Reg e cathay biography books

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Reg E. Cathey

Birth name:

Reginald Eugene Cathey

Place of birth:

Huntsville, Alabama, USA

Place of death:

New York City, New York, USA

Reg E. Cathey(18 August1958– 9 February2018; age 59) was the actor and voice actor who played KlingoncommanderMoragin the Star Trek: The Next Generationsixth seasonepisode "Aquiel".

Outside of Star Trek, he is probably best known for his recurring role as Warden Martin Querns on the HBO series Oz and his role as Freddy Hayes on House of Cards, for which he earned an Emmy award and two further nominations. He had previously worked on PBS' Square One Television with Larry Cedar.

Cathey appeared in an episode of Spenser: For Hire, starring Avery Brooks. In 2002, Cathey appeared in an episode of Law & Order: Criminal Intent with fellow Next Generation guest star Olivia d'Abo, and in 2005, he co-starred with Gerrit Graham in an episode of Third Watch. He also had recurring roles on Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (starring Mariska Hargitay) and as Norman Wilson on The Wire (co-starring Idris Elba, Sonja Sohn, Robert Wisdom and John Doman).

In 1995, he appeared in Tyson, along with Paul Winfield, James B. Sikking, and George Murdock. Five years later, he appeared in Homicide: The Movie, co-starring Ed Begley, Jr. and Michelle Forbes.

Cathey had a number of feature films to his credit. Two of his more prominent film roles were in The Mask (1994, featuring Christopher Darga and Robert O'Reilly), and Tank Girl (1995, starring Lori Petty and Malcolm McDowell, with Charles Lucia, Jeff Kober, Ann Magnuson, Doug Jones, Ann Cusack, and Iggy Pop). He also appeared in Seven (1995) and American Psycho (2000, with Catherine Black and Josh Lucas).

Among his other films are Funny Farm (1988, also featuring Kevin Conway, Mike Starr, William Newman, Dan Desmond, David Williams, and Dakin Matthews), Born on the F

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    1. Reg e cathay biography books

    About

    • Adam Driver

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      Adam Driver

      Theater credits include:
      Angels In America (Signature Theater)
      Mrs. Warren’s Profession(Broadway)
      The Retributionists (Playwrights Horizons)

    • Adepero Oduye

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      Adepero Oduye

      Broadway: The Trip To Bountiful. Off-Broadway: Her Portmanteau (NYTW). Regional: Eclipsed (Yale Rep), The Bluest Eye (Hartford Stage). Film & TV: The Dinner, The Big Short, My Name Is David, 12 Years a Slave, Pariah, Steel Magnolias, "Law & Order," "Louie," "The Unusuals."

    • Adrian Brown

    • Aidan Kelly

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      Aidan Kelly

      Credits include:

      Eden

      National Theatre Live: Treasure Island

      Superstar

    • Alex Averbuch

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      Alex Averbuch

      Oleksandr (Alex) Averbuch, a native of Novoaidar, Luhans’k region, Ukraine (b. 1985), is a literary historian, poet, and translator. He is the author of three books of poetry and an array of literary translations between Hebrew, Ukrainian, English, and Russian. His poetry deals with the issues of ethnic fragmentation and in-betweenness, multiple identities, queerness, cross- and multilingualism, documentalist writing, and memory. He has organized numerous poetic performances and festivals, such as the International Festival of Contemporary Ukrainian Poetry (summer 2020), and edited a special issue of Ukrainian Literature: A Journal of Translations, dedicated to the poetry of this festival’s participants. Averbuch is active in promoting Ukrainian-Jewish relations. In 2022 he organized a first-of-its-kind series of bilingual (Ukrainian-Hebrew) literary events dedicated to contemporary Ukrainian poetry in Hebrew translation, which involved prominent Ukrainian and Israeli poets and translators. Currently he is compiling and editing an anthology of contemporary Ukrainian poetry in Hebrew translation. He earned his PhD in Slavic and Jewish studies at the University of Toronto. Since 2022 he has been an Izaak Walton Killam Memorial Postdoctoral fellow at the Uni

    Born into a military family in Huntsville, Alabama -- his father was an army vet who had served in World War II, Korea and Vietnam, while his mother held a somewhat mysterious job in the Department of Defence -- Reg E. Cathey spent much of his early childhood living on a rural farmhouse in Germany. There, he watched American TV shows dubbed into German and first became theatre-struck at the age of nine after attending a USO performance of "Guys and Dolls". That same year, he also took up playing the saxophone. That he became an actor and not a jazz musician was happenstance, but, as he once admitted "he was no Lester Young". An incisive and eloquent personality with a uniquely expressive baritone voice, Cathey was to bring a soulful dignity and often unexpected sense of humour to a wide variety of roles on both stage and screen.

    Cathey attended the University of Michigan and later studied acting at the Yale School of Drama. The theatre remained his lifelong passion and New York his preferred place of residence. As he later explained: "I learned how to act at Yale but learned how to be an actor in NYC. I escaped wandering lost in the desert that is Los Angeles after a decade (which I'll never get back) and being psychically traumatized, I didn't audition for film and television, immersing myself in the 'Classics.'" And so, Cathey went on to tackle diverse (non-stereotypical) roles, ranging from Prospero in a musical version of Shakespeare's 'The Tempest' to 'Red' Redding in a British production of 'The Shawshank Redemption' (a part made famous by Morgan Freeman in the film version).

    Though performing more often than not in New York, Cathey did ultimately return to Hollywood. His formidable screen characters have often been marked by a uniquely erudite fierceness. They have included powerful authority figures, scientists and occasional villains in films (The Mask (1994), Tank Girl (1995),

    Cathey, Reg E. 1958- (Reginald E. Cathey)

    PERSONAL

    Full name, Reginald E. Cathey; born August 18, 1958, in Huntsville, AL. Education: Attended University of Michigan and Yale University.

    Addresses:

    Agent—Sarah Fargo, Paradigm, 360 North Crescent Dr. N., Beverly Hills, CA 90210.

    Career:

    Actor.

    Awards, Honors:

    Obie Award (with others), outstanding ensemble performance, Village Voice, 2002, for Talk; Black Reel Award nomination, best supporting actor on a network or cable program, 2002, for Boycott; Black Reel Award nomination, best supporting actor on a network or cable program, 2005, for Everyday People; Audelco Award nomination (with others), outstanding ensemble performance, Audience Development Committee, 2007, for Blue Door.

    CREDITS

    Film Appearances:

    Waiter, Ich und Er (also known as Me and Him), Columbia, 1988.

    Reporter, Funny Farm, Warner Bros., 1988.

    Cab driver, Crossing Delancey, Warner Bros., 1988.

    Wayne, Astonished, Leo Video, 1988.

    Second man, Just Like In the Movies, Cabriolet Films, 1989.

    Fan's friend, Penn & Teller Get Killed (also known as Dead Funny), Warner Bros., 1989.

    Speaker in Syracuse, NY, Born on the Fourth of July, Universal, 1989.

    Willie, Loose Cannons, TriStar, 1990.

    Sound analyst, Quick Change, Warner Bros., 1990.

    Howie, What About Bob?, Buena Vista, 1991.

    (As Reginald E. Cathey) Freeze, The Mask, New Line Cinema, 1994.

    Sergeant major, Clear and Present Danger, Paramount, 1994.

    Marcus, Airheads, Twentieth Century-Fox, 1994.

    Shotgun cop, The Hard Truth, Spectacor Films/Starlight, 1994.

    First cop, Clean Slate, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 1994.

    Voice of frog, Napoleon (animated), 1994.

    DeeTee, Tank Girl, United Artists, 1995.

    (As Reginald E. Cathey) Coroner, Se7en (also known as Seven), New Line Cinema, 1995.

    Nassor, Ill Gotten Gains, Spats Films, 1997.

    Al, American Psycho, Lions Gate Films, 2000.

    Dirty Dee, Pootie Tang, Paramount, 2001.

    Officer Wate