum's Double Happiness, for which he was nominated for a 1994 Genie Award for best supporting actor).

Callum Keith Rennie's most prominent early roles were as guitar player Billy Tallent in Bruce McDonald's Hard Core Logo (1996) and as detective Stanley Raymond Kowalski in the CTV series Due South, which aired in over 150 countries. His role as Craig Zwiller in Don McKellar's Last Night earned him his first Genie Award (1999). His first big international success on the big screen was his appearance as Dodd in Christopher Nolan's Memento (2000).

Rennie was seen in the role of the convenience store guru Newbie in Don McKellar's cult TV series Twitch City and as detective Bobby Marlowe in the award-winning TV series Da Vinci's Inquest. He expanded to playing more mature roles, such as the father characters in Falling Angels (2003) and Flower and Garnet (2002), rather than young, self-destructive rebels. He took on the role of Inspector Wood in the period drama Torso: The Evelyn Dick Story and he appeared as a dyslexic painter in Wilby Wonderful (2004).

His roles continued to be diverse, in movies such as The Butterfly Effect (2004), H20: the Last Prime Minister (2004), The Five People You Meet in Heaven (2004), Blade: Trinity (2004), Lucid (2005), Unnatural & Accidental (2006), The Invisible (2007), Tin Man (2007), Normal (2007), Silk (2007) and The X-Files: I Want to Believe (2008). He has played guest roles in television episodes of various series like Mutant X, La Femme Nikita, The Dead Zone, Smallville, Supernatural, The L Word, Bionic Woman and Harper's Island.

His recurring role as the Cylon Leoben Conoy in the reimagined Battlestar Galactica and his portrayal of the record producer Lew Ashby throughout the second season of Californication earned him a new wide and international recognition..

Future Projects

Rennie is currently involved in a number of projects. In July 2009 he finished shooting three episodes[8] of the 8th season of 24, in which he will appear as Russian mobster Vladimir Laitanan. He will play a character named Reynaud in the new ABC series FlashForward. Two Canadian movies, Faith, Fraud & Minimum Wage[9], based on Canadian playwright Josh MacDonald's play Halo, and Gunless[10], a Western comedy starring Paul Gross, are in post production.

In Shattered, a series about an ex-cop who suffers from multiple personality disorder, Rennie will take on the lead role. The one-hour drama has been green-lit for 13 episodes[11] for the Canadian cable television channel Showcase, and is currently in pre production.

Filmography

Movies

Year Film Role Notes
1993 Purple Toast Tom Struck leading role
1994 Valentine's Day Astronaut as Callum Rennie
Still Boyfriend as Callum Rennie
The Raffle Floor Director cameo
Frank's Cock unnamed character leading role; as Callum Renney
Double Happiness Mark supporting role; as Callum Rennie

nominated for Genie Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role[12]

Time Cop Stranger supporting role
1995 Curtis's Charm Jim leading role
1996 Unforgettable Irate Motorist supporting role
Hard Core Logo Billy Tallent leading role
Letters From Home unnamed character supporting role; as Callum Rennie
1997 Masterminds Ollie supporting role
Excess Baggage Motel Manager supporting role; as Callum Rennie
Men With Guns Mamet leading role
1998 Last Night Craig Zwiller supporting role

Genie Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role [12], nominated for Canadian Comedy Award for Pretty Funny Male Performance[13]

1999 eXistenZ Hugo Carlow supporting role
The Life Before This Martin Maclean supporting role
2000 The Highwayman Telemarketer cameo
The Last Stop Jake supporting role
Memento Dodd supporting role
Suspicious River Gary Jensen leading role

Leo Award for Best Lead Performance by a Male in a Feature Length Drama[14]

2001 Picture Claire Laramie supporting role
2002 Now And Forever Carl Macke supporting role
Slap Shot 2: Breaking the Ice Palmberg supporting role
Flower & Garnet Ed leading role

Leo Award for Best Male Lead Performance in a Feature Length Drama[15], Vancouver Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor in a Canadian Film[16][17]

2003 Falling Angels Jim Field leading role

nominated for Leo Award for Best Male Lead Performance in a Feature Length Drama[18] and Vancouver Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor in a Canadian Film[19]

Paycheck Jude - Guard cameo
2004 The Butterfly Effect Jason supporting role
Wilby Wonderful Duck MacDonald leading role
Blade: Trinity Asher Talos supporting role
2005 Lucid Victor supporting role
Shooting Gallery Michael Mortensen supporting role
Whole New Thing Denny supporting role
2006 Snow Cake John Neil supporting role
Unnatural & Accidental Norman leading role

Leo Award for Best Male Lead Performance in a Feature Length Drama[20]

2007 Code Name: The Cleaner Shaw supporting role
Butterfly on a Wheel Det. McGill supporting role
The Invisible Det. Brian Larson supporting role
Normal Walt Braugher leading role

Genie Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role[12], nominated for Leo Award for Best Male Lead Performance in a Feature Length Drama[21]

Silk Schuyler supporting role
2008 Sleepwalking Will supporting role
The X Files: I Want to Believe Janke Dacyshyn supporting role
2009 Case 39 Edward Sullivan supporting role
2010 Faith, Fraud & Minimum Wage Donald leading role
Gunless Ben Cutler supporting role; in post-production[10]

TV movies

Year Film Role Notes
1994 Paris or Somewhere Christy Mahon leading role
1995 Little Criminals Kostash supporting role
The Omen Driver supporting role
Falling from the Sky: Flight 174 Pumper supporting role
When the Dark Man Calls Bob Levesh supporting role
The Ranger, the Cook and a Hole in the Sky Big Hat supporting role
1996 For Those Who Hunt The Wounded Down Jerry Bines leading role

nominated for Gemini Award for Best Performance in a Leading Role in a Dramatic Program or Mini-Series[12]

1997 Tricks Adam supporting role
2000 Murder Seen Det. Keegan leading role
Nature Boy Eden Abez supporting role
2001 Trapped Antonio Bello supporting role
Dice Egon Schwimmer supporting role, miniseries
2002 Torso: The Evelyn Dick Story Inspector Wood leading role
2003 Battlestar Galactica Leoben Conoy supporting role; miniseries
2004 H2O Don Pritchard/Lt. Daniel Holt supporting role
The Five People You Meet in Heaven Eddie's father supporting role
2005 Whiskey Echo Dr. Rollie Saunders leading role
Painkiller Jane Mitchel supporting role
2006 The Hunters Quin Hunter leading role; unaired pilot
2007 Tin Man Zero supporting role; miniseries
2008 Murder on Her Mind Leonard supporting role
2009 Battlestar Galactica: The Plan Leoben Conoy supporting role
Mistresses John supporting role; unaired pilot

TV series

Year Show Episodes Role Notes
1996 - 1997 My Life as a Dog 22 Johnny Johansson leading role

Gemini Award for Best Performance in a Children's or Youth Program or Series[12]

1997 - 1999 Due South 26 Det. Stanley Raymond Kowalski leading role

nominated for Gemini Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Continuing Leading Dramatic Role [12]

1998 - 2000 Twitch City 8 Newbie leading role
1999 - 2001 Da Vinci's Inquest 7 Det. Bob Marlowe supporting role
2008 Californication 12 Lew Ashby supporting role
2004 - 2009 Battlestar Galactica 21 Leoben Conoy supporting role
2009 Shattered 13 Kyle Loggins leading role; filming

TV guest appearances

Year Show Episode Role Notes
1993 Highlander: The Series 2.05 ("An Eye for an Eye") Neal
1994 Lonesome Dove: The Series 1.07 ("Long Shot") Harry Price
The Commish 3.18 ("Security ") Michael Konichek
The X Files 1.14 ("Lazarus") Tommy
1995 Forever Knight 3.03 ("Outside the Lines") Bruce Spencer
The X Files 2.15 ("Fresh Bones") The Groundskeeper
The Marshal 1.06 ("Protection") Cal
The Outer Limits 1.09 ("Corner of the Eye") Carlito
Highlander: The Series 4.03 ("The Innocent") Tyler King
Side Effects 2.02 ("Snap, Crackle, Pop!") Armando nominated for Gemini Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Supporting Role in a Dramatic Series[12]
1996 Viper 1.15 ("Wheelman") William T. Lennox
La Femme Nikita 1.09 / 1.10 ("Gray" / "Choice") Gray Wellman
1999 Strange World 1.02 ("Lullaby") Vince
Foolish Heart 1.04 ("Breathless") Ross
2002 Bliss 1.02 ("Six Days") Mike
Dark Angel 2.16 ("Exposure") Sheriff Lamar
Mutant X 1.18 ("Ex Marks the Spot") Zack Lockhart
The Dead Zone 1.11 ("Dinner with Dana") Mark Cassidy
The Eleventh Hour 1.03 ("The Source") Mark Mitchum
2003 Tru Calling 1.01 ("Pilot") Elliot Winters
2004 Touching Evil 1.05 ("Memorial") Mike Espy
Kingdom Hospital 1.09 / 1.13 ("Butterfingers" / "Finale") Earl Candleton
2005 Supernatural 1.02 ("Wendigo") Roy
2006 The L Word 3.06 / 3.09 / 3.10 Danny Wilson
Smallville 5.18 ("Fragile") Tyler McKnight
2007 Men in Trees 2.02 ("Chemical Reactions") Jeff
2008 Bionic Woman 1.06 ("The List") Victor
2009 Harper's Island 1.10 / 1.11 / 1.12 / 1.13 ("Snap" / "Splash" / "Gasp" / "Sigh") John Wakefield
Harper's Globe 1.15 / 1.16 ("There Is Only One Way Out On Harper's Island" / "Surviving Harper’s Island") John Wakefield web series complementary to Harper's Island[22]
FlashForward 1.07 ("The Gift") Raynaud
2010 24 8.06 / 8.07 / 8.08 ("Day 8: 11:00 p.m.-12:00 a.m." / " "Day 8: 10:00 p.m.-11:00 p.m." / "Day 8: 9:00 p.m.-10:00 p.m.") Vladimir Laitanan

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Elm Street: March 1998 "12 Steps to Stardom", last accessed September 7, 2009
  2. ^ a b Inside Soap issue 103, June 1998, last accessed September 7, 2009
  3. ^ a b The Tao of Callum Keith Rennie, last accessed September 7, 2009
  4. ^ a b Vines: April-May 1999 "Getting Under Callum Keith Rennie's Skin", last accessed September 7, 2009
  5. ^ a b c Northern Stars - Callum Keith Rennie Bio, last accessed September 7, 2009
  6. ^ Now Toronto Interview
  7. ^ Toronto's Globe and Mail: December 14, 1996 "DECISIVE MOMENT: Callum Keith Rennie Climbs To The Top", last accessed September 7, 2009
  8. ^ Callum Keith Rennie knows how to be bad, from 'Californication' to 'Oz' to '24'
  9. ^ The CKR Files: Halo shines in N.S.
  10. ^ a b Paul Gross & Sienna Guillory to star in Gunless
  11. ^ CNW Group: Canwest orders two more new Canadian original series
  12. ^ a b c d e f g Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television official website, Genies & Gemini Awards for Callum Keith Rennie, last accessed October 17, 2009
  13. ^ IMDB, Canadian Comedy Awards: 2000, last accessed October 17, 2009
  14. ^ Leo Awards official website, 2001 winners, last accessed October 17, 2009
  15. ^ Leo Awards official website, 2003 winners, last accessed October 17, 2009
  16. ^ Screen Siren Pictures website (Producer), last accessed October 17, 2009
  17. ^ 3rd Annual Vancouver Film Critics Circle Awards, last accessed October 17, 2009
  18. ^ IMDB, Leo Awards: 2004, last accessed October 17, 2009
  19. ^ 4th Annual Vancouver Film Critics Circle Awards, last accessed October 17, 2009
  20. ^ Leo Awards official website, 2007 winners, last accessed October 17, 2009
  21. ^ Leo Awards official website, 2008 nominees, last accessed October 17, 2009
  22. ^ Harper’s Globe Wiki: List of Harper's Globe videos, last accessed October 17, 2009

External links


 
 
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Suspicious River (2000 Drama Film)
Gray: La Femme Nikita (TV Episode) (1997 Action TV Episode)
Choice: La Femme Nikita (TV Episode) (1997 Action TV Episode)

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