Saul_Rubinek

Saul Rubinek

Saul Rubinek

Canadian actor and director (born 1948)


Saul Hersh Rubinek (born July 2, 1948) is a Canadian actor, director, producer, and playwright.

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He is widely known for his television roles, notably Artie Nielsen on Warehouse 13, Donny Douglas on Frasier, Saul Panzer on A Nero Wolfe Mystery, and Louis B. Mayer on The Last Tycoon. He also starred in the films Against All Odds (1984), Wall Street (1987), The Bonfire of the Vanities (1990), Unforgiven (1992), Nixon (1995), True Romance (1993), The Express (2008), Barney's Version (2010), and The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (2018).[4]

Rubinek is a five-time Genie Award nominee, winning Best Supporting Actor for Ticket to Heaven (1981), and a two-time Gemini Award nominee. His directorial film debut, Jerry and Tom (1998), was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival. He was previously a stage actor and director, working with the Stratford Shakespeare Festival and Theatre Passe Muraille, and co-founding the Canadian Stage Company.

Early life

Rubinek was born in Föhrenwald, a displaced-persons camp in Allied-occupied Germany, in 1948. His parents, Frania and Israel Rubinek, were both Yiddish-speaking Polish Jews who were hidden by Polish farmers for over two years during World War II.[3] So Many Miracles, a book written by Rubinek and published by Penguin Canada in 1988, recounts his parents' experiences in Poland during the Holocaust.[5]

The family immigrated to Canada soon after Rubinek was born.[6] His family settled down in Canada's capital city, Ottawa.[4] He spoke Yiddish, French and then learned heavily accented English, which caused him to be bullied when he was in school.[3] In his youth, he attended Camp B'nai Brith, a Jewish summer overnight camp in Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts, Quebec.[7] At the encouragement of his parents, Rubinek began taking acting lessons and joined the Ottawa Little Theatre in 1965.[4]

Career

Rubinek began performing at the Stratford Festival in 1969. He contributed to the Toronto theatre scene, co-founding the Canadian Stage Company and working with Theatre Passe Muraille as an actor and producer. He began working in the United States in the 1970s, acting in Off-Broadway productions. In 1984, he won a Drama-Logue Award for Des McAnuff's La Jolla production of As You Like It.[4]

Early in his career, Rubinek gained the attention of Canadian audiences when he starred as detective Benny Cooperman in two TV films: The Suicide Murders (1985) and Murder Sees the Light (1986). These are based on the series of mystery novels by author Howard Engel set in the Niagara Region of Canada.[8] Rubinek starred as Owen Hughes, the antagonist, in Obsessed (1987). In the 1987 Canadian film Taking Care, he played Carl, the husband of the main protagonist, played by his then spouse Kate Lynch.[9] It was a medical drama based on the Toronto hospital baby deaths that was the foundation of the Susan Nelles false-conviction case.[9] In another TV film, Liberace: Behind the Music (1988), he played Seymour Heller, the long-time friend and manager of Liberace.[10]

In 1982, he played Allan in the sex-themed romantic comedy Soup for One, directed and written by Jonathan Kaufer and produced by Marvin Worth. Rubinek appeared in: Taylor Hackford's Against All Odds (1984); Alan Alda's Sweet Liberty (1986) as director Bo Hodges; Oliver Stone's Wall Street (1987), as a lawyer; The Outside Chance of Maximilian Glick (1988), as a fun-loving rabbi; Brian De Palma's The Bonfire of the Vanities (1990), again as a lawyer; and in a lead part as a rabbi in The Quarrel (1991). He is noted for his performance in Clint Eastwood's Unforgiven (1992) as a pulp fiction writer. He had a notable role in Tony Scott's True Romance (1993) as Lee Donowitz, a pompous, cocaine-addicted film producer based on Joel Silver.[11]

He co-starred in the 1993 Emmy Award-winning American made-for-television docudrama And the Band Played On as Dr. Jim Curran. Rubinek played the character Kivas Fajo in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "The Most Toys." Rubinek, an ardent Star Trek fan, abruptly took over the part after David Rappaport, the actor who was originally cast in the role, attempted suicide shortly after the filming of the episode had begun. (Rappaport later committed suicide just before the episode premiered.) Photographs of Rubinek in character were used on two cards in Decipher's 1994 ST:TNG card game: a character card entitled "Kivas Fajo" and an event card entitled "Kivas Fajo: Collector." In 1998, "The Fajo Collection," a limited (40,000 copies) edition set of 18 new cards, was released as an addition to this card game.

Another science fiction role portrayed by Rubinek was as a documentary film director named Emmett Bregman, on the seventh season of the Canadian-American military science fiction television series Stargate SG-1, in a two-part episode called "Heroes, Parts 1 & 2".[12]

He played Donny Douglas (Daphne Moon's fiancé and Niles Crane's divorce lawyer) in several episodes of the American sitcom Frasier.[13]

He appeared, in various roles, in two episodes of the 1995 revival of The Outer Limits. He played the role of Louis the Lion on YTV's The Adventures of Dudley the Dragon (1995). He had a cameo appearance as a casino pit boss in the film Rush Hour 2.[14]

Rubinek played Alan Mintz opposite Nicolas Cage in the 2000 film The Family Man. In 2000, Rubinek played Detective Saul Panzer in The Golden Spiders: A Nero Wolfe Mystery, the series pilot for the 2001-02 A&E TV series A Nero Wolfe Mystery, in which he would subsequently play the recurring role of reporter Lon Cohen. In 2005 he appeared in the short-lived American television series Blind Justice, and has appeared from 2006 to 2012 in the supporting role of Hasty Hathaway in the Jesse Stone series of TV films, starring Tom Selleck.

Rubinek with his Warehouse 13 costar Eddie McClintock

His single-episode guest appearances during the 2000s include two 2004 episodes of Curb Your Enthusiasm as Dr. Saul Funkhouser, the "Adrift" episode in the beginning of Lost's second season in 2005, the 2006 "Invincible" episode of Eureka, the 2007 episode of the TV series Masters of Horror "The Washingtonians", and a 2008 episode of the TV series Psych. That same year he guest-starred as Victor Dubenich, the antagonist in the pilot episode of Leverage, reappearing in 2012 for the last two episodes of season 4. In 2013, he guest-starred in two subsequent episodes of the TV series Person of Interest.[15][16]

In 2005, he directed the independent film Cruel but Necessary. The following year he appeared in a supporting role in the 2009 Canadian feature comedy The Trotsky. Rubinek starred in the Syfy series Warehouse 13 as Artie Nielsen, a covert agent employed by a secretive council to recover mystical artifacts with his team. The series finale was aired on May 19, 2014, on Syfy.[17]

His first play, Terrible Advice, premiered in September 2011 at the Menier Chocolate Factory Theatre in London, starring Scott Bakula, Sharon Horgan, Andy Nyman and Caroline Quentin.[18] In 2018, he was cast as a series regular on the Amazon Prime series Hunters.

Filmography

Film

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Television

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Accolades

Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television

Broadcast Film Critics Association

  • 2001 Alan J. Pakula Award for Artistic Excellence: The Contender (won)

FilmOut LGBT Film Festival

Sundance Film Festival


References

  1. Adleman, Sid (February 13, 1980). "Rubinek in NBC private eye pilot". Toronto Star. p. B1. Retrieved January 19, 2024 via ProQuest.
  2. Holden, Alfred (October 16, 1988). "Couple Reconcile with son over story of their escape". Toronto Star. p. D6. ProQuest 1357334420. Retrieved January 19, 2024 via ProQuest.
  3. Scrivener, Leslie (December 20, 2009). "A simple act of kindness saved lives". Toronto Star. pp. A1, A6. ProQuest 1348712388. Retrieved January 19, 2024 via ProQuest.
  4. Seringhaus, Claire (January 16, 2011). "Saul Rubinek". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on May 12, 2023. Retrieved January 19, 2024.
  5. Kirchhoff, H J (November 17, 1988). "Two Jewish Writers". The Globe & Mail. Toronto. p. C6. ProQuest 1237377483. Retrieved January 19, 2024 via ProQuest.
  6. Henry, Brian (November 5, 1988). "A Love Story of Survival". Toronto Star. p. M5. ProQuest 1365778886. Retrieved January 19, 2024 via ProQuest.
  7. Rachlis, Louise (May 5, 2010). "Celebrating 75 years and dufflebags of memories". Ottawa Citizen. p. E1. Retrieved January 19, 2024 via PressReader.
  8. "Benny Cooperman". www.thrillingdetective.com. Retrieved 2019-04-23.
  9. Pevere, Geoff (November 27, 1987). "Truth and Justice, The Canadian Way". Toronto Star. p. D8. ProQuest 1411869672. Retrieved January 19, 2024 via ProQuest.
  10. Greene, David (1988-10-09), Liberace: Behind the Music (Biography, Drama, Music), Kushner-Locke Company, The Kushner-Locke Company, retrieved 2023-01-07
  11. Mikita, Andy (2004-02-13), Heroes: Part 1, Stargate SG-1, retrieved 2023-01-07
  12. Lee, David (1999-02-18), To Tell the Truth, Frasier, retrieved 2023-01-07
  13. Rush Hour 2 (2001) - IMDb, retrieved 2023-01-07
  14. Fowler, Matt (December 17, 2013). "Person of Interest: "Lethe" Review". ign.com.
  15. Dyess-Nugent, Phil (January 8, 2014). "Person Of Interest: "Aletheia"". avclub.com. Retrieved January 9, 2014.
  16. Seklir, Andrew, Part 9, Warehouse 13: Of Monsters and Men, retrieved 2023-01-07
  17. Fremont, Maggie (10 March 2020). "Schitt's Creek Recap: Meanwhile, On Sunrise Bay …". Vulture. Retrieved 20 December 2023.

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