Karyn Dwyer

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Karyn Dwyer
Born Corner Brook, Newfoundland, Canada

Karyn Dwyer is a Canadian actress. Her best known role is Maggie in the 1999 film Better Than Chocolate.

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[edit] Early life

Karyn Elizabeth Dwyer was born in Corner Brook, Newfoundland to two school teachers Donald and Elizabeth Dwyer, who were of Scottish and Irish Catholic descent. She is the oldest of five children. Her father died of cancer in 1982 at the age of 38. After his death, her family moved to her mother's hometown of Wabana on Bell Island, Newfoundland and later St. John's.

Dwyer studied acting with Youth Theatre. She made her stage debut at the Arts and Culture Center at the age of 10, playing the title role in Theatre Newfoundland and Labrador's production of Alice in Wonderland and went on to become an accomplished child stage actress performing in various theatres throughout Newfoundland and Labrador. She also performed in her school productions, won awards for acting, public speaking, singing and instrumental performance and wrote for the school newspaper. She turned down a journalism scholarship from Carleton University and instead moved to Toronto, Ontario to attend the George Brown Theatre School. Dwyer attended theatre school for one year and then began studying with David Rotenberg's on-camera acting class in Toronto and later John Riven's Meisner.

[edit] Career

After moving to Toronto, Dwyer landed her first film role acting opposite David Cronenberg in the Canadian cult classic Boozecan. She soon began appearing regularly in film and television roles opposite actors such as Jon Voight, Gary Busey, Jacqueline Bisset, and Julian Sands. She wrote and starred in her one woman show Bad Girls at the Rivoli in Toronto. In 1994 she played Phoebe in As You Like It opposite Seana McKenna and Albert Schultz in the Du Maurier World Stage theatre festival.

In 1999 Dwyer starred as 19 year old Maggie in Better Than Chocolate, winning the role over hundreds of others who auditioned in a cross Canada search. The film won numerous audience choice awards at film festivals around the world, was ranked 31st on the Hollywood Reporter's Top 200 independent films list of 1999 and had one of Canada's highest international box office grosses, earning Dwyer a loyal cult following. Also that year, Dwyer played Summer Falls in the bigger budget studio film Superstar playing opposite Molly Shannon and Will Ferrell and produced by Lorne Michaels.

Dwyer returned to the stage playing the title role in Native Earth's Romeo and Juliet, performance artist Sooze in Eric Bogosian's Suburbia and originated the role of Carrie, a junkie prostitute in Exercises in Depravity, opposite R.H. Thompson.

She also starred in award-winning short films adapted from plays; Pony, adapted from White Biting Dog by playwright Judith Thompson; Dying Like Ophelia, adapted from Lion in the Streets also by Judith Thompson; Polished, adapted from Polished by James Harkness.

In 2005, Dwyer reunited with her Better Than Chocolate director Anne Wheeler, guest starring in the awarding winning Canadian series This is Wonderland. She divides her time between Toronto, Newfoundland and Los Angeles.

[edit] Personal life

On December 25, 1999, Dwyer's brother died at the age of 24.

Dwyer volunteers for a telephone support line in Toronto.

[edit] Other notes

[edit] External links


Persondata
NAME Dwyer, Karyn
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION Actor
DATE OF BIRTH
PLACE OF BIRTH Corner Brook, Newfoundland
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH