Gideon_Emery

Gideon Emery

Gideon Emery

British actor


Gideon Emery (born 12 September 1972) is an English actor and singer. He is best known for his role as Deucalion in Teen Wolf and for providing voice-over work in video games, television series and films.

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Early life and education

Emery was born to Pauline, a competitive horse rider and Ashton, a management consultant. He has two half brothers, Matthew and Paul. Gideon also has three nieces, Chloe Emery, Rebecca Emery and Kate Emery. At the age of 4, his father moved the family to Johannesburg, South Africa.[1] Emery kept himself amused by imitating characters from film and television.[2] Early impersonations included Michael Jackson[3] and Max from Hart to Hart.[4] He returned to England during high school, briefly attending Reading Blue Coat School. But it was back in South Africa at St John's College where he cemented his love for acting, playing Dick Deadeye in the Gilbert & Sullivan musical H.M.S. Pinafore[5] and winning Best Actor for the role of Mr. Glum in The Glums comedy sketch, "L'Engagement".[6] After briefly considering a career in graphic art, he went on to study acting at the University of the Witwatersrand.[1] Student roles included Salieri in Amadeus and Gregor in Steven Berkoff's adaption of Kafka's The Metamorphosis.

Personal life

On 19 October 2014, Emery married his wife, actress Autumn Withers at Santa Barbara, California. Emery currently lives in Los Angeles with his wife and their dog. In 2017, Emery and his wife revealed that they were expecting their first child together.[7] On 7 April 2018, they welcomed their daughter, Mia Monroe Emery.

Gideon Emery and Autumn Withers attend Tosca at LA Opera at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles on 27 April 2017

Career

In his third year of drama school, friend Ashley Callie was going to audition for Johannesburg's annual Christmas pantomime, directed by the award-winning Janice Honeyman. Emery was persuaded to go along and ended up being cast. He played a couple of characters, but impressed with his stand-up routine during a set change.[1] As a result, fellow cast member, veteran actor Bill Flynn introduced him to his agent and his career was started. Around this time, he also began what was to become a prolific voice career.[8] (He would later win a Gold Craft Award at the 2003 Loerie Advertising Awards) He played in a number of stand-up venues and established himself as character actor,[3] often performing multiple roles within a single play, such as all the male roles in Mark Ravenhill's Sleeping Around[9] and Tom, Leslie and Phyllis in A.R. Gurney's Sylvia.[10]

He performed standup comedy on television and was a series regular on the sketch comedy show Not Quite Friday Night.[3] He received the National Vita Award for Comedy for the role of Maloom in the play Heel Against the Head,[3] once again alongside Bill Flynn and actor/playwright Paul Slabolepszy. Emery has also performed his own one-man plays, Thin Man Talking[11] and The Great Glendini.[12] For the latter, he recorded a jazz standards album, Standard Ease. He acted alongside the late Bill Flynn for a third and final time, playing Bernard to Flynn's Willy Loman in the award-winning Baxter Theatre production of Death of a Salesman.[13]

Gideon Emery in a recording studio in Los Angeles

Thanks to his keen ear for accents, Emery found himself playing various roles in visiting British and American film and television productions. He soon decided that the screen was where he wanted to focus his attention. With most major projects casting their lead roles overseas, he decided it was time to explore more diverse opportunities.[14] In late 2003, he moved to Los Angeles, where he has played memorable characters both on screen (Last Resort, Takers, Moonlight, Burn Notice) and for video games such as Final Fantasy XII, Vanquish, Dragon Age II and Tekken series (starting from Tekken 6 – present). He is an in-demand motion capture performer and can be seen and heard in the games Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare, Battlefield 3 and Halo Wars 2, all of which also use his likeness. He has also narrated over 50 audiobooks.

Emery had a recurring role on the hit MTV series Teen Wolf as season three's main antagonist Deucalion, a blind but powerful Alpha werewolf who leads a pack consisting entirely of Alphas. Emery reprised the role in season five: "To prove not only to others, but also to himself, that Deucalion is capable of being true and noble."[15] He would return once again for the final season of the show. He won multiple best actor awards for his role as Richard Pine in Bill Hanson's adaptation of Stephen King's Survivor Type. On the lighter side, Emery is the creator, director and star of E&N with Ed Neusbit, a comedic news parody show offering "all the news you never knew you needed". Other recurring roles include Daredevil, Shameless, Last Resort, Good Behavior and Scream: Resurrection. In 2020, Emery joined the cast of Netflix series Dash & Lily as Lily's father.

Filmography

Live-action roles

Film

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Television

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Theatre

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Voice over roles

Film

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Television

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Video games

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Audiobooks

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Discography

  • Standard Ease (2011)[31]

Awards

  • Best Actor Award – Survivor Type – Golden Egg Film Festival (2014, Winner)
  • Award of Merit: Leading Actor – Survivor Type – Best Shorts Competition (2014, Winner)
  • Award of Excellence: Leading Actor – Survivor Type – Accolade Competition (2013, Winner)
  • Best Actor in a Short Film – Survivor TypeBare Bones International Film Festival (2012, Winner)
  • Best Actor Award – Survivor Type – Los Angeles International Underground Film Festival (2012, Winner)
  • Award of Merit – Sex Drive – Accolade Competition (2010, Winner)
  • Suspense/Thriller Award – The Price of Love and Other StoriesAudie Awards (2010, Nominee)
  • Supporting Performance in a Drama – Brothers in Arms: Hell's Highway – Videogame Awards (2008, Nominee)
  • Loerie Gold Craft Award: Radio VO – SABC: Wed-nes-day – Loeries Advertising Awards (2003, Winner)
  • Best Actor in a Comedy – Heel Against the Head – National Vita Awards (1995, Winner)

References

  1. "The Million and One Dollar Man". Personality Magazine. 4 June 1993. pp. 34–5.
  2. Adams, Alyn (January 2001). "I Could Do That: The Voice Artist". FHM. South Africa.
  3. Ackermann, Cobus (September 2001). "5 Blink Sterre". De Kat Magazine.
  4. Barkum, Daniella (24 August 2001). "Magic is Gideon's Great Escape". Sandton Chronicle.
  5. "(unknown)". The Johannian. 1989. p. 35. {{cite news}}: Cite uses generic title (help)
  6. "In the Workshop with Gideon Emery". The Workshop. 27 March 2013. Archived from the original on 9 May 2013.
  7. "What a Swell Party This Is". City Life. December 2002.
  8. The Star Tonight, "How'd They Do That?", Garalt MacLiam; August 1999
  9. Daniel, Raeford (19 September 1996). "A Garfield Clone?". The Citizen.
  10. Willoughby, Guy (10 July 1996). "Comedy Cuts". Cue.
  11. MacLiam, Garalt (29 June 2000). "School Chalk and Magical Cheese". The Star Tonight.
  12. Williams, Owen (19 February 2001). "First Rate Production of Miller's 'Salesman'". Cape Argus.
  13. de Lange, Amanda (29 January 2005). "5 Vrae Aan Gideon Emery". Beeld.
  14. "Exclusive interview with Gideon Emery". myfanbase.de. 2016. Retrieved 25 March 2016.
  15. "Gideon Emery (visual voices guide)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved 27 June 2015. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its opening and/or closing credits and/or other reliable sources of information.
  16. "DC Super Friends: The World's Finest Supervillain Hideout". 4 May 2015. Archived from the original on 10 March 2016. Retrieved 25 August 2015 via YouTube.
  17. "Final Fantasy XIII (2010 Video Game)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved 27 December 2023.
  18. Kellams, JP (25 October 2010). "Narrative Design in Vanquish". PlatinumGames Blog. PlatinumGames. Archived from the original on 5 September 2014. Retrieved 21 August 2014.
  19. Square Enix. Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII. Scene: Closing credits, 5 minutes in, Voice Actors, Additional Voices.
  20. Toys for Bob. Skylanders: Trap Team. Scene: Closing credits, 8:40 in Voice Actors.
  21. Konami (2015). Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain. Scene: Closing credits, 0:32 in, Cast.
  22. Vicarious Visions. Skylanders: SuperChargers. Activision. Scene: Closing credits, 7:13 in, Voice Actors.
  23. Bethesda Game Studios Austin (14 November 2018). Fallout 76. Bethesda Softworks. Scene: Credits: Voice & Music – Cast.
  24. "I like cookies. Now I am one!". Twitter. 7 January 2023.
  25. "Get millions of songs. All ad-free". Music.apple.com. Retrieved 27 May 2020.

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