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{{Short description|Welsh-Canadian-American actor.}}
{{Short description|Wales-born American actor}}
{{Other people|Geraint Davies}}
{{Other people|Geraint Davies}}
{{BLP sources|date=December 2015}}
{{BLP sources|date=December 2023}}
{{EngvarB|date=February 2015}}
{{EngvarB|date=February 2015}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2021}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2023}}
{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| bgcolour =
| name = Geraint Wyn Davies
| name = Geraint Wyn Davies
| image = Geraint_Wyn_Davies_2004.JPG
| image = Geraint Wyn Davies 2004.JPG
| imagesize =
| caption = Davies in 2004
| caption = GWD in 2004
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|df=yes|1957|04|20}}
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|df=yes|1957|04|20}}
| birth_place = [[Swansea, Wales]], UK
| birth_place = [[Swansea]], Wales
| death_date =
| death_date =
| spouse = Alana Guinn (1985 - 2006, divorced, 2 children)<br>Claire Lautier (2011 - present)
| spouse = {{plainlist|
* {{marriage|Alana Guinn|1985|2006|end=divorced}}
| children = Galen Wyn Davies (Son)
* {{marriage|Claire Lautier|2011}}
Pyper Wyn Davies (Daughter)
}}
| parents = Cerwyn and Nora Davies
| relatives = Emyr Wyn Davies (older brother)
| children = 2
| awards = Helen Hayes Award
| alma_mater = University of Western Ontario
| website = http://www.gwdfc.org
| occupation = {{flatlist|
* Actor
| alma_mater = University of Western Ontario
* director
| occupation = Actor, director, musician
* musician}}
| years_active = 1976 - present
| height = 5' 11"
| years_active = 1976–present
}}
}}


'''Geraint Wyn Davies''' ({{IPA-cy|ˈɡɛraint}}, 20 April 1957) is a Welsh-American stage, film and television actor-director. Educated in Canada, he has worked in the [[United Kingdom]], [[Canada]] and the [[United States]]. His most famous role as the vampire-turned police detective [[Nick Knight (Forever Knight)|Nick Knight]] in the Canadian television series ''[[Forever Knight]]''.
'''Geraint Wyn Davies''' ({{IPAc-en|'|g|Er|ai|n|t}} {{respell|GHERR|eyent}}, {{IPA|cy|ˈɡɛraint|lang}}; born 20 April 1957) is a British-American stage, film and television actor. Born in [[Wales]] and educated in Canada, he became a citizen of the United States on 13 June 2006, having been sworn in by then Associate Supreme Court Justice [[Ruth Bader Ginsburg]].<!-- no evidence he took out Canadian citizenship --><ref name= winter>{{Cite news |last=Horwitz |first=Jane |date=2007-01-31 |title=This Winter, No Discontent As Richard III |language=en-US |newspaper= The Washington Post |url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/30/AR2007013001747.html |access-date=2023-05-03 |issn=0190-8286}}</ref> His most famous role as the vampire-turned police detective [[Nick Knight (Forever Knight)|Nick Knight]] in the Canadian television series ''[[Forever Knight]]''.


==Early life and training==
==Early life and training==
Geraint Wyn Davies was born on 20 April 1957 in [[Swansea]], Wales, the son of a [[Congregational church|Congregationalist]] Christian preacher and a school teacher. At the age of 7 he moved with his family from [[Haverfordwest]], [[Pembrokeshire]] to Canada, where he attended [[Upper Canada College]]. He first acted at age 12, appearing in a school production of ''[[Lord of the Flies]]''. He went on to study at the [[University of Western Ontario]], where he studied economics before [[dropping out]] to pursue an acting career.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.thestar.com/article/1001636--geraint-wyn-davies-it-s-good-to-be-the-king|title=Geraint Wyn Davies: It's good to be the king|date=3 June 2011|publisher=[[Toronto Star]]|author=Richard Ouzounian}}</ref> His professional stage debut was in 1976 in Quebec City, when at 19 he appeared in ''[[The Fantasticks]]'', ''[[Red Emma]]'' and ''[[A Midsummer Night's Dream]]''.{{citation needed|date=December 2015}}
Geraint Wyn Davies was born on 20 April 1957 in [[Swansea]], Wales, the son of a [[Congregational church|Congregationalist]] Christian preacher and a school teacher. At the age of 7 he moved with his family from [[Haverfordwest]], [[Pembrokeshire]] to Canada, where he attended [[Upper Canada College]]. He first acted at age 12, appearing in a school production of ''[[Lord of the Flies]]''. He went on to study at the [[University of Western Ontario]], where he studied economics before [[dropping out]] to pursue an acting career.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.thestar.com/article/1001636--geraint-wyn-davies-it-s-good-to-be-the-king|title=Geraint Wyn Davies: It's good to be the king|date=3 June 2011 |publisher= | work= [[Toronto Star]]| first= Richard | last= Ouzounian}}</ref>


==Stage career==
==Career==
===Acting===
{{one source|section|date=December 2015}}
Davies moved from Quebec to London's Centre Stage theatre company, and later played the lead in ''The Last Englishman'' with the British Actors Theatre Company. He spent two seasons with Theatr Clwyd, touring Britain in ''Enemy of the People'' and ''[[Hamlet]]'' (for which he received the Regional Theatre Best Actor award), and a season with the Chichester Festival, in ''[[Henry VIII (play)|Henry VIII]]''. In Canada he appeared over several seasons with the [[Shaw Festival]] and [[Stratford Festival of Canada]]. He gained a reputation for his performances in ''The Music Cure'', ''Candida'', ''[[Cyrano de Bergerac (play)|Cyrano de Bergereac]]'', ''The Vortex'', ''Goodnight Disgrace'', ''[[Henry V (play)|Henry V]]'' and ''[[The Three Musketeers]]''. He sang his way through the Rodgers and Hart musical ''[[The Boys from Syracuse]]''.
His professional stage debut was in 1976 in [[Quebec City]], when at age 19 he appeared in ''[[The Fantasticks]]'', ''[[Red Emma]]'', and ''[[A Midsummer Night's Dream]]''.{{citation needed|date=December 2015}} He relocated from Quebec to London's Centre Stage theatre company, and later played the lead in ''The Last Englishman'' with the British Actors Theatre Company. He spent two seasons with Theatr Clwyd, touring Britain in ''Enemy of the People'' and ''[[Hamlet]]'' (for which he received the Regional Theatre Best Actor award), and a season with the Chichester Festival, in ''[[Henry VIII (play)|Henry VIII]]''. In Canada, he appeared over several seasons with the [[Shaw Festival]] and [[Stratford Festival of Canada]]. He gained a reputation for his performances in ''The Music Cure'', ''Candida'', ''[[Cyrano de Bergerac (play)|Cyrano de Bergerac]]'', ''The Vortex'', ''Goodnight Disgrace'', ''[[Henry V (play)|Henry V]]'', and ''[[The Three Musketeers]]''. He sang his way through the Rodgers and Hart musical ''[[The Boys from Syracuse]]''. Other stage performances include ''My Fat Friend'' in Los Angeles and ''[[Sleuth (play)|Sleuth]]'' (with [[Patrick Macnee]]) in Toronto. In 2004, he appeared in [[Washington, D.C.]], in the title role of ''[[Cyrano de Bergerac (play)|Cyrano de Bergerac]]''.<ref>[https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A13517-2004Jun28.html "From 'Lear' To 'Cyrano', Just Following His Nose"], washingtonpost.com; accessed 2 December 2015.</ref>


In April 1996, Davies appeared as Petruchio in Shakespeare's ''[[The Taming of The Shrew]]'', directed by Patrick Tucker of the Original Shakespeare Company. This three-performance run was presented as Shakespeare's own players may have done&mdash;with sparse rehearsal, eclectic costuming, and rotating roles. In Spring 1998, he appeared in the Moises Kaufmann production ''Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde'' at the [[Mark Taper Forum]] in Los Angeles. ''Gross Indecency'' earned the Garland Award for "Best Ensemble Cast from Backstage West" that year. In August 1999, he starred in [[Leon Pownall]]'s one-man show ''An Evening with Dylan Thomas'' at the Atlantic Theatre Festival in [[Nova Scotia]], Canada. The following summer he returned to the Atlantic Theatre Festival in Pownall's ''Dylan Thomas and Shakespeare: In the Envy of Some Greatness''. August 2001 saw the completion of Pownall's [[Dylan Thomas]] trilogy with ''Stranger in Paradise''. In mid-2002, he returned to the Stratford Festival Theatre's main stage in ''[[My Fair Lady]]'', as Henry Higgins, a role he alternated with [[Colm Feore]]. He reprised the role of [[Dylan Thomas]] at the Festival's Studio Theatre, and returned to the Atlantic Theatre Festival in August 2003 to perform ''[[Hughie]]'' (a one-act play by [[Eugene O'Neill]]). The evening was topped off by a presentation of ''The Sermon'' by [[David Mamet]].
Other performances include ''My Fat Friend'' in Los Angeles and ''[[Sleuth (play)|Sleuth]]'' with Patrick Macnee in Toronto. In 2004 he appeared in [[Washington, D.C.]] in the title roles of ''[[Cyrano de Bergerac (play)|Cyrano de Bergerac]]'' .<ref>[https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A13517-2004Jun28.html "From 'Lear' To 'Cyrano', Just Following His Nose"], washingtonpost.com; accessed 2 December 2015.</ref>


In 2004, Davies performed at the Lincoln in New York City as Edmund to [[Christopher Plummer]]'s ''[[King Lear]]''. In the summer of 2004, he starred in the title role of ''Cyrano'' in Barry Kornhauser's adaptation of ''[[Cyrano de Bergerac (play)|Cyrano de Bergerac]]'' at The Shakespeare Theatre in Washington, D.C., for which he won the [[Helen Hayes]] Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Resident Play.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=Shakespeare Theatre Company |url=http://www.shakespearetheatre.org |access-date=2023-05-03 |website= shakespearetheatre.org}}</ref> The next year, in 2005, he played [[Dylan Thomas]] for seven weeks in ''Do Not Go Gentle'' at the Arclight Theatre in New York City. While there, he did a reading of [[Tennessee Williams]]'s letters at the New York Public Library, and performed in a reading of [[Eugene O'Neill]]'s ''Days Without End''. In September 2005, he joined in a reading of [[R. L. Stevenson]]'s ''Treasure Island'' in Washington, D.C., and in October, took part in a staged reading of a new play by [[Austin Pendleton]] entitled ''H6R3'', which blends Shakespeare's plays ''[[Henry VI (play)|Henry VI]]'' and ''[[Richard III (play)|Richard III]]''.
In April 1996, Davies appeared as Petruchio in Shakespeare's ''[[The Taming of The Shrew]]'', directed by Patrick Tucker of the Original Shakespeare Company. This three-performance run was presented as Shakespeare's own players may have done - with sparse rehearsal, eclectic costuming and rotating roles. In Spring 1998 he appeared in the Moises Kaufmann production ''Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde'' at the [[Mark Taper Forum]] in Los Angeles. ''Gross Indecency'' earned the Garland Award for "Best Ensemble Cast from Backstage West" that year.{{citation needed|date=December 2015}}


In 2006, he returned to The Shakespeare Theatre in [[Washington, D.C.]], to perform Don Armado in Michael Kahn's 1960s version of Shakespeare's ''[[Love's Labour's Lost]]''. Following the American run, the play moved to the [[Royal Shakespeare Company]] at [[Stratford-Upon-Avon]] in the UK for a limited run. He was nominated but did not win The Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor, Resident Play for Don Armado.<ref name=":0" /> While in D.C., he participated in a reading of ''London Assurance'' by [[Dion Boucicault]].
In August 1999 Davies starred in [[Leon Pownall]]'s one-man show ''An Evening with Dylan Thomas'' at the Atlantic Theatre Festival in [[Nova Scotia]], Canada. The following summer he returned to the Atlantic Theatre Festival in Pownall's ''Dylan Thomas and Shakespeare: In the Envy of Some Greatness''. August 2001 saw the completion of Pownall's Dylan Thomas trilogy with ''Stranger in Paradise''. In mid-2002, he returned to the Stratford Festival Theatre's main stage in ''[[My Fair Lady]]'', as Henry Higgins, a role he alternated with [[Colm Feore]]. He reprised the role of [[Dylan Thomas]] at the Festival's Studio Theatre, and returned to the Atlantic Theatre Festival in August 2003 to perform ''[[Hughie]]'' (a one-act play by [[Eugene O'Neill]]). The evening was topped off by a presentation of ''The Sermon'' by [[David Mamet]].{{citation needed|date=December 2015}}


Early in 2007, Davies headlined as ''Richard III'' by Shakespeare at The Shakespeare Theatre in Washington, D.C. He, along with friend [[Brent Carver]], opened Toronto's CanStage production of ''The Elephant Man'' in mid-October. In 2008, he returned to Ontario's Stratford Festival to appear in ''Hamlet'' (as Polonius) and ''Fuente Ovejuna'' (as the King). He followed the Stratford season playing the Duke at the Red Bull Theater (NYC) production of ''Women Beware Women''. He returned to Stratford in 2009, playing Duncan in ''[[Macbeth]]'', Caesar in ''[[Julius Caesar (play)|Julius Caesar]]'' and Bottom in ''A Midsummer Night's Dream''. For the 2010 Stratford Festival season, he portrayed King Arthur in ''[[Camelot (musical)|Camelot]]'' and Falstaff in ''[[Merry Wives of Windsor]]''. The 2011 season featured him again in a singing role as King Arthur.
2004 saw Davies appear at the Lincoln in New York as Edmund to [[Christopher Plummer]]'s ''[[King Lear]]''.


For the Stratford Festival's 60th season in 2013, Davies portrayed Duke Vincentio in ''[[Measure for Measure]]'' and the Earl of Leicester in ''[[Mary Stuart (Schiller play)|Mary Stuart]]''. The following year, he continued at the Stratford Festival, portraying Antony in ''[[Antony & Cleopatra]]'' and the Cook in ''[[Mother Courage]]''. For the 2015 season, he portrayed Claudius in ''Hamlet'', and Johann Wilhelm Mobius in ''[[The Physicists]]''. He played [[Prospero]] in ''[[The Tempest]]'' in the 2014-2015 season of The Shakespeare Theatre of Washington, D.C.<ref name=":0"/>
In the summer of 2004 he starred in the title role of ''Cyrano'' in Barry Kornhauser's adaptation of ''[[Cyrano de Bergerac (play)|Cyrano de Bergerac]]'' at The Shakespeare Theatre in Washington, D.C., for which he won the [[Helen Hayes]] Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Resident Play.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|title = http://www.shakespearetheatre.org|url = http://www.shakespearetheatre.org|website = www.shakespearetheatre.org|access-date = 23 February 2016}}</ref>


===Audiobooks===
The next year, in 2005, he was Dylan Thomas for seven weeks in ''Do Not Go Gentle'' at the [[Arclight Theatre]] in New York City. While there he did a reading of [[Tennessee Williams]]'s letters at the New York Public Library, and performed in a reading of [[Eugene O'Neill]]'s ''Days Without End''. In September 2005, he joined in a reading of [[R. L. Stevenson]]'s ''Treasure Island'' in Washington, D.C., and in October took part in a staged reading of a new play by [[Austin Pendleton]] entitled ''H6R3'', which blends Shakespeare's plays ''[[Henry VI (play)|Henry VI]]'' and ''[[Richard III (play)|Richard III]]''.{{citation needed|date=December 2015}}
He has voiced two audiobooks: ''Great American Suspense: Five Unabridged Classics'' and ''Great Classic Hauntings: Six Unabridged Stories''.{{citation needed|date=December 2023}}


===Directing===
In 2006, he returned to The Shakespeare Theatre in [[Washington, D.C.]] to perform Don Armado in Michael Kahn's 1960s version of Shakespeare's ''[[Love's Labor's Lost]]''. Following the American run the play moved to the [[Royal Shakespeare Company]] at [[Stratford-Upon-Avon]] in the UK for a limited run. He was nominated but did not win The Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor, Resident Play for Don Armado.<ref name=":0" />
Davies has directed several episodes of ''Forever Knight'', ''Black Harbour'', ''Pit Pony'', ''Power Play'' and ''North of 60''.<ref name=director>{{cite web| url= https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0943870/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1 |title= Geraint Wyn Davies | work= imdb.com| accessdate= 9 December 2015}}</ref><ref name=filmr>{{cite web| url= http://www.filmreference.com/film/46/Geraint-Wyn-Davies.html| title= Geraint Wyn Davies biography| work= filmreference.com| accessdate= 9 December 2015}}</ref>


===Music performance===
While in D.C. he participated in a reading of ''London Assurance'' by [[Dion Boucicault]].{{citation needed|date=December 2015}}
In ''Forever Knight'', Wyn Davies played the piano in the loft and co-wrote a song for the "Baby Baby" episode; he was featured in one of the selections on the first ''Forever Knight'' CD.


Davies produced a CD of his own works, ''Bar Talk'', which is sold through his fan club with the proceeds going to a variety of charities such as [[Alex's Lemonade Stand]] Foundation, Children's Hospital Foundation in Washington, D.C., the Atlantic Theatre Festival of Wolfville and [[The Stratford Festival]]'s Shakespeare School in Stratford, Ontario.
Early in 2007 he headlined as ''Richard III'' by Shakespeare at The Shakespeare Theatre in Washington, D.C. He, along with friend [[Brent Carver]], opened Toronto's CanStage production of ''The Elephant Man'' in mid-October. In 2008, he returned to Ontario's Stratford Festival to appear in ''Hamlet'' (as Polonius) and ''Fuente Ovejuna'' (as the King). He followed the Stratford season playing the Duke at the Red Bull Theater (NYC) production of ''Women Beware Women''. He returned to Stratford in 2009, playing Duncan in ''[[Macbeth]]'', Caesar in ''[[Julius Caesar (play)|Julius Caesar]]'' and Bottom in ''A Midsummer Night’s Dream''. For the 2010 Stratford Festival season, he portrayed King Arthur in ''[[Camelot (musical)|Camelot]]'' and Falstaff in ''[[Merry Wives of Windsor]]''. The 2011 season featured him again in a singing role as King Arthur.{{citation needed|date=December 2015}}


==Personal life==
For the Stratford Festival's 60th season in 2013, Davies portrayed Duke Vincentio in ''[[Measure for Measure]]'' and the Earl of Leicester in ''[[Mary Stuart (play)|Mary Stuart]]''. The following year, he continued at the Stratford Festival, portraying Antony in ''[[Antony & Cleopatra]]'' and the Cook in ''[[Mother Courage]]''. For the 2015 season, he portrayed Claudius in ''Hamlet'', and Johann Wilhelm Mobius in ''[[The Physicists]]''.
Wyn Davies was married to Canadian artist Alana Guinn from 1985 to 2006. They have two children.{{Citation needed |date=June 2023}} In August 2011, he married actress Claire Lautier.

He played Prospero in The Tempest in the 2014-2015 season of The Shakespeare Theatre of Washington, D.C.<ref name=":0"/>

He has voiced two audio books, ''Great American Suspense: Five Unabridged Classics'' and ''Great Classic Hauntings: Six Unabridged Stories''.{{citation needed|date=December 2015}}


==Filmography==
==Filmography==
Line 67: Line 65:
*''The Boys from Syracuse'' (1986) - Antipholus of Syracuse
*''The Boys from Syracuse'' (1986) - Antipholus of Syracuse
*''Learning to Fly'' (1986) - Young pilot
*''Learning to Fly'' (1986) - Young pilot
*''Daughters of the Country'' (1987) - Angus
*''IKWE: Daughters of the Country'' (1987) - Angus
*''The Taming of the Shrew'' (1988) - Hortensio
*''The Taming of the Shrew'' (1988) - Hortensio
*''[[Bionic Showdown: The Six Million Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman]]'' (1989) - Allan Devlin
*''[[Bionic Showdown: The Six Million Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman]]'' (1989) - Allan Devlin
*''{{Interlanguage link multi|Terror Stalks the Class Reunion|fr|3=Pour le meilleur et pour le pire (téléfilm, 1992)|lt=Terror Stalks the Class Reunion}}'' (1992) - Anton/Tony
*''{{Interlanguage link|Terror Stalks the Class Reunion|fr|3=Pour le meilleur et pour le pire (téléfilm, 1992)|lt=Terror Stalks the Class Reunion}}'' (1992) - Anton/Tony
*''Hush Little Baby'' (1993) - Dr. Martin Nolan
*''Hush Little Baby'' (1993) - Dr. Martin Nolan
*''Other Women's Children'' (1993) - Matt Stewart
*''Other Women's Children'' (1993) - Matt Stewart
Line 79: Line 77:
*''[[One of the Hollywood Ten]]'' (2000) - Michael Wilson
*''[[One of the Hollywood Ten]]'' (2000) - Michael Wilson
*''[[Trudeau (film)|Trudeau]]'' (2002) - Premier William G. Davis
*''[[Trudeau (film)|Trudeau]]'' (2002) - Premier William G. Davis
*''[[American Psycho II: All American Girl]]'' (2002) - Daniels
*''[[American Psycho 2]]'' (2002) - Daniels
*''[[Cube 2: Hypercube]]'' (2002) - Simon Grady
*''[[Cube 2: Hypercube]]'' (2002) - Simon Grady
*''[[The Wild Dogs]]'' (2002) - Colin
*''[[The Wild Dogs]]'' (2002) - Colin
Line 86: Line 84:
*''Pavane'' (2008) - Phil
*''Pavane'' (2008) - Phil
* ''[[Antony and Cleopatra (2015 film)|Antony and Cleopatra]]'' (2015) — Antony
* ''[[Antony and Cleopatra (2015 film)|Antony and Cleopatra]]'' (2015) — Antony
*''[[Antony and Cleopatra (2015 film)|Hamlet]]'' (2016) - Claudius
*''The Merry Wives of Windsor'' (2020) - Falstaff
*''The Scottish Play'' (2020) - Hugh Painter


==Television==
==Television==
Line 95: Line 96:
*''[[Airwolf]]'' (1987) as Major Mike Rivers (24 episodes)
*''[[Airwolf]]'' (1987) as Major Mike Rivers (24 episodes)
*''[[Dracula: The Series]]'' (1990–91) as Klaus Helsing (5 episodes)
*''[[Dracula: The Series]]'' (1990–91) as Klaus Helsing (5 episodes)
*''[[Highlander: The Series]]'' (1993) as Michael Moore/Quentin Barnes
*''[[Forever Knight]]'' (1992–96) as Det. Nicholas 'Nick' Knight/Nicholas de Brabant (70 episodes)
*''[[Forever Knight]]'' (1992–96) as Det. Nicholas 'Nick' Knight/Nicholas de Brabant (70 episodes)
*''[[RoboCop (Canadian TV series)]]'' (1994) as Martin (episode: "Provision 22")
*''[[Black Harbour]]'' (1996–99) as Nick Haskell (34 episodes)
*''[[Black Harbour]]'' (1996–99) as Nick Haskell (34 episodes)
*''[[The Outer Limits (1995 TV series)|The Outer Limits]]'' (1996–2001) as David / Sheriff Grady Markham (2 episodes)
*''[[The Outer Limits (1995 TV series)|The Outer Limits]]'' (1996–2001) as David / Sheriff Grady Markham (2 episodes)
*''[[Tracker (TV series)|Tracker]]'' (2001–2002) as Zin (12 episodes)
*''[[Robocop: Prime Directives]]'' (2001) (TV mini-series) as Dr. David Kaydick
*''[[Tracker (Canadian TV series)|Tracker]]'' (2001–2002) as Zin (12 episodes)
*''[[Slings and Arrows]]'' (2005) as Henry Breedlove (5 episodes)
*''[[Slings and Arrows]]'' (2005) as Henry Breedlove (5 episodes)
*''[[24 (TV series)|24]]'' (2006) as [[Minor characters in 24#24: Season 5|James Nathanson]] (6 episodes)
*''[[24 (TV series)|24]]'' (2006) as [[Minor characters in 24#24: Season 5|James Nathanson]] (6 episodes)
*''[[ReGenesis]]'' (2007–2008) as Carleton Riddlemeyer (18 episodes)
*''[[ReGenesis]]'' (2007–2008) as Carleton Riddlemeyer (18 episodes)
*''[[Murdoch Mysteries]]'' (2008 & 2013) as Sir [[Arthur Conan Doyle]] (3 episodes)<ref>[http://thefiveeight.com/murdochmysteries/epguide6.html Murdoch Mysteries infosite], thefiveeight.com; accessed 2 December 2015.</ref>
*''[[Murdoch Mysteries]]'' (2008, 2013) as Sir [[Arthur Conan Doyle]] (3 episodes)<ref>[http://thefiveeight.com/murdochmysteries/epguide6.html Murdoch Mysteries infosite], thefiveeight.com; accessed 2 December 2015.</ref>
*''[[Frankie Drake Mysteries]]'' (2021) as Ned Drake (one episode)
*''[[Frankie Drake Mysteries]]'' (2021) as Ned Drake (one episode)

==Directing==
Davies has directed several episodes of ''Forever Knight'', ''Black Harbour'', ''Pit Pony'', ''Power Play'' and ''North of 60''.<ref name=director>[https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0943870/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1 Geraint Wyn Davies profile]; imdb.com; accessed 9 December 2015.</ref><ref name=filmr>[http://www.filmreference.com/film/46/Geraint-Wyn-Davies.html Geraint Wyn Davies biography], filmreference.com; accessed 9 December 2015.</ref>

==Music==
{{BLP unsourced section|date=February 2015}}
In ''Forever Knight'', Wyn Davies played the piano in the loft and co-wrote a song for the "Baby Baby" episode; he was featured in one of the selections on the first ''Forever Knight'' CD. He has appeared in several musicals, notably as Henry Higgins in ''My Fair Lady'' in [[Stratford, Ontario]].

Wyn Davies produced a CD of his own works, ''Bar Talk'', which is sold through his fan club with the proceeds going to a variety of charities such as [[Alex's Lemonade Stand]] Foundation, Children's Hospital Foundation in Washington D.C., the Atlantic Theatre Festival of Wolfville and The Stratford Festival's Shakespeare School (Stratford, Ontario).

==Personal life==
Wyn Davies was married to Canadian artist Alana Guinn from 1985 to 2006. They have two children, daughter Pyper and son Galen.{{cn}}

On 13 June 2006, Davies became an American citizen, having been sworn in by Supreme Court Justice [[Ruth Bader Ginsburg]].<ref name="horwitz">Horwitz, Jane. "This Winter, No Discontent As Richard III", ''[[Washington Post]]'', 31 January 2007.<br>[https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/30/AR2007013001747.html Report of actor's naturalization as citizen of the United States], washingtonpost.com; accessed 9 December 2015.</ref>

In August 2011, he married actress Claire Lautier.{{citation needed|date=December 2015}}


==References==
==References==
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{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Davies, Geraintwyn}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Davies, Geraint Wyn}}
[[Category:1957 births]]
[[Category:1957 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
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[[Category:American male stage actors]]
[[Category:American male stage actors]]
[[Category:American male television actors]]
[[Category:American male television actors]]
[[Category:American people of Welsh descent]]
[[Category:British male film actors]]
[[Category:Canadian male film actors]]
[[Category:British male stage actors]]
[[Category:Canadian male stage actors]]
[[Category:British male television actors]]
[[Category:Canadian male television actors]]
[[Category:British people of Welsh descent]]
[[Category:Welsh emigrants to Canada]]
[[Category:Welsh emigrants to Canada]]
[[Category:People from Haverfordwest]]
[[Category:Welsh expatriates in Canada]]
[[Category:Welsh emigrants to the United States]]
[[Category:British expatriate male actors in the United States]]
[[Category:Actors from Haverfordwest]]
[[Category:Male actors from Swansea]]
[[Category:Male actors from Swansea]]
[[Category:Upper Canada College alumni]]
[[Category:Upper Canada College alumni]]
[[Category:Canadian expatriate male actors in the United States]]
[[Category:20th-century British male actors]]
[[Category:Canadian male Shakespearean actors]]
[[Category:20th-century Welsh male actors]]
[[Category:20th-century Canadian male actors]]
[[Category:21st-century British male actors]]
[[Category:21st-century Canadian male actors]]
[[Category:21st-century Welsh male actors]]
[[Category:21st-century American male actors]]
[[Category:Male actors from Pembrokeshire]]

Latest revision as of 02:55, 30 December 2024

Geraint Wyn Davies
Davies in 2004
Born (1957-04-20) 20 April 1957 (age 67)
Swansea, Wales
Alma materUniversity of Western Ontario
Occupations
  • Actor
  • director
  • musician
Years active1976–present
Spouses
Alana Guinn
(m. 1985; div. 2006)
Claire Lautier
(m. 2011)
Children2

Geraint Wyn Davies (/ˈɡɛrnt/ GHERR-eyent, Welsh: [ˈɡɛraint]; born 20 April 1957) is a British-American stage, film and television actor. Born in Wales and educated in Canada, he became a citizen of the United States on 13 June 2006, having been sworn in by then Associate Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.[1] His most famous role as the vampire-turned police detective Nick Knight in the Canadian television series Forever Knight.

Early life and training

[edit]

Geraint Wyn Davies was born on 20 April 1957 in Swansea, Wales, the son of a Congregationalist Christian preacher and a school teacher. At the age of 7 he moved with his family from Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire to Canada, where he attended Upper Canada College. He first acted at age 12, appearing in a school production of Lord of the Flies. He went on to study at the University of Western Ontario, where he studied economics before dropping out to pursue an acting career.[2]

Career

[edit]

Acting

[edit]

His professional stage debut was in 1976 in Quebec City, when at age 19 he appeared in The Fantasticks, Red Emma, and A Midsummer Night's Dream.[citation needed] He relocated from Quebec to London's Centre Stage theatre company, and later played the lead in The Last Englishman with the British Actors Theatre Company. He spent two seasons with Theatr Clwyd, touring Britain in Enemy of the People and Hamlet (for which he received the Regional Theatre Best Actor award), and a season with the Chichester Festival, in Henry VIII. In Canada, he appeared over several seasons with the Shaw Festival and Stratford Festival of Canada. He gained a reputation for his performances in The Music Cure, Candida, Cyrano de Bergerac, The Vortex, Goodnight Disgrace, Henry V, and The Three Musketeers. He sang his way through the Rodgers and Hart musical The Boys from Syracuse. Other stage performances include My Fat Friend in Los Angeles and Sleuth (with Patrick Macnee) in Toronto. In 2004, he appeared in Washington, D.C., in the title role of Cyrano de Bergerac.[3]

In April 1996, Davies appeared as Petruchio in Shakespeare's The Taming of The Shrew, directed by Patrick Tucker of the Original Shakespeare Company. This three-performance run was presented as Shakespeare's own players may have done—with sparse rehearsal, eclectic costuming, and rotating roles. In Spring 1998, he appeared in the Moises Kaufmann production Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles. Gross Indecency earned the Garland Award for "Best Ensemble Cast from Backstage West" that year. In August 1999, he starred in Leon Pownall's one-man show An Evening with Dylan Thomas at the Atlantic Theatre Festival in Nova Scotia, Canada. The following summer he returned to the Atlantic Theatre Festival in Pownall's Dylan Thomas and Shakespeare: In the Envy of Some Greatness. August 2001 saw the completion of Pownall's Dylan Thomas trilogy with Stranger in Paradise. In mid-2002, he returned to the Stratford Festival Theatre's main stage in My Fair Lady, as Henry Higgins, a role he alternated with Colm Feore. He reprised the role of Dylan Thomas at the Festival's Studio Theatre, and returned to the Atlantic Theatre Festival in August 2003 to perform Hughie (a one-act play by Eugene O'Neill). The evening was topped off by a presentation of The Sermon by David Mamet.

In 2004, Davies performed at the Lincoln in New York City as Edmund to Christopher Plummer's King Lear. In the summer of 2004, he starred in the title role of Cyrano in Barry Kornhauser's adaptation of Cyrano de Bergerac at The Shakespeare Theatre in Washington, D.C., for which he won the Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Resident Play.[4] The next year, in 2005, he played Dylan Thomas for seven weeks in Do Not Go Gentle at the Arclight Theatre in New York City. While there, he did a reading of Tennessee Williams's letters at the New York Public Library, and performed in a reading of Eugene O'Neill's Days Without End. In September 2005, he joined in a reading of R. L. Stevenson's Treasure Island in Washington, D.C., and in October, took part in a staged reading of a new play by Austin Pendleton entitled H6R3, which blends Shakespeare's plays Henry VI and Richard III.

In 2006, he returned to The Shakespeare Theatre in Washington, D.C., to perform Don Armado in Michael Kahn's 1960s version of Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost. Following the American run, the play moved to the Royal Shakespeare Company at Stratford-Upon-Avon in the UK for a limited run. He was nominated but did not win The Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor, Resident Play for Don Armado.[4] While in D.C., he participated in a reading of London Assurance by Dion Boucicault.

Early in 2007, Davies headlined as Richard III by Shakespeare at The Shakespeare Theatre in Washington, D.C. He, along with friend Brent Carver, opened Toronto's CanStage production of The Elephant Man in mid-October. In 2008, he returned to Ontario's Stratford Festival to appear in Hamlet (as Polonius) and Fuente Ovejuna (as the King). He followed the Stratford season playing the Duke at the Red Bull Theater (NYC) production of Women Beware Women. He returned to Stratford in 2009, playing Duncan in Macbeth, Caesar in Julius Caesar and Bottom in A Midsummer Night's Dream. For the 2010 Stratford Festival season, he portrayed King Arthur in Camelot and Falstaff in Merry Wives of Windsor. The 2011 season featured him again in a singing role as King Arthur.

For the Stratford Festival's 60th season in 2013, Davies portrayed Duke Vincentio in Measure for Measure and the Earl of Leicester in Mary Stuart. The following year, he continued at the Stratford Festival, portraying Antony in Antony & Cleopatra and the Cook in Mother Courage. For the 2015 season, he portrayed Claudius in Hamlet, and Johann Wilhelm Mobius in The Physicists. He played Prospero in The Tempest in the 2014-2015 season of The Shakespeare Theatre of Washington, D.C.[4]

Audiobooks

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He has voiced two audiobooks: Great American Suspense: Five Unabridged Classics and Great Classic Hauntings: Six Unabridged Stories.[citation needed]

Directing

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Davies has directed several episodes of Forever Knight, Black Harbour, Pit Pony, Power Play and North of 60.[5][6]

Music performance

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In Forever Knight, Wyn Davies played the piano in the loft and co-wrote a song for the "Baby Baby" episode; he was featured in one of the selections on the first Forever Knight CD.

Davies produced a CD of his own works, Bar Talk, which is sold through his fan club with the proceeds going to a variety of charities such as Alex's Lemonade Stand Foundation, Children's Hospital Foundation in Washington, D.C., the Atlantic Theatre Festival of Wolfville and The Stratford Festival's Shakespeare School in Stratford, Ontario.

Personal life

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Wyn Davies was married to Canadian artist Alana Guinn from 1985 to 2006. They have two children.[citation needed] In August 2011, he married actress Claire Lautier.

Filmography

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Davies made his film debut in Deadly Harvest in 1977, and has since appeared in many films, among them RoboCop: Prime Directives (2000). In 2007 he appeared in a cameo in Nancy Drew and filmed a made-for-TV movie, Post Mortem for Lifetime.[5]

Television

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Davies was a regular in the cast of To Serve and Protect. Since Forever Knight he has appeared in several series. He has guest-starred in episodes of Katts and Dog, Highlander: The Series, Kung Fu: The Legend Continues, The Outer Limits, RoboCop: The Series, Diamonds, Sweating Bullets, 1-800-Missing, among others.[5]

References

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  1. ^ Horwitz, Jane (31 January 2007). "This Winter, No Discontent As Richard III". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  2. ^ Ouzounian, Richard (3 June 2011). "Geraint Wyn Davies: It's good to be the king". Toronto Star.
  3. ^ "From 'Lear' To 'Cyrano', Just Following His Nose", washingtonpost.com; accessed 2 December 2015.
  4. ^ a b c "Shakespeare Theatre Company". shakespearetheatre.org. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  5. ^ a b c "Geraint Wyn Davies". imdb.com. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  6. ^ "Geraint Wyn Davies biography". filmreference.com. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  7. ^ Murdoch Mysteries infosite, thefiveeight.com; accessed 2 December 2015.
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