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HUNT FOR JUSTICE: Cast Biofilmographies
Click here to access Hunt for Justice: The Louise Arbour Story full cast and crew credits.
WENDY CREWSON (LOUISE ARBOUR)

A native of Hamilton, Ontario, Crewson received a Bachelor of Arts from Queen's University in Kingston and did post-graduate studies in London at the Webber Douglass Academy of Dramatic Arts and the American Repertory Theatre.

Now a widely celebrated actor, Crewson has amassed a feature filmography that speaks for itself: the upcoming Niagara Motel; A Home At The End Of The World with Colin Farrell and Sissy Spacek; The Clearing directed by Pieter Jan Brugge, starring Robert Redford and Helen Mirren; Santa Clause II with Tim Allen; Perfect Pie; Between Strangers with Sophia Loren; Suddenly Naked directed by Anne Wheeler and starring Peter Coyote (an official entry in the 2001 Toronto, Vancouver & Berlin International Film Festivals); Roger Spottiswoode’s The Sixth Day with Arnold Schwarzenegger; What Lies Beneath from director Robert Zemekis starring Harrison Ford and Michelle Pfeiffer; Bicentennial Man from director Christopher Columbus starring Robin Williams and Sam Neil; Mercy with Ellen Barkin; Question Of Privilege; Better Than Chocolate from director Anne Wheeler which premiered at the 1999 Berlin Film Festival and garnered the1999 People’s Choice Award For Best Film - Inside Out Festival Toronto; Escape Velocity; The Eighteenth Angel; director Wolfgang Peterson’s Air Force One starring Harrison Ford and Gary Oldman; Gang Related with Tupac Shakur, To Gillian On Her 37th Birthday starring Michelle Pfeiffer and Claire Danes; The Santa Clause with Tim Allen, Corrina, Corrina with Whoopy Goldberg and Ray Liotta; The Good Son with Macaulay Culkin and Elijah Wood, Ted Kotcheff’s Folks with Tom Selleck and Don Ameche and The Doctor with William Hurt, one of Crewson’s co-stars in Hunt for Justice.

Crewson’s television roles are equally impressive: Sex Traffic; Showtime’s Jack; Piano Man’s Daughter co-produced by Whoopi Goldberg/Sullivan Entertainment; 24 with Kiefer Sutherland; the CBS western Twelve Mile Road (2003) co-starring Tom Selleck; An Unexpected Love with Leslie Hope; The Many Trials Of One Jane Doe, for which she won the 2003 Gemini Award - Best Performance in a Lead Dramatic Role; The Matthew Shepard Story directed by Roger Spottiswoode; The Beast; The Last Brickmaker In America with Sydney Poitier; the Lifetime telefilm Criminal Instinct: The Joanna Kilbourne Mysteries which she produced and she was the (2001) Gemini Award Nomination for Best Leading Actress in a Dramatic Program and 2000 Women in Film & Television-Toronto Crystal Award for Creative Excellence; Summers End from director Helen Shaver for Showtime with James Earl Jones; Sleeping Dogs Lie; At The End Of The Day: Sue Rodriguez, for which she won the 1999 Gemini Award For Best Leading Actress in a Dramatic Program; Sally Field’s From The Earth To The Moon; Black Harbour; Due South, for which she won the 1998 Gemini Award - Best Performance in a Guest Role Dramatic Series; Ebbie; Spenser: A Savage Place; Lives Of Girls And Women, Spenser: The Judas Goat, Frost Fire; To Save The Children; I’ll Never Get To Heaven, which earned Crewson a 1994 Gemini Award Nomination For Best Performance in a Lead Dramatic Role; Getting Married In Buffalo Jump, which also earned Crewson a 1992 Gemini Award Nomination for Best Performance in a Lead Dramatic Role; Street Legal; Studio 5b; In The Lion’s Den, a CBS Pilot; Robert Altman’s Tanner ’88, where she met her husband, actor Michael Murphy; A Hobo’s Christmas; Hard Copy; Covert Action; Perry Mason: The Case Of The Shooting Star; The Sight, directed by Francis Mankiewicz; Dark, But Full Of Diamonds; Murder In Space; Night Heat; Heartsounds with Mary Tyler Moore, The Guardian with Martin Sheen and Louis Gosset Jr; Mazes & Monsters with Tom Hanks, Home Fires for which Crewson won the Actra Award for Best Performance in a Continuing Role and The War Brides, for which Crewson attracted attention across the industry with her Actra Award Nomination for Best New Performer.

In 2002 Crewson was honored with the 2002 Gemini Humanitarian Award for her work with Lou Gehrig's disease.

JOHN CORBETT (BRITISH CAPTAIN JOHN TANNER)

Born and raised in West Virginia, John Corbett initially moved out to California to work in a steel factory. He worked there for six years until an injury forced him to stop. Concurrently, Corbett was attending the local city college and decided to sit in on a friend's drama class. While watching the class, he was invited on stage for an exercise and became captivated with the craft. He acted in several college theater productions, in which his drama teacher recognized his talent and encouraged him to pursue an acting career in Hollywood.

Since then, he has starred in Garry Marshall’s summer 2004 film Raising Helen opposite Kate Hudson, Elvis Has Left the Building with Kim Basinger, and Raise Your Voice with Hilary Duff. He recently starred as Ian Miller in My Big Fat Greek Wedding, one of the highest grossing independent films of all time, Serendipity with John Cusak, Dinner Rush with Danny Aiello, Desperate But Not Serious with Claudia Schiffer, Volcano with Tommy Lee Jones, Anne Heche and Don Cheadle, Tombstone with Val Kilmer and Wedding Bell Blues.

He is well known among Sex & the City fans as Aidan Shaw playing opposite Sarah Jessica Parker. His turn as Aidan earned Corbett a nomination for an Emmy Award in 2002. Corbett also starred on the critically acclaimed series Lucky, Rocky Times, and The Visitor, while he will always be remembered as the disk jockey, Chris Stevens on the CBS series Northern Exposure, where he received both Emmy and Golden Globe nominations. Over the last ten years, Corbett has worked consistently in all mediums.

Corbett’s television movies and mini-series include Prancer Returns, Private Lies, On Hostile Ground, To Serve And Protect, The Sky’s On Fire, Warlord: Battle For The Galaxy, The Morrison Murders, Don’t Look Back with Billy Bob Thorton and Eric Stoltz, and Innocent Victims.

WILLIAM HURT (BRITISH GENERAL MORTIMER)

After theological studies in Boston, William Hurt turned to studying dramatic arts, first in London, then at New York's Juilliard School of Music and Drama. He spent the early years of his career on the stage and between classes, in summer stock, in regional repertory and Off Broadway, appearing in more than 50 productions including Henry V, 5th of July, Hamlet, Richard II, Hurlyburly (for which he was nominated for a Tony Award in 1984), My Life (winning an Obie Award for Best Actor), A Midsummer's Night's Dream and Good. His interest in the theatre has continued to this day, even after his cinematographic career began.

Hurt made his on-screen debut with Ken Russel in, Altered States where he portrayed a scientist who was the victim of his own experiments, which achieved cult status for science-fiction amateurs. Hurt then stayed up all night in Peter Yates’ thriller Eyewitness, played a Russian police investigator in Michel Apted’s Gorky Park and then was a private detective in Body Heat. This film marked the beginning of a fruitful collaboration between its director Lawrence Kasdan and Hurt, which continued with the biting comedy The Big Chill, The Accidental Tourist and I Love You to Death.

He won an Oscar, a British Academy Award, and the Cannes Palme d’or for his portrayal of a homosexual prisoner in Kiss of the Spider Woman. The next year, 1987, he was nominated for an Oscar for his role in Children of a Lesser God, Randa Haines first film, with whom he again worked in The Doctor. On a lighter note, he starred with Albert Brooks and Holly Hunter in Broadcast News for which he earned another Oscar nomination and a role opposite Mia Farrow in Woody Allen’s Alice. Hurt was more serious again in Wim Wenders’ futuristic parable Bis ans Ende der Welt and in Luis Puenzo’s La Peste. Doing two or three films a year, Hurt alternated characters from the quieter, delicate types (a shy bachelor in Second Best, a writer in crisis in Smoke, a disillusioned psychoanalyst in Un divan à New York) to more popular characters (a tough guy in Trial by Jury, a journalist in Michael). He even tried his hand in historic romance, appearing in Zeffirelli’s Jane Eyre.

Hurt starred along with Molly Parker in Sturla Gunnarson’s Rare Birds, Lionel Chetwynd’s Varian’s War, and Disney’s Tuck Everlasting. He also appeared in Steven Speilberg’s A.I. and made a cameo appearance in Roger Michell’s Changing Lanes. As well, Hurt gave a remarkable performance opposite Ralph Fiennes in Istvan Szabo’s Sunshine earning him a Genie nomination. He also appeared with Lynn Redgrave in The Simian Line and in the television series Dune. In 2001, he also appeared in the Quebec French-language television series Rivière-des-Jérémie.

For radio audiences, William Hurt read Paul Theroux’s The Great Railway Bazaar for the BBC’s Radio Four and E as well as Annie Proulx’s The Shipping News. He has also recorded The Polar Express and The Boy Who Drew Cats, and narrated several documentaries. A four-time finalist at the Golden Globe Awards, William Hurt was the first ever to be granted the Spencer Tracy Award by U.C.L.A.

Recently, Hurt appeared along Joaquin Pheonix, Sigourney Weaver and Adrian Brody in The Village by M. Night Shyamalan (The Sixth Sense) the television movie Frankenstein with Julie Delphie. He will soon be appearing in several projects: Syriana, alongside Matt Damon and George Clooney; the new David Cronenberg film A History of Violence; Neverwas, with Ian McKellen; an Elvis movie called The King directed by James Marsh; Downloading Nancy with Holly Hunter; and A License to Steal with Christian Slater.

STIPE ERCEG (PASKO ODZAK, ARBOUR’S TRANSLATOR)

Hailed as an emerging talent in Europe, Stipe Erceg is cautious about the roles he selects and is resisting mainstream success in favour of more meaningful projects—like Hunt for Justice, in which he takes his first English-language role. Nonetheless, Erceg has an extensive resume of film, theatre and television credits. His filmography includes: Hans Weingartner’s The Edukators, which was nominated for the Palm d’Or at Cannes in 2004, won the best young actress award at the Bavarian Film Awards and garnered two more nominations on the festival circuit; Zwei Minuten; Crash Test Dummies; Der Ringfinger; Sommer Hunde Söhne; Der Typ, which won the First Steps Award 2003 in the category Feature Film under 60 Minutes and won a dialogue award at the Berlin Film Festival in 2004; Kiki und Tiger which was nominated for the First Steps Award 2003 in the category Feature Film under 60 Minutes, and won a cinematography award at the Serb Film Festival and the Audience award at the Max Orphüls Festival; Such Mich Nicht (Don’t Look for Me); Porträt vor Weisser Wand; Puca; Der Letzte Tag im Sommer and Der Letzte Adler; Stadt Als Beute; Die Kirschenkönigin, an enormously popular television miniseries in Europe; and Yugotrip, for which Ercek won the Best Young Actor award at the Max Orphüls Festival in 2004. He will be soon be seen in the upcoming L’Annulaire, directed by the award-winning Diane Bertrand.

HEINO FERCH (THOMAS KELLER, LAWYER AT THE HAGUE)

This charismatic and acclaimed movie star in Europe has a distinguished career of acting in film and television, winning dozens of awards and popular success—especially in Germany, where he lives. As well as starring in the recent blockbuster action film Extreme Ops, Ferch also played Albert Speer in the 2005 Academy Award-nominated film The Downfall: Hitler and the End of the Third Reich, which also won the Bambi Award and three top awards at the Bavarian Film Festival. Ferch’s other recent starring roles include: Nachts im Park; The Seagull’s Laughter, which won seven awards at Iceland’s Edda Awards; Der Tunnel, which won audience choice awards in Montreal, Portland and St. Louis Film Festivals, plus five other prizes across Europe; Marlene, which won the Hollywood Discovery award for best feature at the Hollywood Film Festival; The Unscarred; Güne Wüste; Straight Shooter with Dennis Hopper; Tom Tykwer’s Run Lola Run, which was nominated for a BAFTA and garnered 25 festival prizes; Two Women, Two Men; Widows; The Harmonists, which won the Bavarian Film Prize in 1998, The Portland Film Festivla’s audience award for best film, plus eleven more awards across Europe; Tom Tykwer’s big-budget Winter Sleepers, which won eight film awards and numerous nominations internationally; the BAFTA-nominated Lucie Aubrac, starring Carole Bouquet and Daniel Auteuil; Der Unhold; KüB mich!; Leben ist eine Baustelle; Alles Lüge, Wer hat Angst vor Rot, Gelb, Blau?; Wedding, and SchloB Königswald.

His television career is equally distinguished, with over 36 titles, including his recent role as Athos in The Three Musketeers, co-starring Emmanualle Béart, Tchéky Karyo and Vincent Elbaz; the television movie Das Konto, which is nominated for two Adolf Grimme Awards; Le Lion; A Light in Dark Places, which won four top European prizes; Der Anwalt und sein Gast; and the TV mini-series Caesar, co-starring Richard Harris and Christopher Walken, which was nominated for two Emmies.

Ferch played the Marquis de Caulaincourt in the seven-times Emmy nominated mini-series Napoléon, which co-starred Gerard Depardieu, Isabella Rossellini and John Malkovich. (It won the 2003 Emmy for best costume). He also stars in The Sands of Time with Peter Weller and Ben Cross and 25 other made-for-television films. He appears as himself in the television documentaries Star in der Manege and Freedom2speak, while making frequent guest appearances on television as himself or as a cameo character.

CLAUDIA FERRI (TINA VERMA, ARBOUR’S ASSISTANT)

Following Claudia Ferri’s spectacular success in Cinémaginaire’s Mambo Italiano—in which Ferri stars as the pill-popping daughter of an Italian family, opposite Paul Sorvino and Ginette Reno—she was chosen as the lead of the bilingual television series Ciao Bella (CBC/Radio-Canada), based on the film. Ferri also starred in Viva La Frida! (Official Selection at the Montreal International Festival New Cinema New Media –2002), a docu-drama based on the life of Frida Kahlo.

In 2001, CLAUDIA starred in two award-winning short films: Soother (Best Children’s Film-Uppsala Film Festival in Sweden) and Killing Time (Best Canadian Short Film-World Wide Short Film Festival in Toronto) directed by newcomer Tara Johns. She also appeared in Lifetime’s, After Amy and does a cameo role in the film Snow in August as Stephen Rea’s wife. She acted opposite Dan Akroyd in Denys Arcand’s Stardom, and opposite Stephen Baldwin in Dead Awake. For Showtime, she opened the second season of The Hunger, directed by Darrell Wasyk, while in Family, a three-part miniseries about Joe Bonanno, she played Fay, a.k.a. Fanny Labruzzo. In the TNT television feature 36 Hours to Die directed by Yves Simoneau, she played opposite Treat Williams. In the award-winning SDA Production Omertà II (1996-19997) directed by Pierre Houle, Ferri had a recurring role as wife of the mafia godfather, for which she spoke fluent English, French and Italian. Ferri reprised her role in Omertà III, directed by George Mihalka. Her subsequent television series included, MacGyver, Neon Rider, and The Highlander.

The Assignement, directed by Christian Dugay, marked an early turning point in Ferri’s film career when she co-starred with Aidan Quinn, Donald Sutherland and Ben Kingsley. Her previous credits included Hard Core Logo by Bruce Macdonald and her debut on television in 1988, in a commercial directed by Jean-Claude Lauzon. Born in Montreal, Québec, Ferri trained as an actress in Ste-Hyacinthe (Theatre Program), in New York at HB Studio, as well as in Vancouver at the Bill Davis Actors’Workshop.

MICHAEL MURPHY (GENERAL SALINSKI)

For over 35 years, Michael Murphy has performed in film, television and in the theatre. He has had major roles in many award-winning pictures, and has worked with some of the most respected filmmakers of his generation. They include: Robert Altman, Woody Allen, Paul Mazursky, Peter Weir, Tim Burton, Oliver Stone, Elia Kazan, Peter Bogdanovich, Martin Ritt, Robert Aldrich, Orson Welles and Paul Thomas Anderson.

Murphy has worked in over one hundred television productions, the highlight of which was the Robert Altman - Gary Trudeau cult series Tanner ‘88 in which he played the title role. It was followed in 2004 by the mini series Tanner on Tanner. He also appeared in the classic Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, with Cicely Tyson. The film won nine Emmy Awards.

A partial list of Murphy’s more interesting credits include: Silver City directed by John Sayles, Heights directed by James Ivory, Magnolia (SAG nomination for Best Ensemble), Kansas City, Batman Returns, Salvador, The Year of Living Dangerously, Manhattan, The Front, An Unmarried Woman, Nashville, What’s Up Doc?, Brewster McCloud and M*A*S*H*.

For years Murphy lived in New York, and worked in many theatrical productions in and around the city. Recently, he starred in Jon Robin Baitz’s Three Hotels, at the Magic Theatre in San Francisco.

Over the last couple of years, Murphy has turned his attention to the independent arena, where he recently completed three films: Three Janes, by Jim & Iris Klein, Tart, by Christina Wayne, and Norma Jean, Jack & Me, by Cyrus Nowrasteh. Murphy and Nowrasteh recently reunited for the Paramount/Showtime The Day Regan Was Shot, also starring Richard Dreyfus.

Additionally, Murphy has been busy narrating some highly acclaimed programs for Public Broadcasting that include: Long Journey Home: The Irish in America, The Last Stand of Tallgrass Prairie, and the forthcoming Mount Rushmore. He has also committed many well-known novels to tape including the Nero Wolfe series.

With co-writer David Fineman, Murphy recently completed an original screenplay entitled Crashing, which is gaining momentum in Hollywood.

Since his recent move to Canada, Michael has had a recurring role on the series This is Wonderland, for which he has been nominated for a 2004 Gemini Award, The Eleventh Hour, the critically acclaimed series for CTV, as well as leading roles in the CBC MOW Footsteps and In The Dark for Shaftesbury Films. Childstar directed by Don McKellar, and two projects by director Charles Binamé. H20: The Last Prime Minister and Hunt for Justice.

LESLIE HOPE (FORENSIC EXPERT CAMILLE GILBERT)

Director Charles Binamé enjoyed collaborating with Leslie Hope so much on H2O: The Last Prime Minister that he was thrilled to have her in Hunt for Justice. Well known to both filmgoers and television audiences, Hope has an impressive list of acting credits. Her filmography includes: The Incredible Mrs. Ritchie with Gena Rowlands; Dragon Fly with Kevin Costner; the three Robocop movies; Bruiser, directed byGeorge Romero; The Life Before This; Water Damage; The Summer Of Monkeys; Rowing Through; First Degree with Rob Lowe; Cityscrapes; Boozecan; Fun; Schemes; Paris, France; And The Dance Goes On; True Confections directed by Gail Singer; Men At Work, directed by Emilio Estevez starring Charlie Sheen; Talk Radio directed by Oliver Stone; It Takes Two; Kansas with Matt Dilllon and Andrew McCarthy; Sword Of Gideon with Rod Steiger and Micheal York, The Education Of Allison Tate; Go For The Gold directed by Jackie Cooper; Love Streams directed by John Cassavetes, starring Gena Rowlands and Ups & Downs directed by Paul Almond.

Her many television movies and mini-series include: American Meltdown; H2O: The Last Prime Minister directed by Charles Binamé, starring Paul Gross; Human Cargo; Dangerous Acquaintances a.k.a. The Death and Life of Nancy Eaton; Line Of Fire directed by Rod Lurie; An Unexpected Love with co-star Wendy Crewson; Sanctuary; Dead Aviators; This Matter Of Marriage; Black Out with Eric Stoltz; Seduced By Madness with Ann Margret And Peter Coyote; Shadow Ops; Avenging Angel with Tom Berenger and James Coburn; Caught In The Act; Working Trash with George Carlin and Ben Stiller; Ask Me Again; Tales Of The Hollywood Hills; War And Remembrance with Robert Mitchum and Jane Seymour; Berengers; and All The Kids Do It directed by Henry Winkler.

Hope is currently playing a lead role in the smash-hit television series 24, opposite Keifer Sutherland. Her additional episodic appearances include House MD, The L Word (NBC Pilot), The District, The Eleventh Hour, Judging Amy, Chicago Hope, Early Edition, Party Of Five, The Conversation (NBC Pilot), and Knots Landing. Her theatre work includes Romeo & Juliet (Will & Company), Slide, Ghost Stories, and Therese Raquin (all for The Wilton Project), Taking Off: An Evening Away From The City (The Odyssey Theatre, L.A.), The Rattle Of The Moon (The Burbage Theatre, L.A.), Emerald City (South Coast Repertory) and The Government Inspector (Langham Court B.C.).

NEVILLE EDWARDS (ODON MAKWENE, LAWYER AT THE HAGUE)

Neville Edwards plays Odon, a key lawyer in Louise Arbour’s legal team at The Hague. Edward’s film and television movie credits include: The Man with Samuel L. Jackson; Dawn Of The Dead; The Lost Angel with Judd Nelson and Alison Eastwood; Profoundly Normal with Kirstie Alley; Absolon with Christopher Lambert; The Human Stain with Nicole Kidman; Owning Mahowny with Minnie Driver and John Hurt; Confessions Of A Dangerous Mind directed by George Clooney, starring Sam Rockwell and Drew Barrymore; My Name Is Tanino; 10,000 Black Men Named George directed by Robert Townsend; The Case Of The Whitechapel Vampire; And Never Let Her Go; Exit Wounds with Steven Seagal, The Miracle Worker; Robocop, Bruiser directed by George Romero, Possessed; One Kill; Bless The Child; Cover Me; Revelation; Naked City II (1998) directed by Peter Bogdanovich; Down In The Delta directed by Maya Angelou, and Bad As I Wanna Be. His many television appearances include roles on Soul Food, 1-800-Missing, Tracker, Drop The Beat, and Due South, while his theatre experience includes productions of I Love You Baby Blue and 12 Angry Men.

Edwards has an extensive background in sports. He won a football scholarship to Kent State University and was drafted by the Ottawa Roughriders. He was a basketball coach and basketball choreographer in Due South, White Men Can't Jump, Straight Up and Menace.

LYNNE DERAGON (ROSE ARBOUR, LOUISE’S MOTHER)

Born just outside of Montreal, Lynne Deragon was in her final year at the National Theatre school of Canada when comedian Dave Broadfoot offered her work in his satirical comedy revue Squeeze II. She accepted…and while it meant she couldn’t graduate from NTS, this job gave her a degree in “Show Biz 101”, taking her from the world of night clubs, to a varied and eclectic career in radio, TV, film, dubbing, music, commercials, teaching, narration and writing.

Deragon taught theatre at the Loyola Campus of Concordia University, and co-developed a communications workshop for student clergy at the Montreal Institute for Ministry at McGill University. The first of its kind to approach scriptural text using videotape as an aid to student learning, this workshop continued for 10 years. Moving to Toronto in 1977, Deragon took a side trip from acting and worked mainly as a studio session singer for radio and TV commercials, both in English and French. Music is a great love for her, and she has written and co-written many songs in the jazz and pop world, recorded by various artists. The latest venue was writing lyrics for Doug Riley’s music for Leave the Porch Light On.

Deragon was involved in two of the most groundbreaking success stories in Canadian theatre. She originated the part of Irene Regan in David Fennario’s hit Balconville and played Sandy in Judith Thompson’s incredible ensemble piece The Crackwalker, resulting in marriage (1983) to her leading man, actor/singer/writer Frank Moore, and “semi-retired” to raise their two wonderful daughters.

Since her return, Deragon has worked steadily in film, television, radio and music. Her film credits include: The Interpreter directed by Sydney Pollack, starring Nicole Kidman and Sean Penn; Khaled directed by Asghar Massombagi; Swann a.k.a. Mary Swann with Brenda Fricker and Miranda Richardson with Ned Beatty; Introducing... Janet a.k.a. Rubber Face with Jim Carrey and Rabid directed by David Cronenberg.

Her work on television movies leading roles in the Lives of the Saints with Sophia Loren and Kris Kristofferson; When Andrew Came Home a.k.a. Taming Andrew; One Kill with Anne Heche and Sam Sheppard; Cheaters a.k.a. The Cheating Scandal with Jeff Daniels and Paul Sorvino; Happy Face Murders with Ann Margret; Blue Moon; Giving Up the Ghost; Thanks of a Grateful Nation a.k.a The Gulf War with Ted Danson and Jennifer Jason Leigh; The Absolute Truth directed by James Keach starring Jane Seymour, Side Effects; Million Dollar Babies directed by Christian Duguay with Beau Bridges and Roy Dupuy, and Turning to Stone. Her recurring roles or appearances include spots on Freaks of Nature, 1-800-Missing, The Eleventh Hour, Street Time, Queer as Folk, Blue Murder, The City, PSI Factor, Due South, Nothing Sacred, Prince Street, The Great Defender, Street Legal, and Saying Goodbye (Thunder in My Head).

GABRIELLE BONI (MS. MELANIE ARBOUR, LOUISE’S DAUGHTER)

Despite her youth, Boni is a seasoned actor with the following lead film roles in her filmography: Time at the Top; Loss of Faith (MOW) with John Ritter; Little Men with Mariel Hemingway, and Daddy's Girl. Her feature roles include Eight Days a Week; Grace of My Heart; Indictment: The McMartin Trial (TV) with James Woods and Lolita Davidovich, and Based on an Untrue Story (TV).

In television, Boni’s regular or recurring roles include: Wind at My Back, Big Wolf on Campus, ER, The Canterberrys' Tales, Get Smart, Sisters, Phenom, and General Hospital, along with guest-starring appearances on 15 Love II, Seriously Weird, Goosebumps, The Nanny, Renegade, Live Shot, and Evening Shade. Boni’s also does voice work for Arthur, Santa Claus, Suzuki Beane, Itsy Bitsy Spider, Little Wizard Stories, Real Monsters and Charlie Brown (MetLife). Her work on stage includes lead roles in Our Town, The Chisholm Trial Went Through Here and Frankenstein.

JASSON FINNEY (BODYGUARD JIM VIS)

Jasson Finney’s original career path was in fitness, as a personal trainer in British Columbia, but one of his clients soon convinced him to take up acting. Finney’s attended acting workshops with Lynne Carrow, Sid Kozak, Larry Gilman and Marc Baur. This lead to principle roles in Tales from the Neverending Story; The Hunger; Nick Fury; and Ad Max. Additional credits include film roles in Monica La Mitraille with Roy Dupuy, Gothika directed by Mattieu Kassovitz starring Halle Berry and Robert Downey Jr.; A Different Loyalty with Sharon Stone and Rupert Everett; Timeline directed by Richard Donner; Confessions of a Dangerous Mind directed by George Clooney starring Sam Rockwell and Drew Barrymore; Chasing Holden a.k.a. Christmas With JD; Taken with Dabney Coleman, and Soldier of Fortune.

Finney’s work on television includes roles on the popular shows Temps Dur; Jack Carter; The Last Chapter with Micheal Ironside and Roy Dupuis; Urban Myth Chillers; Veritas; Just a Walk in the Park; Bliss; Fortier II; Live Through This; Misguided Angels; Shelby Woo; Student Bodies and Nick Fury. Finney’s background in fitness also makes him an excellent stunt consultant, which he did for Largo Winch; and Atikka a.k.a. The Killing Yard with Alan Alda and Morris Chestnut.

FARUK SOFIC (WAR CRIMINAL SLAVKO DOKMANOVIC)

Faruk Sofic attended the prestigious Academy of Theatre, Film and Television Arts at the University of Sarajevo in Bosnia and Herzegovina, where he performed for over 20 years in hundreds of theatre productions. Now located in Toronto with his wife and two grown daughters, Sofic’s film and television credits include Take Your Falls, Peacekeepers (TV Movie), La Femme Nikita, Bones in the Throat (TV Sa – TV Austria), Student from Prague (TV Sa – TV Praha), The Man Who Knew Where Is West and Where is South (TV Sarajevo), Aleksa Santic (TV Sarajevo), and Johnny Be Good (TV Sarajevo).

KRESIMIR BOSILJEVAC (WAR CRIMINAL DR. MILAN KOVACEVIC)

Born in Zagreb, Croatia, Kresimir Bosiljevac immigrated to Canada in 1986 and immediately continued his acting career. As well as co-founding Toronto’s Croatian Theatre Histerioni and co-owning the Kultura Books store, he acts in film and television productions, most notably the CBC series Spy Net. In 2002, he played the lead in a film, Die Mutter, which was shown at the San Francisco Short film Fesitval and the Toronto International Film Fesitval. His other credits include: Mayday 2 for Discovery; Playmakers for Showcase, The Day Reagan was Shot for Paramount; Not Being Frank, Undercover Brother for Universal Pictures, Peacekeepers, Jennifer, and a CBC radio narration of Church in Croatia.

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