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Created page with 'Please choose a specific reference for the name, '''Patrick''': * David Patrick Green, the actor who potrayed Xeno Fenner in the Re-imagined Series. * [[G. Patrick C…'
 
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Please choose a specific reference for the name, '''Patrick''':
{{DisambigTab
 
|David Patrick Green
* [[David Patrick Green]], the actor who potrayed [[Xeno Fenner]] in the [[Re-imagined Series]].
|G. Patrick Currie
* [[G. Patrick Currie]], the actor who portrayed [[Enzo]] in the Re-imagined Series.
|James Patrick Stuart
* [[James Patrick Stuart]], the second and final actor who potrayed [[Doctor Zee]] in ''[[Galactica 1980]]''.
|Patrick Gallagher
* [[Patrick "Flick" Harrison]], the filmmaker, journalist and cameraman who portrayed [[Bell]] in the Re-imagined Series.
|Patrick Gilmore
* [[Patrick Macnee]], the actor who portrayed Count [[Iblis]] in the [[Original Series]].
|Patrick "Flick" Harrison
* [[Patrick Massett]], ''[[Caprica (series)|Caprica]]'' writer.
|Patrick Macnee
 
|Patrick Massett}}
{{disambig}}
[[fr:Patrick]]

Latest revision as of 18:09, 8 December 2024

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Patrick
Patrick
{{{credit}}}
Portrays: Xeno Fenner
Date of Birth:
Date of Death: Missing required parameter 1=month! ,
Nationality: CAN CAN
Related Media
@ BW Media


David Patrick Green is the Canadian actor who portrayed Xeno Fenner in "Dirty Hands".

Green graduated in 1989 from the University of Guelph with a degree in consumer studies, with the intention of working in the advertising field; additionally, he took his first acting class while studying at Guelph. His first job was a six-month stint selling cellphones, which at the time averaged $5,000. For a year after that, he backpacked through Europe, working as a ski instructor and ski shop employee in France in order to finance his personal expedition. Green then worked for three years in Canada as a collection agent, moving to Poland (near or in Warsaw) to work as an accounting manager for an advertising company.[1]

In 1996, he attended University of Southern California working for a Master of Business Administration degree, so as to advance his career with the Poland-based advertising company. Instead of returning to Warsaw, he worked as a management consultant in the tech industry prior to the dot-com crash, as he was attracted to the southern California sights.[1]

After the crash, the then-36 year old Green pursued his passion: acting.[1] Since then, he has appeared in skits for Jimmy Kimmel Live (in 2004), as well as in Veronica Mars (having read for the series six times before being booked)[1], CSI, and ER.

In February 2006, he began interning at Ulrich/Dawson/Kritzer Casting, having interned there for at least six months.[1]

References[edit]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Kendall, Rebecca (08 March 2006). "Follow that Dream," an interview with David Patrick Green (backup available on Archive.org) (in ). Retrieved on 27 Feburary 2007.



Patrick
Patrick
Portrays: Enzo
Date of Birth:
Date of Death: Missing required parameter 1=month! ,


Related Media
@ BW Media

Warning: Default sort key "Currie, G. Patrick" overrides earlier default sort key "Patrick".


G. Patrick Currie (also credited as Patrick Currie) is a television actor who portrayed Enzo in "The Passage" and "Deadlock."

Currie also worked in minor and supporting roles in other TV shows, including the Vancouver-filmed genre productions of Smallville, Stargate SG-1, Jeremiah, The Outer Limits and Millennium. Additional credits include Queer As Folk and Da Vinci's Inquest.



Patrick
Patrick
{{{credit}}}
Portrays: Doctor Zee
Date of Birth: June 16, 1968
Date of Death: Missing required parameter 1=month! ,
Age: 56
Nationality: USA USA
Related Media
@ BW Media

Warning: Default sort key "Stuart, James Patrick" overrides earlier default sort key "Currie, G. Patrick".


James Patrick Stuart (born June 16, 1968) is an American television actor.

Born in Encino, California, Stuart was born into a showbiz family, his father was Chad of the musical group, Chad and Jeremy.

As a child actor, Stuart went by the name Patrick Stuart, and took over the role of Doctor Zee in Galactica 1980 beginning with the episode "The Super Scouts, Part I." The change in actors was never explained by any on screen dialogue.

Since that time, Stuart has been prolific in television work, appearing in such diverse programs as Seinfeld, Judging Amy, CSI and Still Standing. He has also performed voiceover work for the TV series Duck Dodgers, the movie Cars and the video games Kingdom Hearts II and Call of Duty 2: Big Red One.

Stuart currently stars in the TV drama, The Closer.

Notes[edit]

Patrick
Patrick
{{{credit}}}
Portrays: Rafferty
Date of Birth: April 01, 1976
Date of Death: Missing required parameter 1=month! ,
Age: 48
Nationality: CAN CAN
Related Media
@ BW Media

Warning: Default sort key "Gilmore, Patrick" overrides earlier default sort key "Stuart, James Patrick".

Patrick Gilmore is the actor who portrays Rafferty in the Re-imagined Series episodes "Deadlock" and "Someone to Watch Over Me."

He also portrays Dale Volker on Stargate Universe and Trennan on the steampunk web series Riese the Series.

External links[edit]

Patrick
Patrick
{{{credit}}}
Portrays: Bell
Date of Birth:
Date of Death: Missing required parameter 1=month! ,
Nationality: CAN CAN
Related Media
@ BW Media


Patrick "Flick" Harrison, who plays D'anna Biers' cameraman, is actually a filmmaker, journalist, and cameraman. He wrote about the experience on his blog[1]. During the episode's filming, Harrison's footage of interviews and other events shot as Bell are incorporated into the final documentary. He explains that having a person experienced in actual camera work was important in being "Bell."

External Links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. Flick on Battlestar Galactica (backup available on Archive.org) . (27 January 2024). Retrieved on 2006-12-12.



Patrick
Patrick
{{{credit}}}
Portrays: Count Iblis
Date of Birth: February 6, 1922
Date of Death: June 25, 2015
Age at Death: 93
Nationality: UK UK
Related Media
@ BW Media

Warning: Default sort key "Macnee, Patrick" overrides earlier default sort key "Gilmore, Patrick".


Early Life and Career[edit]

Patrick Macnee (born Daniel Patrick Macnee on February 6, 1922 in London, England, died June 25, 2015 in Rancho Mirage, CA) was a British stage, film and television actor.

Born and raised in a wealthy family with turbulent changes caused by his father's lifestyle, Macnee was raised by his mother, Dorothea Mary, and her female partner.

Graduating from Eton College (despite a near-expulsion due to his involvement in a gambling ring), Macnee began his career as an extra in the 1938 film, Pygmalion (starring the film's star and director, Leslie Howard). World War II interrupted his acting career as he served in the Royal Navy, after which Macnee entered into a drama school for additional training in Britain.

Macnee landed additional minor and extra roles in some of the first BBC televised movies in the latter 1940s, including Wuthering Heights, Macbeth, Othello and Hamlet. One of his earliest credited film roles was the 1951 production of Scrooge starring Alastair Sim, where he played the young Jacob Marley.

Seeking more substantial roles, Macnee left to work in Canada and the neighboring United States. From 1955 to 1960, he appeared mostly on Canadian and US television, chiefly in dramatic anthology series such as Playhouse 90, Alfred Hitchcock Presents and the first season Twilight Zone episode "Judgment Night" which starred Nehemiah Persoff. Another notable role was in the Kraft Television Theatre production of A Night To Remember about the sinking of the Titanic. Macnee played Thomas Andrews, the doomed builder and designer of the liner in a live broadcast that required 107 actors and 31 sets, described at the time as "the most complex live television show ever attempted."

The Avengers[edit]

Because he had failed to achieve notable stardom in the US, Macnee returned to England to co-produce an ambitious documentary series about Winston Churchill, The Valiant Years. He wasn't sure about continuing as an actor until he received the offer in 1960 that would change his life forever as John Steed, the derby-wearing, umbrella-carrying secret agent in the British TV series The Avengers. In the first season, Macnee largely played second-fiddle to the nominal star, Ian Hendry as Dr. David Keel. After Hendry's departure following the first season, Macnee became the first-billed star of the show, playing opposite a series of female partners, first with Honor Blackman (as the leather-suited Cathy Gale), followed by Diana Rigg (as Mrs. Emma Peel), and finally Linda Thorson (as Tara King). Macnee lent his costume designing skills to the series as well. The series ran from 1961 to 1969, and reached American audiences starting in 1966 when ABC began airing the episodes featuring Macnee and Rigg. Macnee subsequently reprised the character of Steed in The New Avengers, which ran from 1976 to 1977 in Britain. In the 1998 film remake of The Avengers he had a voice-only cameo as "Invisible Jones."

Return to the US[edit]

Following the end of The Avengers, Macnee returned to the US as his primary base, appearing in many American films and TV shows for the next three decades. His credits included such shows as Night Gallery and Columbo. He reunited with his Avengers co-star Diana Rigg in an episode of her short-lived 1973 sitcom Diana as an old flame of hers. His iconic status as John Steed also led to other spy-oriented projects such as a regular role in the short-lived spy series Gavilan (1982), the 1983 TV-movie Return Of The Man From U.N.C.L.E and the James Bond film, A View To A Kill. (1985) He also played Dr. Watson in three different Sherlock Holmes TV-movies between 1976 and 1992.

Galactica and Glen Larson[edit]

Macnee first worked for Glen A. Larson in an episode of Alias Smith And Jones and later The Hardy Boys. For the Original Series he was first hired to do the uncredited voice of the Imperious Leader and the opening narration that began, "There are those who believe, that life here began out there." This led to him being cast as the mysterious Count Iblis in the two-part episode "War of the Gods," which became perhaps his most famous role outside that of John Steed.

After Galactica, Macnee also guested on the Larson co-created Magnum P.I. and had a recurring role on the 1997 Larson series NightMan.

Personal Life and Death[edit]

Macnee married his first wife, Barbara Douglas, in 1942. They had two children, Rupert and Jenny, and a grandson, Christopher ("Kit"). The divorced in 1956. In 1959, while working in the US, he became an American citizen. His second marriage (1965−1969) was to actress Kate Woodville, who appeared in the Star Trek episode "For The World Is Hollow And I Have Touched The Sky". His third marriage was to Baba Majos de Nagyzsenye, daughter of opera singer Ella Némethy. It lasted from 1988 until her death in 2007. The notable British television magician David Nixon was his cousin.

Macnee died in 2015 in Rancho Mirage, CA at age 93. Longtime friend Roger Moore tweeted, "We were mates from 1950s and I have so many happy memories of working with him. A true gent."

External links[edit]

Patrick
[[Image:|200px]]
Role: Writer
BSG Universe: Caprica
Date of Birth:
Date of Death: Missing required parameter 1=month! ,


IMDb profile

Warning: Default sort key "Massett, Patrick" overrides earlier default sort key "Macnee, Patrick".

Patrick Massett is a television writer, producer and actor. Massett will join the writing staff and production team of the Re-imagined Series spin-off Caprica.[1]

Massett and John Zinman produced such television shows as Veritas: The Quest and worked as Consulting Producer for both Friday Night Lights (which they were nominated in 2006 for a WGA Award) and Knight Rider. They also wrote the screenplay for the 2001 film Lara Croft: Tomb Raider.

As an actor, he has starred in various television series and television movies most notably as Duras in Star Trek: The Next Generation.

External Links[edit]


References[edit]

  1. Anders, Charlie Jane (2 February 2009). io9: Jane Espenson Talks BSG, Caprica, Buffy and Dollhouse! (backup available on Archive.org) . Retrieved on 9 February 2009.

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