Eric McCormack

TV Actor

Eric McCormack was born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on April 18th, 1963 and is the TV Actor. At the age of 61, Eric McCormack biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, TV shows, and networth are available.

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Other Names / Nick Names
Eric James McCormack, E Mack
Date of Birth
April 18, 1963
Nationality
Canada, United States
Place of Birth
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Age
61 years old
Zodiac Sign
Aries
Networth
$15 Million
Salary
$125 Thousand
Profession
Actor, Film Actor, Film Director, Screenwriter, Stage Actor, Television Actor
Social Media
Eric McCormack Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 61 years old, Eric McCormack has this physical status:

Height
180cm
Weight
76kg
Hair Color
Light Brown
Eye Color
Dark Brown
Build
Athletic
Measurements
Not Available
Eric McCormack Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Stephen Leacock Collegiate Institute, Sir John A. Macdonald Collegiate Institute, Ryerson University School of Theatre, Banff Center for the Arts
Eric McCormack Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Janet McCormack
Children
1
Dating / Affair
Janet McCormack (1994-Present)
Parents
James McCormack, Doris McCormack
Siblings
Ellen McCormack (Younger Sister). He also has a younger brother.
Eric McCormack Life

Eric James McCormack (born April 18, 1963) is a Canadian-American actor and singer best known for his role as Will Truman in Netflix's Travelers and Dr.

Perception by Daniel Pierce in the American crime drama Perception. McCormack, a native of Toronto, began acting in high school plays.

He left Ryerson University in 1985 to work at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival, where he spent five years in various stage productions. He lived in Los Angeles for a large portion of the late 1990s and had minor roles.

In the 1992 science-fiction adventure film The Lost World, he made his debut in a film.

McCormack appeared in several television shows, including Top Cops, Street Justice, Lonesome Dove: The History, Townies, and Ally McBeal.

McCormack gained worldwide fame for his role in Will & Grace, which premiered in September 1998.

His appearance has earned him six Golden Globe nominations and four Emmy nominations, as well as the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series in 2001. Besides appearing on television, he made his Broadway debut in the 2001 revival of The Music Man and appeared in the 2005 film The Sisters.

McCormack played the leading role in Will & Grace's 2006 film adaptation, Some Girls(s).

In 2008, he appeared in The Andromeda Strain (2008), and in the TNT drama Trust Me, which was cancelled after one season.

McCormack appeared in Alien Trespass, a science fiction film that was released in 2009.

In addition, he appeared as Dr. John Kerry.

Daniel Pierce appeared on Perception, a TNT crime drama, and appeared as "Lucky" on The Hub's Pound Puppies.

He appeared as Dr. Norm from 2009 to 2010.

Max Kershaw, the psychiatrist turned boyfriend of Julia Louis-Dreyfus' title character in The New Adventures of Old Christine, is the author.

Will Truman is now starring in Will & Grace's revival.

Early life

McCormack was born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, the son of Doris (1932–2006), a homemaker, and James "Keith" McCormack, an oil company financial analyst who died of cancer in 2008. He is the eldest of three siblings. McCormack has ancestry from Scotland. Though he was growing up, he was shy and did not participate in sports, but he was involved in theatre from an early age: "I was a bit of an outsider," he said, "I was a bit of an outsider, but I was taken seriously early on." McCormack enrolled at Sir John A. Macdonald Collegiate Institute in Scarborough, Ontario, where he was a classmate of David Furnish. He enrolled in drama lessons and performed in Godspell and Pippin's high school productions. McCormack recalls that after appearing in Godspell, his feelings about becoming an actor solidified, and he pursued a career in acting. "I remember after the first appearance of that... I knew where to go. That was the start of my career as an actor. That was a revelation to me that no other options existed. There was no doubt about it from the start. I knew exactly what I was going to do. I'm lucky that way."

McCormack graduated from high school in 1982 and then enrolled at Ryerson University School of Theatre in Toronto to further develop his acting skills. He left Ryerson in 1985, several months before graduating, to take up a Stratford Shakespeare Festival in Stratford, Ontario, where he spent five seasons. "It was all I wanted to be a classical actor for the remainder of my life," I said, but I began to understand that it wasn't for me." "Maybe I didn't have to give my Hamlet before I died, but without my Hamlet, the world could be a good place." McCormack appeared in A Midsummer Night's Dream, Henry V. Murder in the Cathedral and Three Sisters productions. McCormack appeared in Burn This and also with the Royal Alexandra Theatre in Biloxi Blues, both in Winnipeg and Toronto.

Personal life

McCormack has been married to Janet Leigh Holden, whom he met on the set of Lonesome Dove in August 1997. They have a son. McCormack has lived in Los Angeles and Vancouver. He became a resident of the United States in 1999 and has dual Canadian and US citizenship.

Project Angel Food is one of many Los Angeles and Canadian-based charitable groups. The Wellbeing Community West Los Angeles Tribute to the Human Spirit Awards Dinner gave McCormack an award for his breast cancer advocacy work. Doris McCormack's mother, Doris McCormack, survived her breast cancer treatments, and he told the audience how his comedy helped her. In 2004, Doris was honoured at the Lifetime Breast Cancer Heroes Luncheon. He serves as an honorary board member of the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation (MMRF) and was given the MMRF Spirit of Hope Award in October 2006.

At the 2004 NHL All-Star game in Minnesota, McCormack performed both the American and Canadian national anthems. McCormack is a promoter of same-sex marriage and attended a protest in Fresno, California, on May 30, 2009, after the Supreme Court upheld a prohibition against same-sex marriages that was not allowed by voters in November by ballot Proposition 8.

McCormack is a Democrat.

Source

Eric McCormack Career

Career

McCormack made his Canadian television debut in the 1986 film "The Boys from Syracuse." McCormack made his television debut in Los Angeles, California, in a 1991 episode of CBS crime drama Top Cops. He appeared in the 1992 theatrical films The Lost World, based on Conan Doyle's book of the same name and in its sequel, Return to the Lost World, which was also released in 1992. He landed a recurring role as a detective in the crime drama Street Justice by 1993. McCormack appeared in Double, Double, Toil and Trouble in 1993, as Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen's father.

Colonel Francis Clay Mosby appeared in 42 episodes of the Western television series Lonesome Dove: The Outlaw Years (1995), which was later renamed Lonesome Dove: The Outlaw Years (1995). McCormack said that it was a "fantastic job." In an interview with The Guardian in 2003, McCormack confessed to auditioning "two or three times" for the role of Ross Geller, which eventually went to David Schwimmer for the situation comedy Friends. He appeared in the television series The Man Who Wouldn't Die in 1995. He appeared in the 1997 made-for-television film Borrowed Hearts, where he played a selfish businessman who learns to love and in the HBO film Exception to the Rule, in which he played a cheating husband.

He appeared in minor roles in the film Townies, Veronica's Closet, and Ally McBeal, which were both present in 1997. McCormack had intended to appear in NBC sitcom Jenny as a series regular, but he was dismissed due to the network's decision to change his appearance. In addition, McCormack appeared in season five of The New Adventures of Old Christine, in which he played a psychiatrist and love interest for Julia Louis-Dreyfus' character, Christine.

McCormack made his debut on the NBC sitcom Will & Grace in 1998 as gay advocate Will Truman. As the part came along, McCormack said he was secure in the role. "That was wonderful," Max Mutchnick, co-creator and executive producer of the show, said at the end of the audition." "You never have to be more gay than that," the author says. "What struck me right away was that this was me," he explained as he first read the script. Will was so much like me, regardless of sexual orientation. He's a great host, he's joking, he has a following, and he's a good friend to them... the gay issue wasn't really a big deal." The show debuted on September 21, 1998, and nearly 8.6 million Americans watched it. Will & Grace quickly established a following, with the show and McCormack receiving rave reviews. The San Francisco Chronicle's John Carman said that McCormack and Debra Messing, Will's best friend Grace Adler, worked "nicely" together. McCormack, Messing, and the supporting cast were all "very funny," according to Kay McFadden of The Seattle Times. He received four Emmy Award nominations (2000, 2001, 2003, 2005), one of which culminated in the award of Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series. In addition,, he has received five Golden Globe Award nominations.

McCormack appeared in Stephen Herek's comedy film Holy Man in 1998. The film was both critically and financially sluggish. In 1999, he appeared in the comedy film Free Enterprise (1999), a film about two filmmakers (McCormack and Rafer Weigel) who were obsessed with actor William Shatner and Star Trek. Kevin Thomas, a film critic for the Los Angeles Times, said McCormack and Weigel "both make a good impression." McCormack appeared in The Audrey Hepburn Story on ABC TV in 2000, portraying actor Mel Ferrer.

McCormack briefly played Professor Harold Hill (replacing Craig Bierko) in the Susan Stroman revival of The Music Man at the Neil Simon Theatre for a brief period of time during the 2001 Broadway season. In August 2002, he reprised his role as part of the Hollywood Bowl's summer concert series, in which he and other actors recreated the songs from the film. On November 2, 2002, McCormack hosted the fourth episode of the sketch comedy series Saturday Night Live. On Showtime's comedy drama Dead Like Me, he appeared as Ray Summers in 2004. McCormack appeared in The Sisters, Anton Chekhov's adaptation of Three Sisters, for the second year. At the 2005 Tribeca Film Festival, the film premiered.

Will & Grace's eighth (at the time) final season conclude with the series's conclusion on May 18, 2006. The finale attracted 18 million viewers in the United States, making it the most viewed entertainment television show in six years.

During the 2017-18 season, NBC announced a contract for a new, 10-episode season of Will & Grace. The new show has been dubbed a "reboot" or "revival" in its 11-year absence from the original series's finale episode, and McCormack has reprised his role as Will Truman. The episode order was raised to 12 episodes in April 2017. It was extended to 16 episodes in August 2017, and a second 13-episode season was ordered. In March 2018, NBC ordered five more episodes for the revival's second season, raising the total number to 18 episodes, and also renewed the series for an 18-episode third season. Will Truman played Eric McCormack in all of the revival's announced seasons.

McCormack appeared in Neil LaBute's off-Broadway play Some Girl(s) at the Lucille Lortel Theatre following Will & Grace's conclusion, Jack Corormack appeared on the New York stage opposite Fran Drescher, Judy Reyes, Brooke Smith, and Maura Tierney. He is planning to settle down and marry but first visits four ex-girlfriends. McCormack's performance was lauded for his work. "Playing a thoughtless, woman-despising heterosexual, Mr. McCormack isn't much different from when he was playing a thoughtful, woman-worshiping homosexual," New York Times reporter Ben Brantley wrote in a review of the play. He italicizes every other line for maximum comedy spin and punctuates his discourse by earnestly furrowing his hair." Brantley continued to state that McCormack's interpretation of the character is "certainly more slickly maintained result" than the one that was offered by David Schwimmer in 2005. Melissa Rose Bernardo of Entertainment Weekly said that McCormack and Maura Tierney "have chemistry."

McCormack produced Lovespring International, a Lifetime comedy troupe headquartered in California, a "elite Beverly Hills" company. Lovespring International is described as "a lively little cable exercise in over-the-top characters, poor taste, satire, and political incorrectness" when the series premiered to ambivalent reviews, according to Matthew Gilbert of The Boston Globe. The performance was cancelled the same year as well.

McCormack co-starred in The Andromeda Strain, an A&E television miniseries based on Michael Crichton's novel. Jack Nash, a television reporter who fights an addiction to cocaine, appeared in the miniseries. McCormack's results were mixed, and the Andromeda Strain was chastised. "The presence of Eric McCormack, as an intrepid television reporter, is particularly generous (no disrespect to intrepid journalists)," Boanna Weiss of the Boston Globe wrote. Poor Eric McCormack as a crusading, coke-addicted journalist who spends the second half of the film playing Rambo in the desert, completes the central cast, according to USA Today's Robert Bianco. Let's just say that McCormack does the best he can with what he's been given and leave it at that." McCormack appeared in the seventh season and 100th episode of the television show Monk on September 5, 2008, where he appeared as the unctuous host of a television crime docudrama.

McCormack appeared in the TNT drama Trust Me co-starring Tom Cavanagh in January 2009. McCormack, the firm's newly promoted creative director, appeared in the series, as well as his best friend's (Cavanagh) unpredictable behavior. McCormack said he was not afraid of being typecast in an interview with USA Weekend. McCormack's decision to host the program was due to "great writing." The show debuted on January 26, 2009, and over 3.4 million viewers followed it. Trust Me debuted to overwhelmingly positive feedback, with San Francisco Chronicle writer Tim Goodman's words, "the book is surprisingly good." McCormack and Cavanagh, according to Mary McNamara of the Los Angeles Times, "manage to keep their characters crisply defined but low-key." They are opposites, but not in the sense that they are in an ash-smudged, Windex-wielding Felix and Oscar. However, the series was cancelled after a season due to poor ratings.

After he crash-lands on Earth, McCormack appeared in Alien Trespass (2009), in which he played Doctor Ted Lewis, who is captured by an alien marshal, Urp. McCormack said he wanted to make Ted Lewis more alien, sounding like Spock. The film was both artistic and commercially poor.

In Reprise Theatre Company's revival of the 1960s musical "The Fantasticks" at UCLA's Freud Playhouse, he played "El Gallo" in May 2009. McCormack appeared in Richard Loncraine's comedy My One and Only, which was released in August 2009.

He appeared in the second episode of its 11th season as a manager of a dating website on September 30, 2009.

Clark Rockefeller appeared in the Lifetime television film Who Is Clark Rockefeller?, which premiered on March 13, 2010. He read everything about the case, including reports of the prosecution and Rockefeller's jailhouse interview to get ready for the position.

Who Is Clark Rockefeller?

McCormack's reaction was mixed, but critics were largely supportive, with Variety's Brian Lowry deciding that "the true kitsch factor resides in Eric McCormack's appearance as the suave charmer, which gives an element of high camp to the proceedings."

At the Banff TV Festival in June 2010, McCormack received the NBC Universal Canada Award of Distinction. McCormack was named on Canada's Walk of Fame in October 2010. McCormack was inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2018 for his contributions to the television industry.

In October 2010, it was revealed that McCormack would appear in a new TNT television drama, Perception, as Dr. Daniel Pierce, a crime-solving neuroscientist who works with the federal government, would solve problems by using his expertise and an optimistic view of the world. Perception debuted on July 9, 2012. McCormack also acts as the show's producer. He also appears in "Lucky" on The Hub's Pound Puppies film, which debuted on October 10, 2010.

Senator Joseph Cantwell appeared in Gore Vidal's The Best Man from March 6 to July 8, 2012.

In February 2015, he appeared on an episode of NBC's The Mysteries of Laura, starring Debra Messing, his former co-star on Will & Grace.

McCormack appeared in Travelers, a science fiction drama that premiered in October 2016 and lasted for three seasons.

He narrated a portion of the 8th Canadian Screen Awards in 2020.

Source

Will & Grace star Eric McCormack believes straight actors SHOULD be able to play gay roles: 'If gay actors weren't allowed to play straight actors, Broadway would be over'

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 20, 2024
Eric McCormack, a straight actor who rose to fame as a gay character on NBC's Will & Grace, has joined in the discussion regarding gay roles. Will Truman, a 60-year-old Toronto resident, has been practicing gay rights since 1998 to 2006, with additional three seasons from 2017 to 2020. Will & Grace was a landmark series for the LGBT audience, becoming one of the first successful network sitcoms starring gay cast members.

For the first time at Elton John's Oscar party, Ashlyn Harris and Sophia Bush stand out as a couple for the first time, following rumors that she cheated on US soccer star Ali Krieger with the actress

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 11, 2024
On Sunday, retired USWNT goalkeeper Ashlyn Harris spoke out about her friendship with actress Sophia Bush for the first time at an Oscars party. Bush, 41, and Harris, 38, both attended the Elton John AIDS Foundation's annual Oscar viewing party, five months after the actor denied rumors that cheated on her ex-wife Ali Krieger with the actress. The newlywed couple were photographed together with actor Eric McCormack at the expo. They've been out together numerous times since hearing of their relationship was revealed amid Harris' tumultuous divorce, but their first official red carpet event took place on Sunday.

Eric McCormack was joined by Janet Holden, a 26-year-old actress, at Elton John AIDS Foundation 2024 viewing party, three months after divorce filing

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 11, 2024
Eric McCormack of Will & Grace was joined by Janet Holden, a 26-year-old woman, just three months after she applied for divorce. On Sunday night, the 60-year-old actor was pleasantly welcomed by his longtime wife, who appeared only days after filing for divorce in November, as they attended the Elton John AIDS Foundation 2024 Oscars viewing party. Despite the fact that there is no news regarding the divorce case, the couple seemed to be in good spirits as they hung out at the gala dinner together. On the red carpet, they snapped some cute photos together, and even posed for a riot during the actual event.
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