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Alan Dale

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Alan Dale
File:Alan DaleRev3.jpg
Dale at a promotional event in 2009
Born Alan Hugh Dale
(1947-05-06) 6 May 1947 (age 76)
Dunedin, Otago, New Zealand
Occupation Actor
Years active 1979–present
Spouse(s) Claire Dale (1968–1979)
Tracey Pearson (1990–present)
Children 4

Alan Hugh Dale (born 6 May 1947) is a New Zealand actor. As a child, Dale developed a love of theatre and also became a rugby player. After retiring from the sport he took on a number of professions to support his family, before deciding to become a professional actor at the age of 27. With work limited in New Zealand, Dale moved to Australia, where he played Dr. John Forrest in The Young Doctors from 1979 to 1982. He later appeared as Jim Robinson in Neighbours, a part he played from 1985 until 1993. He left the series when he fell out with the producers over the pay he and the rest of the cast received.

After leaving Neighbours, Dale found that he had become typecast as Robinson in Australia and struggled to find work. His career was revitalised after he relocated to the United States in 2000. Since then he has had roles in many American series including prominent parts in The O.C. (as Caleb Nichol) and Ugly Betty (as Bradford Meade), as well as recurring and guest roles in Lost, 24, NCIS, ER, The West Wing, The X-Files, Entourage and Once Upon a Time. Dale has also appeared in minor roles in films such as Star Trek Nemesis, Hollywood Homicide, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull and The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, as well as the London West End production of Spamalot. Dale has been married to former Miss Australia Tracey Pearson since 1990 and has four children.

Early life and work

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"When I was 27, I started to get really jumpy and thought, what could I do that would give me the same buzz rugby did? Acting was what came to mind. I told my first wife, 'Look, I really can't stand it any more. I'm going to have to go and be an actor'."

— Dale on why he turned to acting professionally.[1]

Dale was born on 6 May 1947 in Dunedin, Otago, New Zealand.[2][3] One of four children, Dale enjoyed his childhood, but his family was relatively poor.[1] Although he was a gentle child, Dale was bullied so he learned to defend and stand up for himself.[1]

Growing up in New Zealand without television until the 1960s, Dale developed a love of theatre and amateur dramatics.[4] His first performance was for a school concert, at the age of 13, doing an impression of comedian Shelley Berman. His parents became founding members of an amateur theatre in Auckland called "The Little Dolphin Theatre". Dale often operated the stage equipment used to produce weather effects,[1] and whenever he was on stage he loved the applause.[2] Although a skilled rugby player, Dale opted to move into drama instead because "the acting fraternity didn't like footballers and the footballers didn't like actors. [...] Acting gave me the same buzz and there was the chance of a longer career."[4] He gave up rugby at the age of 21 because it was not considered a workable career at the time, and he had to support his family.[1] Acting roles were limited in New Zealand so Dale worked in multiple jobs, including as a male model,[5] a car salesman and a realtor.[4] While working as a milkman he heard the disc jockey at his local radio station resign during a broadcast. Dale went over to the station and told the managers he could do a better job. They gave him a trial and then signed him up for the afternoon show, which led to him landing his first TV role,[4] and at the age of 27 he decided to become a professional actor.[1]

Acting career

Early roles and Neighbours

Dale's first professional acting job was playing an Indian in a production of The Royal Hunt of the Sun at the Grafton Theatre in Auckland.[2] His first on-screen role came in the New Zealand television drama Radio Waves, which although not successful, he described as "nine months of solid work and great fun."[2] In the late 1970s, Dale moved to Australia at the age of 32,[1][4] due to the limited acting work in New Zealand. He applied to the National Institute of Dramatic Art in Sydney, but was rejected because he "was a lot older than anybody else on the course."[2] He was soon cast as Dr. John Forrest in the Australian soap opera The Young Doctors, where he remained for three-and-a-half years.[2]

In 1985, Dale was cast in the continuing role of Jim Robinson in the Australian soap opera Neighbours, earning him acclaim across the world, including the United Kingdom. He appeared on the show from the first episode and stayed for eight years before his character was killed off in 1993.[4] He found working on Neighbours "exciting" and it enabled him to provide for his sons, but he noted: "You were a totally replaceable commodity; [the production company] didn't put any value on any of the people appearing in the show."[1] He expanded: "I didn't like it there, they were not nice people. When we decided that we hated each other, the company and me, one of the things the company did was to market everything they could out of us and pay us nothing."[5] Dale and the company (Grundy Television) parted on "bad terms".[6]

After Neighbours, Dale struggled to find work in Australia because he was typecast as Jim Robinson.[1] His only regular sources of income were voice-overs,[4] and publishing magazines about his former show which he "made quite a lot of money out of". He lost most of his profits investing in a failed children's magazine.[5] In 1999, he was cast in the American TV film First Daughter, which was filmed in Australia. After discovering he could perform a convincing American accent, Dale attended the film's premiere, finally moving with his family to the United States permanently in January 2000.[4] Dale, his second wife Tracey, and their then two-year-old son Nick moved into an "awful little flat" in Los Angeles and found an agent. Dale recalled telling his wife in Melbourne that "there's no way this is going to work. But if it does, it proves you can do anything."[1]

Wider success

At the age of 52, he began to revive his career and started taking acting classes,[4] something he had not thought about after being cast in Neighbours.[2] He described his age, unknown status and willingness to work for a relatively low fee as being his main assets for getting work in America. His drama teacher, who he has remained with ever since,[2] told him "that you might want to play great roles, but truth is you will get cast as a specific type. Just work out your type. The others in the class said I was a bit Anthony Hopkins and a bit Sean Connery and that went into my head. I thought if I go for roles those guys would go for I'm more likely to get them."[4] The first role he was offered was a part in a series called Sign of Life, a show about a rock band, which eventually fell through.[2] Dale only received a couple of auditions during his first year in America, but his break came when he was cast as the South African Al Patterson in four episodes of ER.[1] Since then, Dale has been "busier than ever".[4] He has appeared in many television series including guest appearances on The West Wing, Torchwood, The Lone Gunmen, Californication,[7] and The Practice.[2] Many of these have been recurring roles, such as the part of Tom Morrow in JAG and its spin-off NCIS, as well as appearing in three episodes, including the series finale, of The X-Files, playing the "Toothpick Man".[2] He played the recurring role of Vice President of the United States Jim Prescott for seven episodes of the second season of 24, a part which was originally supposed to be a single scene.[1] Dale had recurring roles in the serial Midnight Man and the Australian series Sea Patrol in 2008.[2] He also had recurring parts on Undercovers, Entourage as John Ellis, the fictional owner of Warner Bros., and the British series Moving Wallpaper as a fictional version of himself.[7][8][9] He had a recurring role as King George in the series Once Upon a Time,[7][10] and Emmett in Hot in Cleveland,[11] before joining the main cast of Dominion in 2014, playing General Edward Riesen.[12]

From 2003 to 2010, Dale appeared in his longest running American roles. He starred in the Fox TV series, The O.C. playing Caleb Nichol, a wealthy tycoon. The producers saw that the character had further potential, and made his initially recurring role a regular character in the series.[5] After 35 appearances,[13] Caleb was killed off in the second season episode "The O.Sea" in 2005. Dale was disappointed that Caleb was written out and described it as a mistake by the production staff.[14] In 2006, Dale was cast in the starring role of Bradford Meade, the owner of Meade Publications in the ABC show Ugly Betty.[14] Although he impressed the producers in his audition, he initially lost the role to a "bigger star". After said star began "causing trouble" and was fired, Dale was given the part.[5] Bradford was killed off during the show's second season.[15] Dale appeared in the second season finale of Lost, "Live Together, Die Alone", as Charles Widmore, a businessman and leader of the Others.[7][14] Dale's publicist was initially worried that Widmore (who was an integral part of the show's mystery) would become a starring role, meaning it would be hard for Dale to appear in both Lost and Ugly Betty at the same time.[14] The part became a recurring role, with Dale appearing numerous times between seasons two (2006) and six (2010). He enjoyed the role but often found it difficult due to his character's unclear motivation.[16]

In March 2008, Dale replaced Peter Davison in the lead role of King Arthur in the London West End production of Monty Python's Spamalot at the Palace Theatre.[17] He accepted the role because he was a fan of Monty Python and considered that "life's too short" for him to have turned down a West End part.[4] Although he has seen all of the shows and the other films, Dale had never seen Monty Python and the Holy Grail (from which Spamalot is "lovingly ripped off") and had to buy a copy to prepare for the role.[2] It was not his first experience in musical theatre because he appeared in a 1984 Australian production of Applause, but Dale found the comic timing of the part to be the hardest task. "On stage, the battle is to find all of the humorous moments and not skip over them. [...] There's an art to Python humour and I'm aiming to try and get every single joke just right."[2] He was succeeded in the role by Sanjeev Bhaskar on 23 June 2008.[18]

Dale has also made several film appearances. He appeared as the Romulan Praetor Hiren in Star Trek Nemesis, a part he got after the actor originally cast fell ill,[19] and had small parts in films such as Hollywood Homicide, After the Sunset,[5] and the minor part of General Ross in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. Dale said his script for Kingdom of the Crystal Skull was printed on tin foil so it was impossible to replicate, in order to keep the film's plot a secret.[4] He appeared in four films released in 2011: A Little Bit of Heaven, Priest, Don't Be Afraid of the Dark,[16] and The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, having joined late in the film's production.[13]

Popularity and style

Despite his mainstream success since his move to America, Dale is still primarily known for his role as Jim Robinson in Neighbours in the United Kingdom and Australia.[4][20][21][22] This was spoofed in a promotional ident for the UK's Channel 4 in 2007 which sees Dale taking part in a mock interview about the sudden upturn in his career, before being accosted by an Australian fan, who recognises him as Jim Robinson.[20] Discussing this association after Ugly Betty's 2007 Golden Globe win, Dale noted: "Every article I read I'm always, 'Ex-soap star Jim Robinson'. Maybe now people will just get to know me as actor Alan Dale."[23] In 2007, Amazon.co.uk reported that they had sold more DVDs of films and television shows featuring Dale than any featuring other ex-Neighbours cast members.[24]

Dale's characters on most of the American television shows he has appeared on have shared similar character traits, which Dale describes as the "go-to powerful guy" role.[5] Following his appearance as Senator Eaton in The Killing in 2011,[7] reviewers commented on his tendency to play powerful, wealthy and mysterious characters in many shows.[25][26] Maureen Ryan of TV Squad wrote that it was "lovely to see Alan Dale playing a typically Alan Dale-ian character. He's always so great at playing That Sketchy Wealthy Guy With a Hidden Agenda, which he has now played on, I believe, 87 different shows. And he always does it well."[27] Coincidentally, Dale's characters in Neighbours, The O.C. and Ugly Betty have all been killed off by a fatal heart attack.[6] Christopher Rosen of The New York Observer wrote in 2008 that "with his square jaw and seemingly no nonsense attitude, Mr. Dale is the go-to actor when casting directors need a conservative-looking authoritarian. When he comes onto the screen, audiences immediately take him seriously, since he radiates rich, smug and serious. He demands your respect." Rosen says that Dale is "not even...a particularly good actor" but is "fine enough" and "bring[s] a no frills, no gimmicks style to his roles," and "manages to give a consistent performance in every show he appears on."[28]

Jayne Nelson, writing in magazine SFX, named Dale the second most "serial" science-fiction guest star after Mark Sheppard. She wrote: "The thing is, soap-opera origins aside, Dale is always good. Which is why he keeps getting so much work....Dale never lets you down, always (well, usually) summoning up a pitch-perfect accent, too. There's something comforting about his presence on a show, as though the fact he's in it has leant it some weight."[22] In a profile of his work on "cult shows", Ben Rawson-Jones of Digital Spy called Dale an "institution".[29]

Personal life

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"I like both places [Australia and New Zealand] but I get a lot more respect and recognition from Australia than I do in New Zealand. New Zealanders don't want to know me at all, really. I've been Australian for 20-odd years. Everywhere I went I was the guy from Neighbours so I was Australian. Then when I came here [Hollywood], because I have a New Zealand passport I became a New Zealander again. It's odd."

— Dale on his nationality.[5]

In 1968, Dale married his girlfriend, Claire, and the couple had two children, Simon and Matthew.[30][31] Both of Dale's eldest sons are involved in the entertainment industry, Simon as a radio announcer at Kiss 100[2] and Matthew as a writer, film maker and actor.[32] The marriage ended in divorce in 1979.[33] At the time, Dale lived in Auckland but after the divorce he moved to Sydney with his sons.[1] On 8 April 1990,[33] he married Tracey Pearson, the 1986 Miss Australia, whom he met at the 1986 Australian Grand Prix, when she was 21 and he was 39. Dale described it as "the most appropriate relationship I've ever had."[1] Dale also has two children from this marriage, Daniel and Nick, who "keep him young".

[1] He and his family now live in Manhattan Beach, Los Angeles, California[34] and also own property in Australia.[2] Dale sold his holiday home in New Zealand in 2011 for $1.25m.[35] Both of Dale's parents died in 2007,[2] and he regrets not spending enough time with them.[6] Dale describes his life philosophy as being Winston Churchill's quote "Never, never, never give up",[1] and counts Gene Hackman as his "big acting hero".[2]

Filmography

Films

Year Title Role Notes
1989 Houseboat Horror Evans Direct to video release
2002 Rent Control George
2002 Star Trek: Nemesis Praetor Hiren
2003 The Extreme Team Richard Knowles
2003 Hollywood Homicide Commander Preston
2004 Straight Eye: The Movie Kelly's Dad
2004 After the Sunset Security Chief
2008 Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull General Ross
2011 Happy New Year Bill Awaiting release
2011 A Little Bit of Heaven Dr. Sanders
2011 Priest Monsignor Chamberlain
2011 Don't Be Afraid of the Dark Jacoby
2011 The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Detective Isaksson
2012 Tangled Ever After Priest Short film; voice
2014 Captain America: The Winter Soldier Councilman Rockwell[36]
2014 Grace Father John [37]
2015 Entourage John Ellis

Television

Year Title Role Notes
1979–1982 The Young Doctors Dr. John Forrest Main cast member
1985–1993 Neighbours Jim Robinson Main cast member; 869 episodes
1986 The Far Country Dave Marshall Two-part TV film
1994 Janus Richard Issacs Recurring role
1994 Time Trax Mr. Bergdorf Episode 2.21: "The Crash"
1995 Plainclothes Senior Sergeant Mitch Mitchell
1995 Space: Above and Beyond Colonial Governor Borman Episode 1.1: "Pilot"
1997 Frontline Dave Episode 3.1: "Dick on the Line"
1997 Blue Heelers Rod Wright Episode 4.31: "Off the Air"
1997–1998 State Coroner Dudley Mills Eight episodes
1999 Alien Cargo Eichhorn, Explorer Dolphin TV film
1999 First Daughter Daly TV film
2000 Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's The Lost World Phelan Episode 1.20: "The Chosen One"
2000–2001 ER Al Patterson Four episodes
2001 Signs of Life Clive Episode 1.1: "Pilot"
2001 The Lone Gunmen Michael Wilhelm Episode 1.3: "Eine Kleine Frohike"
2001 Philly Bruce Frohman Episode 1.9: "Loving Sons"
2002 The X-Files Toothpick Man Three episodes
2002 American Dreams Captain Andrews Episode 1.6: "Soldier Boy"
2002 The Practice Judge Robert Brenford Episodes 7.9: "The Good Fight" and 7.10: "Silent Partners"
2002–2003 The West Wing Secretary of Commerce Mitch Bryce Episodes 4.1: "20 Hours in America, Part I" and 4.23: "Twenty Five"
2003 JAG NCIS Director Tom Morrow Episodes 8.20: "Ice Queen" and 8.21: "Meltdown"
2003 CSI: Miami Canadian Consulate General Dubay Episode 2.1: "Blood Brothers"
2003–2004 24 Vice President Jim Prescott Eight episodes (seasons 2–3)
2003–2005 The O.C. Caleb Nichol Main cast member; appeared in 35 episodes (seasons 1–2)
2003–2015 NCIS NCIS (later Homeland) Director Tom Morrow Reprised character from JAG; 13 episodes (seasons 1–3, 10–12)
2004 Crossing Jordan Carl Logan Episode 3.2: "Slam Dunk"
2005 E-Ring Raymond Metcalf Three episodes
2005 Bow "Bow Wow's gay English butler"[5] Episode 1.1: "Pilot"; series not picked up
2006–2010 Lost Charles Widmore 17 episodes (seasons 2–6)
2006–2007 Ugly Betty Bradford Meade Main cast member; 35 episodes (seasons 1–2)
2008 Torchwood Dr. Aaron Copley Episode 2.6: "Reset"
2008 Midnight Man Donald Hagan Episodes 1.1 and 1.3
2008 Sea Patrol Ray Walsman Six episodes
2008–2011 Entourage John Ellis Five episodes (seasons 5–8)
2009 Flight of the Conchords Australian Ambassador Episode 2.3: "The Tough Brets"
2009 Moving Wallpaper Himself/John Priest Six episodes; Dale plays a fictionalised version of himself and stars in the show-within-a-show Renaissance.[9]
2009 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Judge Joshua Koehler Episode 10.21: "Liberties"
2010 Important Things with Demetri Martin Mob Boss Episode 2.1: "Attention"
2010 Burn Notice Mr. Bocklage Episode 4.6: "Entry Point"
2010 Undercovers James Kelvin Five episodes[8]
2011 Californication Lloyd Alan Phillips Jr. Episode 4.07: "The Recused"
2011 Doomsday Prophecy General Slade TV film
2011 Person of Interest Kohl Episode 1.8: "Foe"
2011–2012 The Killing Senator Eaton Six episodes (seasons 1–2)
2011–2013 Once Upon a Time King George/Albert Spencer Eight episodes (seasons 1–2)
Also narrated the clip show "The Price of Magic"
2012 House of Lies Jonathan Strauss Episode 1.3: "Microphallus"
2012 Unsupervised Sid Episode 1.9: "Jesse Judge Lawncare Incorporated"
2012 Beauty and the Beast Emperor Dorian Episode 1.1: "Pilot"; series not picked up[38][39]
2012-2013 Hot in Cleveland Sir Emmett Lawson Eight episodes
2013 Body of Proof Emmett Harrington Episode 3.12: "Breakout"[40]
2013 The Mindy Project Alfred Episode 2.5: "Sk8er Man"[41]
2013 Auckland Daze Alan/Himself Three episodes
2014 Dominion General Edward Riesen Main cast
2015 Top Coppers Frank Episode 1.1: "The Chill of the Cockney Freezer"

Video games

Year Title Role
2002 X-Men: Next Dimension Additional voices
2004 EverQuest II Dawson Magnificent, Generic High Elf
2005 Yakuza Masa Sera
2006 24: The Game Vice President Jim Prescott
2012 Mass Effect 3 Henry Lawson
Captain Aaron Sommers
2013 The Bureau: XCOM Declassified Dr. Alan Weir

Theatre

References

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External links