Showing posts with label Victor Garber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Victor Garber. Show all posts

Tuesday, 15 January 2013

Victor Garber Reveals He's Gay and Dating Artist Rainer Andreesen

[Source]

Victor Garber Reveals He's Gay and Dating Artist Rainer Andreesen

Celebrity News January 15, 2013 AT 9:30AM By Zach Johnson

Victor Garber and Rainer Andreesen attend The American Fertility Association's Illuminations NYC
2012 on December 3, 2012 in New York City.
Credit: Jason Kempin/Getty Images

While Jodie Foster made her sexual orientation a public spectacle at the 70th Annual Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills Jan. 13, Titanic actor Victor Garber quietly confirmed that he's gay in an interview with Greg in Hollywood blogger Greg Hernandez.

Garber -- best known for his roles in the movies Argo, Legally Blonde, Milk, The First Wives Club and Sleepless in Seattle -- addressed his homosexuality during the TV Critics Association Press Tour in Pasadena, Calif. in early January.

PHOTOS: Out and proud stars

Hernandez asked Garber about a Wikipedia entry that claimed he lives in New York City with artist and model Rainer Andreesen. "I don't really talk about it but everybody knows," the 63-year-old actor said of his relationship with Andreesen, a fellow Canadian. "He's going to be out here with me for the SAG Awards."

PHOTOS: Celebrity LGBT allies

Garber -- who has been nominated for six Emmy Awards since entering show business -- first spoke about his longtime love in an April 2012 interview with Canada's Forever Young.

"My companion Rainer Andreesen and I have been together almost 13 years in Greenwich Village," he said. "We both love New York."

PHOTOS: TV's best gay and lesbian couples

In addition to his film career, Garber has also appeared on the small screen in Alias, 30 Rock, Frasier, Ugly Betty, Web Therapy, The Big C, Damages, Deception, Eli Stone, Nurse Jackie and Glee.

Victor Garber's gay, he confirms

[Source]

Victor Garber's gay, he confirms — but didn't you know already?

Victor Garber at a panel discussion about NBC's "Deception" during a critics' tour event this month in Pasadena. (Frederick M. Brown / Getty Images / January 6, 2013)
By Christie D'Zurilla | January 15, 2013, 11:42 a.m.

Actor Victor Garber confirmed Monday that he's gay -- though he did it in a didn't-everyone-know-already way.

"I don’t really talk about it but everybody knows," Garber told the Greg in Hollywood blog about living with his same-sex partner, Rainer Andreesen, for more than a decade. "He’s going to be out here with me for the SAG Awards."

E! News confirmed the info, while People linked to an April 2012 interview in Canadian magazine FYI in which the "Alias" and "Titanic" actor had mentioned his relationship with Andreesen, noting it as one of his proudest achievements.

"My companion Rainer Andreesen and I have been together almost 13 years in Greenwich Village. We both love New York."

Andreesen was reportedly Garber's date to the Golden Globe Awards on Sunday, where "Argo," in which the 63-year-old actor appeared, took home best picture and best director.

Garber can be seen in NBC's series "Deception."

Victor Garber Comes Out

[Source]

'Titanic' Star Victor Garber Comes Out As Gay

Posted: 15/01/2013 11:17 GMT  |  Updated: 15/01/2013 11:17 GMT

Victor Garber, the US actor who has starred in the likes of 'Titanic', 'Legally Blonde', 'Argo' and the hit TV series 'Alias' has come out as gay - just a day after Jodie Foster did the same at the Golden Globes.

The star confirmed he was living with his male partner during an interview with Greg In Hollywood.

When he was asked about an entry on his Wikipedia page that states he lives with his partner Rainer Andreesen in New York, he said: "I don't really talk about it, but everybody knows. He's going to be out here with me for the SAG Awards."

Victor Garber

Despite having a relatively low profile, Garber has had a hugely successful career on both the big and small screens.

He can currently be seen in Ben Affleck's Golden Globe-winning 'Argo' as well as on the small screen playing corporate executive and family patriarch Robert Bowers in 'Deception'.

Could this be the start of a 'coming out' trend in Hollywood? We hope so - and can't help but wonder who'll be next?

Victor Garber: 'Everybody knows' I'm gay

[Source]

Victor Garber: 'Everybody knows' I'm gay

Ann Oldenburg, USA TODAY | 2:46p.m. EST January 15, 2013

The actor, 63, is confirming that he has been quietly living with his longtime partner in New York.




Victor Garber confirms he is gay

[Source]

Victor Garber confirms he is gay and in longterm relationship with artist Rainer Andreesen

By Daily Mail Reporter
PUBLISHED:17:27 GMT, 15 January 2013 | UPDATED:23:48 GMT, 15 January 2013

Coming out: Victor Garber, pictured here
at the Golden Globes on Sunday, has
confirmed he is gay
Victor Garber has confirmed he is gay.

The Argo actor has never publicly addressed his sexuality, but said he is planning to attend the screen Actors Guild (SAG) Awards later this month with long-term partner Rainer Andreesen.

Asked about an entry on his Wikipedia page - which is not official and open to editing by users - that says he lives in New York City with the artist-and-model, the 63-year-old actor told blog Greg in Hollywood: 'I don't really talk about it but everybody knows.

'He's going to be out here with me for the SAG Awards.'

Six-time Emmy nominated Garber first acknowledged Andreesen in an April 2012 interview with Canada's Forever Young.

He said: 'My companion Rainer Andreesen and I have been together almost 13 years in Greenwich Village. We both love New York.'

The former Alias actor can next be seen in NBC drama series Deception and says the drama series is like 'dessert' because it is everything he everwanted.

He said: 'I'm a lucky actor, I work. But this is the first series that's come along since Eli Stone, three years ago, that I really wanted to do.

'Everybody knows': Victor with longterm partner Rainer Andreesen who he lives
with in New York, pictured here in December

'It was smart, it was interesting, it was dynamic and it wasn't like the show was going to rest on me.

'I thought this was the perfect thing at this point in my life. It had everything I like, the complexity of the character, the family drama, all of the duplicity.

'For an actor, it's like getting a dessert - like getting what you hope for and rarely get.

'I love to work and I love the idea of going to work every day and also the fact that I get to do it in New York. It's like a gift. I feel like Iwon the lottery.'

Movie star: Garber in a scene from Argo with Ben Affleck
The son of Joe and Hope Garber, his mother was a popular TV and stage personality in his native Canada with her own show called At Home With Hope Garber.

Victor began acting at the age of nine, and he took acting lessons at the University of Toronto's Hart House at age 16.

He started his career as a folk singer and in 1967 formed The Sugar Shoppe with Peter Mann, Laurie Hood and Lee Harris.

They enjoyed moderate success having four top 40 hits in Canada and performed on The Ed Sullivan Show and The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson before breaking up.

Titanic role: Victor developed a flawless Northern Irish accent to play shipbuilder
Thomas Andrews in the 1997 smash
Plum role: Victor also starred with Jennifer Garner in 2000s TV series Alias

After his big break playing Jesus in 1971 musical Godspell, and the subsequent 1973 film adaptation, he has featured in a slew of high profile films.

His best known role may be in 1997's Oscar sensation Titanic, in which he mastered a flawless Northern Irish accent to play shipbuilder Thomas Andrews.

Other well-known appearances include Sleepless in Seattle, Annie, Legally Blonde, and Tuck Everlasting.
Jet set lifestyle: Victor's success as an actor has allowed him to fly around the
globe on promotional tours

Monday, 14 January 2013

Actor Victor Garber Confirms

[Source]

Actor Victor Garber Confirms: Yep, He's Gay

The well-regarded actor, currently on the big screen in Argo and the small one in Deception, says yes, his life partner is a man.

BY Trudy Ring January 14 2013 7:27 PM ET

Victor Garber
While everyone is debating the merits of Jodie Foster’s Golden Globes speech, another distinguished performer, albeit one with a lower profile, has quietly confirmed that he’s gay: character actor Victor Garber.

Garber, perhaps best known for Titanic and the TV series Alias, and currently on-screen in Argo, confirmed the information to Greg in Hollywood blogger Greg Hernandez in a recent interview.

In a post published today, Hernandez writes that he met Garber last week at the TV Critics Association Press Tour in Pasadena, Calif. He asked Garber about a Wikipedia entry that said he is partnered with a man, Rainer Andreesen, with whom he lives in New York. “I wondered if that’s something public, that you’ve confirmed,” Hernandez said to Garber.

“He seemed surprised by the question but said: ‘I don’t really talk about it but everybody knows,’” Hernandez writes. “Garber then added: ‘He’s going to be out here with me for the SAG Awards.’”

The Argo ensemble, which includes Garber as Canadian ambassador Ken Taylor, is nominated for a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture.

Garber also noted to Hernandez that he’s friendly with Argo star and director Ben Affleck and Affleck’s wife, actress Jennifer Garner; he played her father in the espionage drama Alias. He also appeared, uncredited, in Affleck’s film The Town. Of Argo, he told Hernandez, “It’s such a gratification because of my relationship with Ben and Jennifer to see him emerge now as one of the great directors which I’ve always felt since Gone Baby Gone. To be a part of it is like the icing on the cake. It’s incredibly thrilling for me. And the fact that people love the movie so much means the world.”

Garber also currently appears in the TV series Deception, playing corporate executive and family patriarch Robert Bowers. His notable film roles include shipbuilder Thomas Andrews in Titanic and San Francisco mayor George Moscone in Milk. He has appeared frequently on Broadway and has four Tony Award nominations, along with six Emmy nominations for his TV work — including one for a 2004 guest shot on Will & Grace.

Greg interviewd Victor Garber

[Source]

How my interview w/Victor Garber got interesting

By Greg Hernandez on Jan 14, 2013 2:02 pm

I didn’t plan on asking Victor Garber about his private life.

Last week during the TV Critics Association Press Tour in Pasadena, the actor was onstage with the cast of the new NBC drama Deception and I knew that I’d want to chat with him one-on-one after the panel.

So I quickly looked at his Wikipedia page and there it was: ‘He lives in New York with his companion of 13 years, Rainer Andreesen.’ I then found all kinds of photos of this most handsome couple together.

I wondered, ‘Did he come out publicly and I missed it?’

After the panel, I still had that question in mind as I talked to Garber about the new series, his role in Argo and whether or not he was going to do a guest spot on Smash which was also stated on Wikipedia.

“Wikipedia is bullshit,’ Garber said in telling me he was not doing Smash.

We were being rushed off the stage so the next panel could be set up so I thanked him and we parted ways. I sat down but couldn’t help wondering: “Did he come out and I missed it?”

So I got up, walked into the lobby of the Langham Huntington Hotel and found Garber. I just decided to ask him: “Wikipedia lists Rainer Andreesen as your partner. I wondered if that’s something that’s public, that you’ve confirmed.”

He seemed surprised by the question but said: ‘I don’t really talk about it but everybody knows.”

Garber then added: “He’s going to be out here with me for the SAG Awards.”

So in the end, our chat ended up being a bit more interesting than I thought it would be!

Here is some of what else he had to say:

On his new series, NBC’s Deception: “I’m a lucky actor, I work. But this is the first series that’s come along since Eli Stone, three years ago, that I really wanted to do. It was smart, it was interesting, it was dynamic and it wasn’t like the show was going to rest on me. I thought this was the perfect thing at this point in my life. It had everything I like: the complexity of the character, the family drama, all of the duplicity. For an actor, it’s like getting a dessert – like getting what you hope for and rarely get. I love to work and I love the idea of going to work every day and also the fact that I get to do it in New York. ‘It’s like a gift. I feel like I won the lottery.’

On being in the cast of Argo: ‘It’s such a gratification because of my relationship with Ben (Affleck) and Jennifer (Garner) to see him emerge now as one of the great directors which I’ve always felt since Gone Baby Gone. To be a part of it is like the icing on the cake. It’s incredibly thrilling for me. And the fact that people love the movie so much means the world.’

Friday, 13 April 2012

Victor Garber on success, family and friends

[Source]

Victor Victorious: Victor Garber on success, family and friends

By Hal Drucker
April 13, 2012
Victor Garber was back on the big screen in 2010 in Disney’s You Again, co-starring Billy Unger, James Wolk and Jamie Lee Curtis (Disney Enterprises)

From Godspell to Alias, Canadian Victor Garber has had decades of success in all media, but he’s most proud of his family and relationships

***

My introduction to the two charitable causes that animate Canadian actor Victor Garber came about by accident.

I was thumbing through magazines in my doctor’s office and ventured upon an interview by writer Karen Doss Bowman with an actor whom I have admired for his versatility in serious drama, comedy and musicals: Victor Garber. What struck me was that he lost both parents to Alzheimer’s disease. In reading on, I saw that Garber, now 62, has had Juvenile Diabetes since age 13 and is as much of an advocate on behalf of the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation as he is for Alzheimer’s research.

A lifelong love of the theatre began for Victor Garber in London, Ont. as a nine year-old when with diminutive steps he strode the boards of the Grand Theatre. He started with children's shows but, shortly after, it became apparent to his drama coaches that the young actor would do just fine in mainstage productions of the company.

“My parents were of Russian-Jewish descent.” Garber told me in a recent interview. “My mother Hope was a singer and had her own television show, At Home with Hope Garber, in London. She was a local celebrity who was supportive of my decision to pursue show business."

“As a Jewish parent, my father Joseph was a little less enthusiastic because he worried I wouldn’t be able to make a living. But I could count on him to send me a cheque when I was living on my own in Toronto.”

In 1964, when only 16 years old, Garber left his hometown and went to Toronto, to study acting in an intensive summer course at the University of Toronto's Hart House Theatre. There then began a detour from stage aspirations to a musical career with The Sugar Shoppe folk rock group, which recorded an album for Columbia Records and appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show. After Sugar Shoppe disbanded in 1972 he was cast as Jesus in a Toronto production of the off-Broadway musical Godspell, with its now-legendary cast that included Eugene Levy, Andrea Martin, Gilda Radner, Dave Thomas and Martin Short; the show's musical director was David Letterman’s music director Paul Shaffer. Garber’s impressive performance earned him the same role in the film version of the play, in 1973.

Garber’s Godspell performance catapulted him to a fruitful stage career in the U.S., where he became an accomplished and respected Broadway actor who garnered four Tony Nominations.

In reviewing Victor Garber’s career, from the lens of an inveterate theatregoer, I’m intrigued by the almost limitless array of roles he has played in all media: movies, theatre, TV, Direct TV and cable; high drama, comedy and musicals. Two roles pop into my head as mirror opposites: Christian, the fumbling young lover in Rostand’s Cyrano De Bergerac (in 1973) and president-elect John P. Wintergreen in the 2006 Encores production of the Gershwins’s Of Thee I Sing.

I asked him the first movie he can recall seeing.

“I remember seeing Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim’s West Side Story as a kid. I thought Robert Wise’s direction and Jerome Robbins’s dance numbers were a glorious expression of what I wanted to do.”

And what was the first Broadway show?

“It was either Hair or Stephen Sondheim’s Follies in 1971. I loved Follies and its unusual and brilliant cast. I was young, and I sat in the front row, which I don't think is the best vantage point, but I just recall being blown away by it.”

A six-time Emmy Award-nominated actor, Garber became familiar to a new audience playing Jack Bristow, a double agent in the television series Alias (2001-2006). “You never know when you step into something what the outcome will be, of course, but I think it broke ground for television. They got Jennifer Garner, who became a huge star, and I think that's why the show stayed on the air for so long.”

Garber’s had an amazing run of co-stars in his career and the string continues. When Laura Linney returns in the Showtime’s The Big C on April 8, Garber is among the slate of guest stars for the upcoming third season, and he'll make his appearance during the opener.

As for Glenn Close, she returns as the steely malfeasance lawyer Patty Hewes on Damages. “I like the show, this being the final season,” says Garber. “As a guest, I’m glad to be in the company of such actors as Judd Hirsch and Janet McTeer. They don’t tell us in advance what will happen. It’s very well done and Glenn’s fantastic in it."

Garber will also be guesting on NBC’s new series “Smash, which premiered in February. It’s all about The Great White Way and Broadway backstage – something Garber knows all about.

Aside from his theatrical successes, Garber was asked, what is his proudest achievement?

“My relationships with my family and my friends. My companion Rainer Andreesen and I have been together almost 13 years in Greenwich Village. We both love New York.”

I hesitated to ask, but is he Jewish?

“No, but he is Canadian.”