Dominic Keating

Dominic Keating (born 1 July 1962) is an English television, film and theatre actor, known for his portrayal of Tony in the Channel 4 sitcom Desmond's and Lieutenant Malcolm Reed on Star Trek: Enterprise.

Dominic Keating
Dominic Keating
Born (1962-07-01) 1 July 1962
Alma materUniversity College London
Years active1989-present

Early life and education

Keating was born in Leicester, to an Irish father; his grandfather, a brigadier, was awarded an OBE.[1] His first stage performance was in primary school, playing a character in The Ragged School. He then attended Uppingham School.

After graduating from the University College London with First Class Honours in History,[2] he tried various jobs before deciding to be a professional actor. To obtain his Equity card, Keating worked in a drag act called Feeling Mutual.[3]

Career

Theatre

Keating had success on the UK stage before working as a television and film actor. He originated the role of "Cosmo" in Philip Ridley's The Pitchfork Disney,[4] as well as that of "Bryan" in Michael Wall's Amongst Barbarians, for which he won a Mobil Award. He has also done additional stage work in both the UK and in Los Angeles, including the one man play The Christian Brothers at King's Cross, in The Best Years of Your Life at the Man in the Moon Theatre, Screamers at the Edinburgh Playhouse Festival, and Alfie at the Tiffany Theater.[4]

Television

Keating first came to major public attention in the UK when he had a semi-regular role as Tony in the Channel 4 sitcom Desmond's (1989–95).[3] He went on from this to a role in Inspector Morse, as well as other guest-starring roles.

Having moved to the United States, he gained the role of the demonic warrior Mallos on the short-lived 2000 series The Immortal.[5] He starred in the Zalman King series chromiumblue.com. He also made guest appearances on Buffy The Vampire Slayer, G vs E and Special Unit 2[5] as well as on several other series prior to a major role on the series Star Trek: Enterprise, where he played Lieutenant Malcolm Reed. Since then he has had guest roles on the series Las Vegas, Holby City and the CSI: NY episode Uncertainty Rules.

Keating joined the cast of hit show Heroes for its second season and played an Irish mobster in a four episode arc. He also held a guest-starring role for three episodes on the Fox TV series Prison Break. In 2010 Keating guest starred in the FX original series Sons of Anarchy.

Film

He has appeared in films, including The Hollywood Sign, The Auteur Theory and the upcoming films Certifiably Jonathan, Hollywood Kills and Robert Zemeckis' animated version of Beowulf. At a Star Trek convention in Sacramento, California on 9 September 2006, he announced that he had been cast as an Australian scientist in the Species sequel Species IV. He has also recently done work in several short films, including the latest by Tim Russ, called Plugged, a satire on modern advertising.

Dominic Keating also appears as Sherlock Holmes's brother in the 2010 film Sherlock Holmes by the Asylum.

Dominic Keating was also responsible for the voice-over in the Ricky Gervais film "The Invention of Lying" – 2009 release by WB.

Other work

Keating also does commercial and voiceover work, perhaps most famously on an early 1990s Vidal Sassoon commercial, where his British pronunciation of "salon" brought him some notice as well as a spoof on Saturday Night Live. He has also done voice work for various audiobooks, and also voiced (uncredited) the minor character 'Mouse' in BioWare's Dragon Age: Origins.[6] He has also recently appeared in commercials for Sprint/Nextel as fictitious British rock star Ian Westbury.

Keating has been confirmed as the voice of "Kormac the Templar" in the PC game Diablo 3 by Blizzard Entertainment.[7] He was also the voice of Gremlin Prescott in Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two (having provided Prescott's vocal effects in the previous game).

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1994Shake, Rattle and Rock!Marc (uncredited)Television film
1997Jungle 2 JungleIan
1998Folle d'elleChris
1999The Auteur TheoryLewis Rugglesworth
2001The Hollywood SignSteve
2006Hollywood KillsFrancis Fenway
2007PluggedDetective PitchmanShort
2007Certifiably JonathanNicholas DeBoor
2007The AttackmenCoachShort
2007Species - The AwakeningForbes McGuire
2007BeowulfCain
2009NinongNinong
2010Sherlock HolmesThorpe Holmes
2011The One WarriorMerlin / Dragon's voice / Narrator
2016A Killer Walks Amongst UsDobsyn
2018Once Upon a Time in LondonBelgian Johnny
2018Unbelievable!!!!!Paramedic Hacky
2020Greyhound (film)Harry

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1989The Paradise ClubJimmyEpisode: "Crack in the Mirror"
1989-1992The BillFriend 2 / Patrick Litton / Andrew JensenEpisodes: You'll Be Back, Old Wounds and Party Politics
1989-1993Desmond'sTony36 episodes
1990CasualtyIan TilsleyEpisode: Remembrance
1992Inspector MorseMurray StoneEpisode: Dead on Time
1993Teenage Health FreakTony St. MichaelEpisode: Episode No.2.6
1995Love StreetMarkEpisode: Second Chance
1998Poltergeist: The LegacyBryan / Jason CrenshawEpisode: Father to Son
1999Buffy the Vampire SlayerBlairEpisode: Helpless
1999-2000G vs ETomek Walenski / Sergei DraskovicEpisodes: Orange Volvo and Immigrant Evil
2000-2001The ImmortalMallos6 episodes
2001Special Unit 2Dr. Harlan EdensEpisode: The Wraps
2001-2005Star Trek: EnterpriseMalcolm Reed98 episodes
2002ChromiumBlue.comOwen8 episodes
2006Las VegasAnthony DembyEpisode: Bait and Switch
2007HeroesWill4 episodes
2007Prison BreakAndrew TygeEpisodes: Interference and Photo Finish
2008Holby CityOllie LakeEpisode: Love Will Tear Us Apart
2010CSI: NYRufus KnoxEpisode: Uncertainty Rules
2010Sons of AnarchyLutherEpisodes: Lochan Mor and Turas
2012Breakout KingsBob DixonEpisode: Double Down

Voice work

YearTitleRoleNotes
2000StarlancerClaymore - Doug McCleodVideo game
2009Dragon Age: OriginsMouse (uncredited)Video game
2010Epic MickeyGremlin PrescottVideo game
2012Diablo IIIKormac the TemplarVideo game
2012Epic Mickey 2: The Power of TwoGremlin PrescottVideo game
2013One of the FamilyNarratorAudiobook published by Audible Studios
2014Diablo III: Reaper of SoulsKormac the TemplarVideo game
2015The General From AmericaNarratorAudiobook published by L. A. Theatre Works
2014DestinyXander 99-40 / Arcite 99-40 / City Vendor FrameVideo game[8]
2016World of Warcraft: LegionTirathon SaltherilVideo game
2016The Iliad: A New Translation by Caroline AlexanderNarratorAudiobook published by HarperCollins
2017Destiny 2Male Frame / Arcite 99-40Video game
2017The Mermaid's DaughterNarratorAudiobook published by HarperCollins
gollark: One time I ran Firefox over X11 forwarding over an awful interweb connection to a Raspberry Pi.
gollark: Which reminds me, time to `sudo pacman -Syu`.
gollark: I mean, I don't like forced updates, but it's better than *no* updates.
gollark: Doesn't having *no* updates even if you want them make it unsuitable for basically everything but a liveCD?
gollark: Can you though? Might a lot of Windows internals not expect CRLFs?

References

  1. "Look Who's Stalking". SFX. September 2005. Archived from the original on 25 October 2008. Retrieved 20 May 2009.
  2. Archived 30 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  3. James Ellis (4 February 2002). "Dominic Keating". Metro. Retrieved 2 September 2010.
  4. Marakay Rogers (Autumn 2003). "An Interview With Enterprise Star Dominic Keating". Union Jack. Archived from the original on 5 February 2013. Retrieved 2 September 2010.
  5. Karen Bennett (7 July 2002). "Dominic Keating at Toronto Trek". Archived from the original on 3 January 2006. Retrieved 2 September 2010.
  6. "Dragon Age: Origins (Video Game 2009)".
  7. "Blizzard Blues on the full Beta Start Date, the Red Target Outline, and more | Diablo: IncGamers". Diablo.incgamers.com. 10 September 2011. Retrieved 8 April 2013.
  8. Destiny - End Credits - IGN Video. IGN Video. 11 September 2014. Retrieved 4 December 2014.
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