John Dunsworth

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John Dunsworth
Born (1946-04-12) April 12, 1946
Bridgewater, Nova Scotia
Occupation Actor
Years active 1987–present

John Dunsworth (born April 12, 1946) is a Canadian actor known for playing the frequently drunk trailer park supervisor Jim Lahey on the hit TV show Trailer Park Boys. He has also appeared in Shattered City: The Halifax Explosion, a CBC film about the 1917 Halifax Explosion. Dunsworth also has extensive experience in regional theatre.

Early life

Dunsworth was born in Bridgewater, Nova Scotia to Frank and Frances Dunsworth. He was the second born of ten children, and the eldest son.[1] His daughter, Sarah Dunsworth, appears on the show Trailer Park Boys with her father.[2]

Career

Politics

In 1988, Dunsworth starred in a video documentary short entitled, John Dunsworth: The Candidate,[3] which was written and directed by Neal Livingston. The film follows an underdog provincial candidate for the New Democratic Party, as he travels around Nova Scotia trying to win support for his campaign. Dunsworth's candidacy in this election was real,[1] but by 1990, he left the political realm in favour of his growing acting career.

Acting

Dunsworth studied acting at the University of Guelph, but dropped out in his fourth year.[1] Despite that, he went on to act in numerous CBC radio dramas, and has had starring roles in many stage productions at the Neptune Theatre in Halifax.[4] In 1970, Dunsworth leased an abandoned building on Halifax's waterfront, and converted it into a playhouse. Dubbing it the Pier One Theatre, it became the city's first and most successful alternative theatre production house.[5] In 1987, Dunsworth founded Filmworks Casting where he worked as Halifax's most renowned casting director.[1] Dunsworth met director Mike Clattenburg in the mid-1990s when he tried out for a bit part in Clattenburg's film short, One Last Shot.[6] Dunsworth's small role gradually transformed into a leading part that earned him a Best Performance award from the Atlantic Film Festival. From there, he further developed the character into what would eventually become Jim Lahey in Trailer Park Boys.

Dunsworth, John Paul Tremblay, and Robb Wells can be seen in the MGM 2002 movie Virginia's Run starring Gabriel Byrne and Joanne Whalley. Dunsworth plays a local cop while Tremblay and Wells play active and verbal townsmen similar to their Trailer Park Boys characters. Actors are credited as cop for John Dunsworth, J.P. for John Paul Tremblay (credits as J.P. Tremblay), and Rob Wells as Rob. The movie was filmed in Nova Scotia, Canada.[7] Dunsworth stars in Haven, the film adaption of the Stephen King novel The Colorado Kid.[8]

In 2010, Dunsworth reunited with many of his former Trailer Park Boys castmates in the new series The Drunk and On Drugs Happy Fun Time Hour.[9]

Personal life

John Dunsworth grew up in Halifax, Nova Scotia and currently resides in Nova Scotia. Unlike Jim Lahey, the character that he plays on Trailer Park Boys, Dunsworth rarely drinks alcohol.[6] Dunsworth has admitted he had suffered from a gambling problem in the past.[10] As a result of his recovery, he has been instrumental in trying to remove Video Lottery Terminals from bars in Nova Scotia. John is married and has 3 daughters and 1 son. Sarah, his eldest daughter, appeared eponymously in Trailer Park Boys and his daughter Molly starred in 2011's Hobo with a Shotgun[11] alongside Blade Runner's Rutger Hauer.[12] John recently appeared on stage with Guns n' Roses in Halifax, as Axl Rose is a fan of Trailer Park Boys and John's character Mr. Lahey in particular.[13] John is an avid boating enthusiast and spends a lot of time on "The Emerald Princess" his personal yacht, and he spends a lot of time at granite quarries finding rocks to complete various sculptures and walkways. He built an enormous granite salt water pool outside his home entirely from hand picked granite and manually mixed concrete.[14]

Filmography

  • The Last Log Drive (1985)
  • Deep Sea Conspiracy (1987)
  • Justice Denied (1989)
  • The Little Kidnappers (TV-1990)
  • Buried on Sunday (1992)
  • Mary Silliman's War (TV-1994)
  • Life with Billy (TV-1994)
  • Sweet Angel Mine (1996)
  • Pit Pony (TV-1997)
  • One Last Shot (1998)
  • The Real Howard Spitz (1998)
  • New Waterford Girl (1999)
  • Deeply (voice, 2000)
  • A Glimpse of Hell (TV-2001)
  • Three Days (TV-2001)
  • The Shipping News (2001)
  • Virginia's Run (2002)
  • Too Young to Be a Dad (TV-2002)
  • Lift-Off (2002)
  • The Christmas Shoes (TV-2002)
  • Blessings (TV-2003)
  • Shattered City: The Halifax Explosion (TV-2003)
  • Reversible Errors (TV-2004)
  • Sleep Murder (TV-2004)
  • The Riverman (TV-2004)
  • The Trailer Park Boys Christmas Special (TV-2004)
  • Stone Cold (TV-2005)
  • Suzanne's Diary for Nicholas (TV-2005)
  • Serious Miracles (2005)
  • Ambulance Girl (TV-2005)
  • The Hunt for the BTK Killer (TV-2005)
  • A Bug and a Bag of Weed (2006)
  • Trailer Park Boys: The Movie (2006)
  • Stuck (2007)
  • Trailer Park Boys: Countdown to Liquor Day (2009)
  • Cloudburst (2011)
  • Trailer Park Boys 3: Don't Legalize It (2013)

Television appearances

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Knox, Casten (September 2005), John Dunsworth: From Angry Young Man to Renaissance Man, retrieved December 9, 2008 
  2. Trask, Nicole (September/October), "Fight Club", Halifax Magazine 
  3. Johnston, Ian (May 27, 1990), "John Dunsworth: The Candidate", The Daily News 
  4. Lahey, Liam (2003), Tight Pants and Self Righteousness, retrieved December 9, 2008 
  5. Perkyns, R. (1985), "Two Decades of Neptune Theatre", Theatre Research in Canada 6 (2) 
  6. 6.0 6.1 Capancioni, Marc (September 2008), "Liquored-up Mr. Lahey role initially gave actor bad case of the shivers", The Sault Star 
  7. Second Teaser Promo: Stephen King's Haven
  8. Find a Haven on Facebook
  9. "The Boys are back and on drugs". The Globe and Mail, July 12, 2010.
  10. CBC Arts (April 18, 2005), "'Trailer Park Boys' to tackle VLT addiction", CBC News, retrieved December 9, 2008 
  11. Hobo with a shotgun blogsite
  12. John appears on stage with Axl Rose
  13. Video of John's boat and stone projects

External links

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