Victor Garber Movies
Broadway actor
Victor Garber was born on March 16th, 1940 in London, Ontario, Canada. Through years of working on-stage, he has earned several Tony and Drama Desk nominations. He earned his first Obie award for his performance in Wenceslas Square at the 1988 New York Shakespeare Festival. Some of his other stage credits include Macbeth, Sweeney Todd, Damn Yankees, and
Yasmina Reza's Art. After playing Jesus on-stage in Toronto,
Garber reprised his role in
David Greene's 1973 film musical
Godspell. He joined
Greene again to play the lead in
Liberace: Behind the Music (1988).
Staying busy with theater,
Garber occasionally acts in supporting roles on the big screen. He appeared in two of
Nora Ephron's feature comedies:
Sleepless in Seattle (1993) and
Mixed Nuts (1994). He also appeared in the tense drama
Exotica in 1994, directed by fellow Canadian
Atom Egoyan. Throughout the '90s and beyond, he appeared in countless TV movies, from
Woman on the Run: The Lawrencia Bembenek Story (1993) to
Torso: The Evelyn Dick Story (2002). Some of his mainstream feature appearances include small parts in
The First Wives Club,
Titanic, and
Legally Blonde. Meanwhile, he regularly appeared in a Canadian television mystery series, Criminal Instincts, based on the novels by
Gail Bowen, starting with the first installment Love and Murder in 2000. He played Inspector Phillip Menard to head police detective Joanne Kilborne (
Wendy Crewson). He also had a very comfortable home in Disney movies during this time, as he played the dad in
Tuck Everlasting, the king in
Rodgers & Hammerstein's Cinderella, and Daddy Warbucks in
Rob Marshall's 1999 TV feature
Annie.
In 2001,
Garber was cast as another dad in the dramatic spy series
Alias. He played Jack Bristow, the CIA agent dad of Sydney Bristow (
Jennifer Garner). He earned an Emmy nomination for his work on the show. Characters for 2003 included a mayor in the ABC musical
The Music Man and a detective in the independent drama
Home Room. The actor continued his work in Alias until 2005, and enjoyed further success on the television series’ Justice and Eli Stone. In 2008, the actor took on the role of Mayor Moscone for the Academy Award-winning Milk, and lent his voice to Kung Fu Panda 2 in 2011. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, Rovi