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Brian
{{{credit}}}
Portrays: Jordan Duram (Caprica)
Silas Nash (Blood and Chrome)
Date of Birth: September 01,1961
Date of Death: Missing required parameter 1=month!
Age: 64
Nationality: USA USA
Related Media
@ BW Media

Warning: Default sort key "Markinson, Brian" overrides earlier default sort key "Brian".

Brian Markinson (born September 1, 1961) is an American actor of film and television who portrayed Jordan Duram on Caprica and Silas Nash on Blood and Chrome.[external 1] Born into a Jewish family in Brooklyn, New York, Markinson trained at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama in London and subsequently graduated from the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in 1983, where his classmates included Elias Koteas and Illeana Douglas.[external 2][external 3] He is married to Canadian Nancy Kerr, and their sons Isaac and Evan were born in Los Angeles in the late 1990s. In 1999, the family relocated to Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, where they have resided since.

Battlestar Galactica Work

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The producers praised Markinson's performance in the Caprica pilot, noting that he "carries a lot of weight" as an actor and brought a "great seriousness of purpose" to the role of Jordan Duram, elevating the character beyond a simple antagonist.[commentary 1][commentary 2] According to Caprica executive producer Tom Lieber, Markinson is a prolific actor in the Vancouver area, having appeared in nearly every major science fiction series filmed there, including The X-Files and Supernatural. Lieber affectionately refers to him as the "Old Yeller of Vancouver" for his reliability and consistent presence in local productions.[commentary 3]

In Blood and Chrome, Markinson returned to the Battlestar Galactica universe in an unrelated role as Commander Silas Nash.[external 4] This casting reunited him with several Caprica colleagues, including Zak Santiago, Carmen Moore, and John Pyper-Ferguson, all of whom portrayed different characters in the new production.

Career

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Theater

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Markinson began his professional career in the New York theater scene. On Broadway, he appeared in Neil Simon's Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award-winning Lost in Yonkers, where he replaced Kevin Spacey.[external 5] Off-Broadway, he performed in Jules Feiffer's Elliot Loves, which was directed by Mike Nichols.[external 6] This collaboration marked the beginning of an extensive professional relationship with Nichols that would span multiple decades.

In 2016, Markinson led the revival of Tony Kushner's Angels in America at the Arts Club Theatre Company in Vancouver, demonstrating his continued commitment to theater work alongside his screen career.[external 7] He has also performed in regional theaters across Canada throughout his career.

Film

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Markinson has appeared in a wide variety of feature films, frequently portraying authority figures or calculating villains. His notable film roles include a U.S. Attorney General in Shooter (2007), an unscrupulous industrialist in Godzilla (1998), and supporting roles in Enemy of the State (1998).[external 8]

Markinson became a favorite collaborator of director Mike Nichols, appearing in more than six of the late director's projects.[external 9] These films included Wolf (1994), Primary Colors (1998), the Emmy Award-winning miniseries Angels in America (2003), and Charlie Wilson's War (2007).

Between 1999 and 2001, Markinson appeared in three consecutive Woody Allen films in supporting character roles: Sweet and Lowdown (1999), Small Time Crooks (2000), and The Curse of the Jade Scorpion (2001).[external 10]

Television

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Canadian Television

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After relocating to Vancouver in 1999, Markinson established himself as a prominent figure in Canadian television. One of his most significant roles was as Police Chief Bill Jacobs on the CBC procedural drama Da Vinci's Inquest (2002–2005) and its spinoff Da Vinci's City Hall (2005–2006).[external 11]

In the science fiction series Continuum (2012–2015), Markinson portrayed Vancouver Police Inspector Jack Dillon, a pragmatic leader grappling with time-travel conspiracies.[external 12]

From 2020 to 2022, Markinson starred as Chuck "Buke" Bukansky in the APTN crime drama Tribal, which addressed Indigenous justice issues in Canada.[external 13]

American Television

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Markinson's early American television career consisted mainly of guest-starring roles on series such as Murphy Brown, L.A. Law, and the short-lived revival of Columbo.[external 14] He continued to work in American television with recurring roles on The L Word (Showtime, 2004–2009) and The Killing (AMC, 2011–2013; Netflix, 2014).[external 15]

In the sixth season of the critically acclaimed drama Mad Men (2013), Markinson played Dr. Arnold Rosen, a neighbor and friend of Don Draper (Jon Hamm) who remained unaware of Draper's relationship with Rosen's wife Sylvia (Linda Cardellini).[external 16]

More recently, Markinson appeared in the Netflix limited series Painkiller (2023), depicting pharmaceutical executive Howard Udell in a dramatization of the opioid crisis.[external 17]

Science Fiction Television

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Beyond his work in the Battlestar Galactica universe, Markinson has made significant contributions to science fiction television. He is particularly notable in the Star Trek franchise, having appeared in three of the four spinoff series. In Star Trek: The Next Generation, he portrayed Vorin in the seventh season episode "Homeward". In Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, he played Elias Giger in the fifth season episode "In the Cards".[external 18]

His most notable Star Trek appearance came in Star Trek: Voyager, where he holds the unique distinction of being one of only two actors (along with Jeffrey Combs) to play two different, completely unrelated characters in a single episode of a Star Trek series. In the first season episode "Faces", Markinson portrayed both Lieutenant Peter Durst and the Vidiian scientist Sulan.[external 19] The character of Durst was first introduced in the preceding episode "Cathexis" so that he would be a familiar face to viewers when Sulan grafted Durst's face onto his own in "Faces".[external 20]

Markinson's other genre television appearances include The X-Files, Dark Angel, Millennium, and Stargate SG-1.[commentary 4]

Awards and Recognition

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In 2008, Markinson received a Gemini Award nomination for Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Dramatic Program for his portrayal of James Roszko in the CTV television film Mayerthorpe.[external 21][external 22] The film, which depicted the tragic 2005 shooting of four Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers, attracted 1.3 million viewers and became the most-watched original Canadian drama of 2008.[external 23]

Markinson was also nominated for a Canadian Screen Award for his work in The Romeo Section.[external 24] He has received multiple Leo Award nominations throughout his career for his work in British Columbia productions.[external 25]

Personal Life

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Markinson is married to Nancy Kerr (full name Nancy Lynn Kerr), a Canadian. The couple has two sons, Isaac and Evan, who were both born in Los Angeles in the late 1990s.[external 26] In 1999, the family moved to Vancouver, British Columbia, where they have lived since, allowing Markinson to maintain an active presence in both the Canadian and American film and television industries.

Beyond his screen work, Markinson is an acting instructor at Railtown Actors Studio in Vancouver, where he teaches scene study classes.[external 27] Students have praised his "wealth of knowledge, experience, passion, and heart" as an instructor, noting his ability to bring "presence to the moment" and his connection to breath and body work in character development.

In 2016, Markinson directed Haberdashery Theatre Company's production of The Motherfucker with the Hat at The Firehall Arts Centre in Vancouver, demonstrating his continued engagement with theater beyond acting.[external 28]

References

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Commentary and Interviews

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  1. Podcast for Caprica pilot, timestamp 00:14:28
  2. Podcast for Caprica pilot, timestamp 00:36:23
  3. Podcast for "Blowback", timestamp 12:35
  4. Podcast for "Blowback", timestamp 12:35

External Sources

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  1. Brian Markinson (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  2. Brian Markinson - Biography (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  3. Brian Markinson Biography (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Fandango. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  4. Blood and Chrome (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Battlestar Wiki. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  5. Brian Markinson (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Tribal Cast. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  6. Brian Markinson, Instructor (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Railtown Actors Studio. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  7. Brian Markinson, Instructor (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Railtown Actors Studio. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  8. Brian Markinson Biography (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Fandango. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  9. Brian Markinson Movies & TV Shows List (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  10. Brian Markinson, Instructor (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Railtown Actors Studio. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  11. Brian Markinson Biography (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Fandango. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  12. Brian Markinson Biography (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Fandango. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  13. Who's who in First Nations investigative drama 'Tribal' (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). SBS What's On (2 March 2022). Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  14. Brian Markinson Biography (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Fandango. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  15. Brian Markinson Biography (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Fandango. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  16. Brian Markinson Movies & TV Shows List (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  17. Brian Markinson (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  18. Brian Markinson Biography (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Fandango. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  19. Brian Markinson (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  20. Star Trek Voyager S 1 E 13 "Faces" Trivia (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). TV Tropes (18 May 2023). Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  21. 23rd Gemini Awards (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Wikipedia (24 September 2025). Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  22. Brian Markinson (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Tribal Cast. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  23. Mayerthorpe movie reaches 1.3 million viewers (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). TV, eh? (12 February 2008). Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  24. Brian Markinson (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Tribal Cast. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  25. Brian Markinson Biography, Celebrity Facts and Awards (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). TV Guide. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  26. Who is Brian Markinson? Age, Height, Bio. Net Worth, Wife, & Children (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). American Star Buzz (1 December 2023). Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  27. Brian Markinson, Instructor (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Railtown Actors Studio. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
  28. Brian Markinson, Instructor (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Railtown Actors Studio. Retrieved on 8 February 2026.
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Brian
Role: Essay contributor
BSG Universe: Re-imagined Series
Date of Birth:
Date of Death: Missing required parameter 1=month! ,
Nationality: USA USA
[[IMDB:nm{{{imdb}}}|IMDb profile]]

Warning: Default sort key "Willems, Brian" overrides earlier default sort key "Markinson, Brian".

Brian Willems is an American academic and writer who contributed the essay "When the Non-Human Knows Its Own Death" to Battlestar Galactica and Philosophy: Knowledge Here Begins Out There (Blackwell Publishing, 2008).[external 1] Born in Minnesota,[external 2] he teaches literature and film theory at the University of Split in Croatia, where he holds the rank of Associate Professor, and completed his doctorate in Media and Communication at the European Graduate School in Saas-Fee, Switzerland.[external 3][external 4]

Academic career

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The essay Willems contributed to the BSG philosophy volume, edited by Jason T. Eberl, appears in Part II of the collection ("I, Cylon: Are Toasters People, Too?") on pages 87–98, at the time of publication Willems was completing his doctorate at the European Graduate School.[external 5]

His first book, Hopkins and Heidegger (Continuum, 2009), examined cross-sections between the poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins and the philosophy of Martin Heidegger, focused on Hopkins' concepts of inscape and instress in relation to Heidegger's accounts of appropriation (Ereignis) and the fourfold (das Geviert).[external 6] His 2010 monograph Facticity, Poverty and Clones: On Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go (Atropos Press) was the first book-length study of Kazuo Ishiguro's 2005 novel, reading its treatment of clone characters through continental philosophy to argue for a reconception of ontological difference between human and non-human subjects.[external 7] He also co-edited The First Ten Years of English Studies in Split (Split University, 2011).[external 8]

Shooting the Moon (Zero Books, 2015) applied methods from object-oriented philosophy to cinematic representations of lunar landings, mapping the different ways film constructs indirect access to objects.[external 9] Speculative Realism and Science Fiction (Edinburgh University Press, 2017) placed science fiction by Cormac McCarthy, Neil Gaiman, China Miéville, and Kim Stanley Robinson alongside speculative materialist philosophers including Graham Harman, Quentin Meillassoux, and Jane Bennett to develop and test arguments against philosophical anthropocentrism.[external 10] Zero Books also published his experimental novella Henry, Henry that year.[external 11]

Sham Ruins: A User's Guide (Routledge, 2022) traced the concept of the fake Gothic ruin from 18th-century English landscape gardens and extended it into a general principle for understanding objects that impose meaning where such meaning does not belong.[external 12] In 2023 he co-edited Global Manifestos for the 21st Century (foreword by Yanis Varoufakis) with Nicol Barria-Asenjo and Slavoj Žižek.[external 13] His first novel, The Surviving Cells, was published by Les Fugitives in 2025.[external 14]

Willems translates from Croatian into English, including work by Jurica Pavičić.[external 15] He has directed the Studia Mediterranea centre at the University of Split, guest lectured in the UK, USA, the Middle East, and continental Europe, and curated exhibitions of new media artists in Croatia and Slovenia.[external 16]

References

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External Sources

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  1. Battlestar Galactica and Philosophy: Knowledge Here Begins Out There (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Wiley. Retrieved on 9 June 2026.
  2. Brian Willems (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Les Fugitives. Retrieved on 9 June 2026.
  3. Sham Ruins: A User's Guide (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Routledge. Retrieved on 9 June 2026.
  4. Facticity, Poverty and Clones: On Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). AbeBooks. Retrieved on 9 June 2026.
  5. Jason T. Eberl (ed.), Battlestar Galactica and Philosophy: Knowledge Here Begins Out There (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). PhilPapers. Retrieved on 9 June 2026.
  6. Hopkins and Heidegger (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Amazon. Retrieved on 9 June 2026.
  7. Facticity, Poverty and Clones: On Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). AbeBooks. Retrieved on 9 June 2026.
  8. Speculative Realism and Science Fiction (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). AbeBooks. Retrieved on 9 June 2026.
  9. Brian Willems (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Zer0 Books. Retrieved on 9 June 2026.
  10. Speculative Realism and Science Fiction (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Edinburgh Scholarship Online. Retrieved on 9 June 2026.
  11. Brian Willems (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Zer0 Books. Retrieved on 9 June 2026.
  12. Sham Ruins: A User's Guide (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Routledge. Retrieved on 9 June 2026.
  13. Brian Willems (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Les Fugitives. Retrieved on 9 June 2026.
  14. Brian Willems (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Les Fugitives. Retrieved on 9 June 2026.
  15. Brian Willems (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Les Fugitives. Retrieved on 9 June 2026.
  16. Brian Willems (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Les Fugitives. Retrieved on 9 June 2026.

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If an article link referred you here, you might want to go back and fix it to point directly to the intended page. Also, if you wanted to search for the term "Brian", click here.