Nicolas Wright

Nicolas Wright (born March 23, 1982[1][2]) is a Canadian actor and writer. Wright has performed on stage, television and film. In 2004, he received the "most promising newcomer" award at the Just for Laughs film festival in Montreal for his short film, Toutouffe. Recently he appeared in Mike Clattenburg's 2011 film Afghan Luke. He appeared in 2016 film Independence Day: Resurgence.

Nicolas Wright
Wright on the set of Accidentally on Purpose, October 2, 2009
Born (1982-03-23) March 23, 1982
NationalityCanadian
OccupationActor
Years active2003 – present

Career

Nicolas began his career on film playing the lead role in the award-winning feature Hatley High (Best Director/Best Screenplay, Aspen Comedy Festival, Best Actor Nomination, ACTRA Awards 2006). Shortly after he co-starred in the BBC mini-series, Superstorm, with Tom Sizemore and Nicola Stephenson. He also starred in the hit IFC mini-series, The Festival as well as its spin-off sequel The Business, which co-stars Kathleen Robertson. His work on the show earned him another Best Actor nomination at the 2007 ACTRA awards as well as a Gemini nomination for "Best ensemble performance in a comedy series." In 2007 he co-starred in MGM’s War Games: The Dead Code, Lifetime’s Girl's Best Friend alongside Janeane Garofalo, as well as PHILMS Pictures’ Prom Wars which co-stars Raviv Ullman and Alia Shawkat. The following year he co starred in the Canadian independent feature The Wild Hunt, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival where it was awarded "Best First Canadian Feature". In 2009 he co-starred in the CBS prime time comedy, Accidentally On Purpose with Jenna Elfman, Ashley Jensen, Grant Show and Jon Foster. The show earned a People’s Choice nomination in 2009 for "Best New Comedy". Later that year he starred in the Alliance Atlantis film, Afghan Luke alongside Nick Stahl. The film had its North American premiere at 2011 Toronto Film Festival. He recently wrapped production on the Canadian feature film Camera Shy which was selected to premiere at this year’s Vancouver International Film Festival.

Nicolas is also actively writing and directing his own projects. His first short film Toutouffe was awarded "Special Jury Prize" at the Just For Laughs Comedia Film Festival. Since then he has developed television series with IFC and most recently Comedy Central. Earlier this year he produced, wrote and starred in Mike Clattenburg's short film Crackin' Down Hard, which was awarded an honorable mention at the 2012 Toronto Film Festival and was also selected as part of TIFF’s Top Ten Films. He appeared in the Columbia Pictures, Roland Emmerich-directed, feature film, White House Down (2013).

Nominations and awards

Nominated in 2003 for Best Actor at the Montreal Critic’s Circle for his starring role in an adaptation of The Portrait of Dorian Gray,[3] he won special mention as "the most promising newcomer" at the 2004 Montreal Comedy Festival Just for Laughs for his short film Toutouffe.[4] In 2006, he shared a "Best Ensemble Performance in a Comedy Program or Series" nomination along with other members of the cast of the "Check Please" episode of The Business.[4]

gollark: PNGizing executables is fun!
gollark: Ah, ye olden APNG trick or whatever.
gollark: g.
gollark: It's lyin.
gollark: You can decode that with the program I have an image of somewhere.

References

  1. "Nicolas Wright biography". TV guide. Retrieved January 10, 2015.
  2. CBS biography of Nicolas Wright Archived 2010-02-12 at the Wayback Machine
  3. "Nicolas Wright Bio". TV.com. Retrieved 2008-02-19.
  4. "Awards". IMDb. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
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