Genie Award for Best Performance by a Foreign Actor explained

The Genie Award for Best Performance by a Foreign Actor was awarded by the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television from 1980 to 1983, for the best performance by non-Canadian actor in a Canadian film.[1]

The award and its Foreign Actress companion were frequently criticized both by actors and film critics — Canadian actor Christopher Plummer criticized the distinction in his Best Actor acceptance speech at the first Genies ceremony, and Jay Scott called them "loathsome", dubbing them "the Colonial Category", in a 1982 article in The Globe and Mail.[2]

The awards were discontinued after the 4th Genie Awards.[3] Initially, non-Canadian actors were simply barred from being nominated in acting categories at all,[3] but beginning with the 7th Genie Awards non-Canadian actors instead became eligible for the Genie Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role and/or the Genie Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role.[3]

Winners and nominees

YearNomineeFilm
1980
1st Genie Awards
George C. ScottThe Changeling
Michael DouglasRunning
Bill MurrayMeatballs
Will SampsonFish Hawk
Rod SteigerJack London's Klondike Fever
1981
2nd Genie Awards
Jack LemmonTribute
Bruce DernMiddle Age Crazy
Burt LancasterAtlantic City, U.S.A.
Brett MarxThe Lucky Star
Rod SteigerThe Lucky Star
1982
3rd Genie Awards
Alan ArkinImproper Channels
Guy BoydTicket to Heaven
Robert CarradineHeartaches
Rémi LaurentThe Plouffe Family (Les Plouffe)
John SavageThe Amateur
Tom SkerrittSilence of the North
1983
4th Genie Awards
Richard FarnsworthThe Grey Fox
Grand BushHard Feelings
Bruce DernHarry Tracy, Desperado
Jeff GoldblumThreshold
Ron PerlmanQuest for Fire
Jean YanneA Day in a Taxi (Une journée en taxi)

Notes and References

  1. Maria Topalovich, And the Genie Goes To...: Celebrating 50 Years of the Canadian Film Awards. Stoddart Publishing, 2000. .
  2. [Jay Scott]
  3. "Genie rules changed to include Americans". Toronto Star, October 9, 1985.