Kristian Ayre Explained

Kristian Ayre
Birth Place:England
Occupation:Actor
Years Active:1992–present

Kristian Ayre is a British actor, best known for his portrayal of the character Radu from the Nickelodeon children's science fiction show Space Cases.[1]

Early life

Kristian Ayre was born in England, and moved to Canada at a young age. He began acting in the early 1990s, and appeared in the 1994 movie Andre with Keith Carradine. After a couple of appearances in TV Movies, including Bye Bye Birdie (1995), he was cast (thanks in part to co-creator Peter David[1]) in the Nickelodeon TV series Space Cases as Radu 386.

He attended Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, British Columbia, graduating in 2004 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Theatre.[2] [3] He is trained in acrobatics and gymnastics.[3]

Career

Ayre appeared in every episode of the David/Bill Mumy-created two-season Space Cases (1996–97), alongside co-stars Walter Emanuel Jones, Rahi Azizi, Paige Christina, Anik Matern, Cary Lawrence and Paul Boretski, which also featured early appearances from future-Firefly and actress Jewel Staite. Staite, as quoted by Peter David, described Ayre as:

Ayre starred in the 1997 CBS TV series The New Ghostwriter Mysteries, and in a regular role on the 1999–2000 TV series Nothing Too Good for a Cowboy alongside future-Scrubs star Sarah Chalke.[3] In the 1999 movie Running Home, Ayre co-starred with Babylon 5 actress Claudia Christian, who is quoted as describing him as "a very good actor and very easy to work with."[1] Ayre also has appeared in odd episodes of such notable science fiction shows as The Outer Limits, Stargate SG-1 and The Dead Zone, among other TV appearances.[3] Appearing as 'Loran' in "The Light" (Stargate SG-1 Season 4, episode 18), Ayre was required to cry, but eschewed the usual tricks of the trade, since he can "cry on cue."[4]

Ayre has also lent his voice to a number of dubbed versions of Japanese anime series, including Elemental Gelade, as the main character of Coud Van Giruet and Shinichiro Isumi in Hikaru no Go, as well as Yuji Sakai in the first season of Shakugan no Shana.[3] His vocal talents have also been featured in the 1993 video release of (orig. title: Kishin Heidan) and in the English-language version of the 2004 fourth InuYasha movie (orig. title: Inuyasha - Guren no houraijima).[3]

In addition to credits on both the big and small screen, Ayre has also appeared in stage productions, including MovEnt's "Dances for a Small Stage" XII in January 2006,[5] and with the Genus Theatre in Vancouver. Also in 2006, he performed in "War Lover for the Vancouver International Folk Festival," which he also produced through his "work with the Leaky Heaven Circus."[6]

A Lieutenant Kristian Ayre appeared as a bridge officer on the Enterprise-E in Peter David's 1997 debut novel, House of Cards.[7]

In 1998, Ayre appeared as Tommy McPherson in the mock-documentary , which depicted a rural family as they were besieged by bizarre unexplained occurrences, before being abducted by extraterrestrials.[8] The program caused a level of confusion and controversy upon its initial broadcast that echoed earlier reality-muddying incidents such as Orson Welles' War of the Worlds radio broadcast. Debate over the hoax nature of the program occurred on Internet chat rooms and bulletin boards, where the program's status as fiction was established by virtue of the fact that Tommy McPherson was played by Ayre, an actor.[8]

Personal life

Kristian Ayre is married.[9]

Partial filmography

YearMovies/Television ShowsRole/sNotes
1994AndreGerald[10]
1994Taishi TakamuraAnime, English dub
1995Eye LevelZackTelefilm
1995Bye Bye BirdieHarvey Johnson[11] Telefilm
1996–1997Space CasesRadu[12] TV series
1997data-sort-value="New Ghostwriter Mysteries, The" The New Ghostwriter Mysteries[13] Henry 'Strick' Strickland[14] TV series
1998Tommy McPhersonMockumentary
1999Running HomeMatt 'Spider' Strilecki
1999–2000Nothing Too Good for a CowboyTommy Aitkens[15] TV series
2000Bear With Me[16] Daniel
2001Voyage of the UnicornSebastianHallmark Entertainment Productions[17]
2001Stargate SG-1LoranTV series, Season 04 Ep. 18 "The Light
2002Bang Bang You're Dead[18] KurtTelefilm
2003ElfFoom Foom[19]
2004–2005Shakugan no ShanaYūji SakaiAnime, English dub, season 1
2004RyūraAnime, English dub
2005Elemental GeladeCoud 'Cou' Van GiruetAnime, English dub
2008Of Golf and GodDaniel

Notes and References

  1. News: David, Peter. Wiki wha?. Comics Buyer's Guide. 1663. March 2010. 82. Krause Publications.
  2. Web site: Kristian Ayre webpage. Kristianayre.com. January 30, 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20110713171245/http://www.kristianayre.com/. July 13, 2011. dead.
  3. http://web.mac.com/kristianayre/iWeb/Kristian%20Ayre/Resume.html Kristian Ayre's resume
  4. Storm, Jo, Approaching the Possible - The World of Stargate SG-1 (ECW Press, 2005), p. 295
  5. Web site: "Dances for a Small Stage" Hall of Fame Gallery photographs by Chris Randle . Movent.ca . January 30, 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100428011122/http://www.movent.ca/dfasshalloffame/dfasshalloffame.htm . April 28, 2010 .
  6. http://web.mac.com/kristianayre/iWeb/Kristian%20Ayre/Blog/C5E3CCB1-6D2B-4A0B-99FE-C505F0C6DFDD.html "Photos for Friday"
  7. David, Peter. : House of Cards. Pocket Books. 1997. . page 101
  8. Roscoe, Jane and Hight, Craig, "Degree 2: critique and hoax" in Faking it - Mock-documentary and the subversion of factuality (Manchester University Press, 2001), pp. 151–155
  9. Web site: Untitled. Ayre, Kristian. Instagram. en-US. bot: unknown. September 16, 2001. March 20, 2023. March 19, 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20230319163206/https://www.instagram.com/p/CT4vsm3As0-/.
  10. [John A. Willis|Willis, John]
  11. Marill, Alvin H., More Theatre: Stage to Screen to Television, 1993–2001 (Scarecrow Press, 2003),, p. 86
  12. Gerhards, Winfried, Handbuch der Phantastischen Fernsehserien (BoD – Books on Demand, 2001),, p. 328
  13. Tate, Marsha Ann, Canadian Television Programming made for the United States market: a History with Production and Broadcast Data (McFarland, 2007),, p. 256
  14. Terrace, Vincent, Encyclopedia of Television Subjects, Themes and Settings (McFarland & Co., 2007),, p. 69
  15. Kenter, Peter and Levin, Martin, TV North: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Canadian Television (Whitecap, 2001),, p. 123
  16. Described as "a sequel of sorts to Ms. Bear" by Pratley, Gerald, A Century of Canadian Cinema: Gerald Pratley's Feature Film Guide, 1900 to the Present (Lynx Images, 2003),, p. 22
  17. http://www.allocine.fr/film/fichefilm-138763/casting/ "Le Voyage de la Licorne"
  18. Roberts, Jerry, "William Mastrosimone" in The Great American Playwrights on the Screen (Hal Leonard Corporation, 2003),, p. 366
  19. [John A. Willis|Willis, John]