Trevor White (actor)

Trevor White

Trevor White
Born Trevor Alan White
26 October 1970 (1970-10-26) (age 41)
Vancouver, British Columbia Canada
Occupation Actor
Years active 1994 - Present

Trevor Alan White (born October 26, 1970 in Vancouver, British Columbia) is a Canadian actor who has worked in theatre, film, television and radio since 1994, and has been based out of London, England, since 2001.

Contents

Life

Trevor was born in 1970 in Vancouver, Canada, to Alan and Lamorna White. In 1992, White graduated with a B.A. in Economics from Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, but soon after changed career paths, and has been acting professionally since 1994.

White is fluent in French and Spanish, and performs both in his native Canadian, as well as an English accent.

Career

His landed his first part in the Kate Jackson film A Kidnapping in the Family, and guest-starring roles in The Sentinel, Madison, The Outer Limits, Viper, Beggars & Choosers, Strange Frequency and Da Vinci's Inquest, among many others, soon followed. From 1997-1999, White became a series regular on Millennium, starring as FBI computer specialist Doug Scaife. He appeared throughout Season 3, becoming especially prominent during the final few episodes as Frank Black's most trusted confidante.

In 1997, White was nominated for two Jessie Richardson Theatre Awards in Vancouver for his acclaimed performance as Hal in the Way Off Broadway production of Steven Berkhoff's Kvetch. He has also twice performed for Bard on the Beach, Western Canada's hugely successful Shakespeare festival, appearing in the title role in Pericles in 2003.

In 2001, just prior to emigrating to London, White starred as the evil Bret in the cult film Hellraiser: Hellseeker, and has since appeared in his first Bond film, Die Another Day, as well as the Val Kilmer & Christian Slater film, Mindhunters. He has also voiced the character of Major Rusty Gubbins in the animated feature Agent Crush, alongside Neve Campbell, Ioan Gruffudd, Brian Cox and Roger Moore, scheduled for a major worldwide release in 2008.

White is the Artistic Director and co-founder of the Suspect Package Theatre Company, formed in London in 2003. Suspect Package's debut production of George F. Walker's Problem Child at the New End Theatre played to rave reviews including "A small but almost perfectly formed gem" from The Daily Telegraph and "A mischievously hilarious piece of work" from Time Out. The company's follow-up in 2006, Daniel MacIvor's House, at the Finborough Theatre, received equally glowing notices, including "A virtuoso performance...This is a tour de force" from The Guardian.[1]

Since living in London, White has starred in the first Robert Lepage play to be staged in the United Kingdom without Lepage's direct involvement, Polygraph, at the Nottingham Playhouse (2001-02), and memorably spoke the last ever words on the RST Main Stage while playing Tullus Aufidius in the Royal Shakespeare Company's production of Coriolanus (2007). He has also appeared in numerous films and television shows, including The Line of Beauty, The Path to 9/11, Kenneth Tynan: In Praise of Hardcore, Judge John Deed and Saddam's Tribe.

He made his Royal Court debut in 2009 as Marty in Wallace Shawn's "Aunt Dan and Lemon", and was part of the original cast of Lucy Prebble's multiple award-winning "Enron", directed by Rupert Goold, which also played at the Royal Court before transferring to the Noel Coward Theatre in the West End in 2010.

Filmography

References

  1. ^ Gardner, Lyn (February 7, 2006). "House". London: The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/2006/feb/07/theatre1. Retrieved 2009-07-01. 

External links