
Alan Scarfe
Personal Info
Known for
Acting
Gender
Male
Birthday
1946-06-08
Day of Death
2024-04-28 (77 years old)
Place of Birth
London, England, United Kingdom
Alan Scarfe
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Alan John Scarfe (born June 8, 1946) is a British-born Genie Award winning Canadian actor. He is a former Associate Director of the Stratford Festival and the Everyman Theatre in Liverpool. He won the 1985 Genie Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role for his role in The Bay Boy and earned two other Genie best actor nominations as well as a Gemini Award nomination.
Description above from the Wikipedia article Alan John Scarfe licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Acting
(2007)
Babylon 5: The Lost Tales - Voices in the Dark
as Father Cassidy
(2002)
The Many Lives of Albert Walker
as Paul Morrow
(1998)
Sanctuary
as William Dyson
(1997)
The Wrong Guy
as Farmer Brown
(1997)
Back in Business
as David Ashby
(1996)
Once a Thief
as Robertson Graves
(1996)
Gridlock
as Martin Joss
(1994)
Without Warning
as General Lucian Alexander
(1994)
Gunsmoke: One Man's Justice
as Sean Devlin
(1993)
Heart of Darkness
as Captain Fenard
(1993)
(1993)
Heritage Minutes: Sam Steele
as Sam Steele
(1992)
Lethal Weapon 3
as Herman Walters
(1992)
The Portrait
as David
(1991)
Double Impact
as Nigel Griffith
(1991)
The Owl
as Hutchins
(1991)
(1990)
Divided Loyalties
as George Washington
(1989)
(1988)
Iron Eagle II
as Col. Vardovsky
(1988)
(1987)
Street Justice
as Eugene Powers
(1987)
Keeping Track
as Royle Wishart
(1987)
All My Sons
as Dr. Jim Bayliss
(1986)
As Is
as Brother
(1986)
Overnight
as Vladimir Jezda
(1985)
The Execution of Raymond Graham
as Governor Richards
(1985)
Joshua Then and Now
as Jack Trimble
(1984)
Walls
as Ron Simmons
(1984)
The Bay Boy
as Sergeant Tom Coldwell
(1984)
(1983)
The Wars
as Captain Leather
(1983)
Will There Really Be a Morning?
as Doctor #3
(1983)
Pajama Tops
as George Chauvinet
(1983)
(1982)
Murder by Phone
as John Websole
(1977)
Cathy's Curse
as George Gimble
(1963)
The Bitter Ash
as Des