Patrick McKenna
Patrick McKenna | |
---|---|
Born | Hamilton, Ontario, Canada | May 8, 1960
Occupation(s) | Comedian, actor |
Years active | 1980s–present |
Spouse |
Janis McKenna (m. 1983) |
Children | 1 |
Website | http://www.PatrickMcKenna.ca |
Patrick McKenna (born May 8, 1960) is a Canadian comedian and actor. He is best known for playing Harold Green on the television series The Red Green Show and Marty Stevens on the television series Traders.
Early life
[edit]Patrick McKenna became interested in Second City when a high-school teacher took him to a show at Second City Toronto. After he graduated from high school, he attended Sheridan College, graduating with a business degree in 1982.
Career
[edit]To help with tuition, he worked his way to being night manager at Second City, learning how improv worked. In 1983, he auditioned successfully for the main stage. During the 1980s he tried his hand at standup and spent five years performing his act in Canada and the US.
One night at Second City during the late 1980s, McKenna received the acting offer which would change his life. Steve Smith was recruiting cast members, especially a sidekick, for his new project, The Red Green Show. He had come to Second City and was checking out the entire troupe, but when Patrick did his twitchy-nerd character, Smith knew he had his sidekick. He offered McKenna a job after the show. McKenna appeared on television screens throughout Canada and the US for the next 15 years as the lovable nephew Harold Green on The Red Green Show, a part he would reprise in the feature film Duct Tape Forever.
He also played Marty Stephens on Traders, working alongside future Stargate SG-1 and Stargate Atlantis Canadian actor David Hewlett. For his work on Traders and The Red Green Show, McKenna received two Gemini Awards. He is the only Canadian actor to win for both drama and comedy in the same year, at the 13th Gemini Awards on 4 October 1998.
McKenna guest-starred in two episodes of Stargate SG-1 playing Dr. Jay Felger, first in the season 6 episode "The Other Guys" and then in the season 7 episode "Avenger 2.0". He also starred in the 2002 Trudeau miniseries.
In 2006, McKenna played producer Jeffrey Littleman on the short-lived CBC television series Getting Along Famously. In 2007, he appeared in the pilot of Sabbatical. He starred as Victor in the 2011 indie horror film Silent but Deadly. In late 2011, he played the politician and Canadian Confederation leader Alexander Galt in the CBC television movie John A: Birth of a Country. Throughout the mid-2000s and early 2010s, McKenna saw work as a voice actor in Canadian animated series such as Atomic Betty, Iggy Arbuckle, Crash Canyon and Sidekick.
McKenna was the subject of the 2009 PBS documentary ADD and Loving It?! McKenna has ADHD, but was not diagnosed until he was well into his forties. He has become somewhat of a spokesman on this condition in Canada. McKenna and Rick Green, writer and performer and co-creator of The Red Green Show, made a documentary to explain some of ADHD's positives and negatives titled "ADD and Loving It." Both men open up about how it has affected them and their relationships.
Charitable work
[edit]McKenna has become involved with many charity organizations and causes—including wheelchair athletes, Adult ADHD, MS Society, Lupus Canada and McMaster Sick Kids—some of which he has personal connection with.
McKenna suffered a debilitating back injury in the early 2000s that left him unable to walk for a year. He went through times of being in a wheelchair and having to learn to walk again. It was from this experience that he became involved with wheelchair athletes.
His mother, Patricia, has suffered from lupus since the 1970s. McKenna's friend and fellow Second City alumnus Colin Mochrie and his wife Debra McGrath often help McKenna with lupus charity fundraising.
Personal life
[edit]McKenna is a member of Toronto's The Second City comedy troupe.
McKenna's mother's name is Patricia, and he has three brothers. He married his high school sweetheart, Janis, in 1983. They have a son, Brendon, born in 1985. Brendon McKenna was seen in two episodes, Dancing with Mr. D. and The Unseen Lever, of his father's series Traders as Marty's son, Mark Stephens.
Filmography
[edit]This is a partial filmography for Patrick McKenna.[1][2]
Television
[edit]- The Red Green Show (Harold Green)
- Traders (Marty Stephens)
- Little Mosque on the Prairie (The Principal)
- Stargate SG-1 (2 eps.) (Dr. Jay Felger)
- Due South (Pizzas and Promises, season 1, ep. 5) (Gary Redfield)
- Getting Along Famously (Jeffrey Littleman)
- The Border (Don Campbell)
- Spliced (Two-legs "Joe")
- Clang Invasion (Rivet)
- Bill 'n' Lloyd (Krasky the Klown)
- Wingin' It (Mr. Telson)
- The Outer Limits (episode "Mindreacher") (Dr. Seigal)
- Sidekick (Pamplemoose)
- Remedy (Frank Kanaskie)
- Forever Knight ("Dance by the Light of the Moon, season 1, ep. 5)
- Everywhere (Jim)
- Rick Mercer Report
- The Ron James Show
- Mysticons (King Darius; supporting role)[3]
- Murdoch Mysteries (5 episodes, 2010–2019) (Detective/ Inspector Hamish Slorach)
- Robocop: The Series (1994) (Umberto Ortega, Talk Show Host)
- Pink Is In (Colonel Kwoka) (4 episodes)
- Moville Mysteries (Victor's father)
Animated television and film (voice)
[edit]- Sam & Max: Freelance Police!!! (Lorne, the Friend for Life) (voice)
- Crash Canyon (Norm Wendell / Vernon Wendell)
- Iggy Arbuckle (Robear)
- Atomic Betty (Quincy Barrett)
- Best Ed (Doug aka Buddy)
- Detective Squirrel Jr. (Dad)
- Scaredy Squirrel (Nestor)
- Go, Dog. Go! (Grandpaw Barker)
- Stories From My Childhood (Various characters)
- The ZhuZhus (Wilfred P. Kerdle)
- Esme and Roy (Roy)
- The Trades
Films
[edit]- Duct Tape Forever (Harold)
- Milo 55160 (Milo 55160)
- John A.: Birth of a Country (TV movie) (Alexander Galt)
- The Masked Saint (Judd Lumpkin)
- Silent But Deadly (Victor)
- Margarita (Ben)
- The Music Man (TV movie remake) (Anvil salesman Charlie Cowell)
Radio
[edit]- The Debaters (recurring)
References
[edit]- ^ "Patrick McKenna Filmography". rottentomatoes.com. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 15 November 2023.
- ^ "Patrick McKenna Credits". tvguide.com. TV Guide. Retrieved 15 November 2023.
- ^ "Patrick McKenna". Behind the Voice Actors. November 13, 2020. Archived from the original on November 14, 2020. Retrieved November 13, 2020.
External links
[edit]- 1960 births
- Living people
- Male actors from Hamilton, Ontario
- Canadian male film actors
- Canadian male television actors
- Canadian male voice actors
- Best Actor in a Drama Series Canadian Screen Award winners
- 20th-century Canadian male actors
- 21st-century Canadian male actors
- Best Supporting Actor in a Drama Series Canadian Screen Award winners
- People with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
- Canadian male comedians
- Comedians from Ontario