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{{realworld}}
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{{Sidebar actor|
[[Image:Kivasfajo.jpg|thumb|...as Kivas Fajo]]
 
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| Name = Saul Rubinek
'''Saul Rubinek''' {{born|2|July|1948}} is the [[Germany|German]]-born Canadian actor who played [[Kivas Fajo]] in the ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]'' episode "[[The Most Toys]]".
 
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| image = Kivas Fajo.jpg
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| imagecap = ...as Kivas Fajo
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| Birth name =
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| Gender = Male
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| Date of birth = {{d|2|July|1948}}
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| Place of birth = Föhrenwald, Wolfratshausen, Germany
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| Date of death =
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| Place of death =
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| Awards for Trek =
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| Roles =
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| Characters = [[Kivas Fajo]]
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}}
 
'''Saul Rubinek''' {{born|2|July|1948}} is the German-born Canadian actor who played [[Kivas Fajo]] in the ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]'' episode {{e|The Most Toys}}.
   
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Rubinek was born in Föhrenwald, Wolfratshausen, Germany, the son of Polish-born Jewish parents. He is married to producer Elinor Reid, with whom he has had two children. He owns a {{w|labradoodle}}.
He had a recurring role on the [[television]] sitcom ''[[Wikipedia:Frasier|Frasier]]'' as Donny Douglas, from 1999 to 2002. That series starred fellow [[TNG]] guest actor [[Kelsey Grammer]]. He also made several appearances on ''The Equalizer'' (starring [[Robert Lansing]] and [[Keith Szarabajka]]), ''The Outer Limits'', and ''Blind Justice''.
 
   
  +
== Television work ==
He also had a role in the 2002 made-for-TV movie ''Gleason'', starring [[Terry Farrell]]. The following year, he appeared in the TV movie ''And Starring Pancho Villa as Himself'', with [[Michael McKean]].
 
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=== Episodic ===
  +
==== Regular and recurring roles ====
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Rubinek had a recurring role on the [[NBC]] television sitcom ''{{w|Frasier}}'' as Daphne Moon's fiancé, Donny Douglas, from 1999 through 2002. That series starred fellow [[TNG]] guest actor [[Kelsey Grammer]]. Rubinek also had a recurring role as reporter Lon Cohen in the 2001-2002 A&E TV series ''A Nero Wolfe Mystery'' (with [[Bill Smitrovich]]), after initially playing detective Saul Panzer in the 2000 series pilot, ''The Golden Spiders: A Nero Wolfe Mystery''.
   
  +
In addition, Rubinek made recurring appearances on the [[CBS Television Studios|CBS]] drama ''The Equalizer'' (starring [[Robert Lansing]] and [[Keith Szarabajka]]) and Steven Bochco's crime drama ''Blind Justice''. He also had two-episode recurring roles in the third season (1998-99) of ''The Practice'' (working with [[Paul Dooley]], [[Stephen Macht]], [[Lawrence Pressman]], and [[David Ogden Stiers]]), in the final season (2001-02) of ''Once And Again'' (with [[William O. Campbell]]), and in the fourth season (2004) of ''Curb Your Enthusiasm'' (with [[Boris Lee Krutonog]], [[James B. Sikking]], and [[Don Stark]]).
Rubinek has had supporting roles in several highly-acclaimed [[film]]s, including ''Wall Street'' (1987), ''Unforgiven'' (1992), amd ''True Romance'' (1993). His other feature film credits include ''Nothing Personal'' (1980, with [[Derek McGrath]]), ''Young Doctors in Love'' (1982, with [[Hamilton Camp]] and [[Deborah Lacey]]), ''The Bonfire of the Vanities'' (1990, with [[Kim Cattrall]], [[Richard Libertini]], [[Kirsten Dunst]], [[F. Murray Abraham]], and [[Terry Farrell]]), ''The Contender'' (2000, which, like ''True Romance'', features [[Christian Slater]]), ''Rush Hour 2'' (2001, with [[Harris Yulin]]), and ''Badasssss!'' (2003, with [[Vincent Schiavelli]]).
 
   
  +
Rubinek's first regular series role was that of neurotic financial reporter Alan Mesnick in the short-lived (1996-97) [[CBS Television Studios|CBS]] comedy series ''Ink''. He is currently starring on the [[Syfy]] original series ''Warehouse 13'' as Warehouse guru Artie Nielsen. This series was co-created by [[Jane Espenson]] (writer, {{DS9|Accession}}). In a five-minute behind-the-scenes interview in 2012, [http://www.syfy.com/videos/Warehouse%2013/Behind%20the%20Scenes/Interviews/vid:2591767] Rubinek and [[Brent Spiner]], who has guest starred in several episodes of the series, revealed their long history of friendship since their stage acting days, with fond references to Rubinek's antagonistic portrayals opposite Spiner in {{TNG|The Most Toys}}.
He had roles in two movies revolving around former [[President of the United States|United States President]] [[Richard M. Nixon]] and featuring other ''[[Star Trek]]'' alumnus: 1995's ''Nixon'', with [[Robert Beltran]], [[Paul Sorvino]], [[Bill Bolender]], [[Tony Plana]], and [[Victor Rivers]]; and 1999's ''Dick'', with Kirsten Dunst and [[Teri Garr]].
 
   
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==== Science fiction shows ====
Most recently, he played a scientist on the Sci Fi Television series Eureka in the episode titled "Invincible."
 
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Since appearing on TNG, Rubinek has made a few return trips to the realm of science fiction television. He appeared in two episodes of the 1990s revival of ''The Outer Limits'', one in 1995 ("Caught in the Act") and another in 1999 ("Tribunal"). In 2004, he was seen on [[Sci-Fi Channel]]'s ''[[stargate:Stargate SG-1|Stargate SG-1]]'', playing [[stargate:Emmett Bregman|Emmett Bregman]] in the two-part episode "[[stargate:Heroes|Heroes]]". The first part also featured [[Ronny Cox]] in his role as Senator [[stargate:Robert Kinsey|Robert Kinsey]]; the second part had [[Robert Picardo]] in his first appearance as Agent [[stargate:Richard Woolsey|Richard Woolsey]].
   
  +
In 2005, Rubinek made an appearance on ABC's science fiction-themed hit series ''Lost'', co-created by [[J.J. Abrams]] and [[Damon Lindelof]] and starring [[Daniel Dae Kim]] and [[Terry O'Quinn]]. The following year, Rubinek guest-starred on the Sci-Fi Channel original series ''Eureka'', working with [[Salli Elise Richardson]], [[Matt Frewer]], and director [[Michael Grossman]]. His association with science fiction currently continues with his regular role on the aforementioned ''Warehouse 13''.
==External Links==
 
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==== Guest spots ====
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In addition to the above, Rubinek has guest-starred on such drama series as ''Hill Street Blues'' (starring [[James B. Sikking]] and [[Barbara Bosson]]), ''L.A. Law'', ''Psych'' (both also featuring [[Corbin Bernsen]]), ''[[lawandorder:Law & Order|Law & Order]]'', ''NYPD Blue'', and ''Leverage''. In 2008, he was seen on ABC's ''Boston Legal'', where he played the client of an attorney portrayed by [[Alan Ruck]]. Also appearing in Rubinek's episode ("Kill, Baby, Kill") were series regulars [[John Larroquette]] and [[William Shatner]] and fellow guest star [[Bill Smitrovich]].
  +
  +
=== TV movies ===
  +
Rubinek was nominated for a Genie Award by the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television for his performance in the 1979 made-for-TV movie ''The Wordsmith''. In 1983, both he and [[Rosalind Chao]] appeared in ''The Terry Fox Story''. Rubinek was later featured in the acclaimed HBO movie ''And the Band Played On'', as were [[Reg E. Cathey]], [[David Clennon]], [[Richard Fancy]], [[Thomas Kopache]], [[Clyde Kusatsu]], [[Dakin Matthews]], [[Lawrence Monoson]], [[Jeffrey Nordling]], and [[Sierra Pecheur]].
  +
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In 1998, The Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television nominated Rubinek for a Gemini Award for his performance in the 1995 TV movie ''Hiroshima'', in which [[Ken Jenkins]] also appeared. Rubinek's subsequent made-for-TV movie credits include 2002's ''Gleason'' (starring [[Terry Farrell]]), 2003's ''And Starring Pancho Villa as Himself'' (with [[Michael McKean]]), and 2004's ''Call Me: The Rise and Fall of Heidi Fleiss'' (with [[Corbin Bernsen]]). He also appeared as Hastings "Hasty" Hathaway in three ''Jesse Stone'' movies, 2006's ''Night Passage'', 2007's ''Sea Change'', and 2010's ''No Remorse''. [[Stephen McHattie]] appeared in all of these movies; [[William Sadler]] had a role in the latter two.
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== Film work ==
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Rubinek has received Genie Award nominations for his performances in five feature films: ''Agency'' (1980), ''Ticket to Heaven'' (1981), ''By Design'' (1982), ''The Outside Chance of Maximilian Glick'' (1988), and ''Pale Saints'' (1997). He won for ''Ticket to Heaven'', a drama in which he co-starred with [[Kim Cattrall]] and [[Meg Foster]]. Rubinek has since worked with Cattrall on Brian de Palma's 1990 film ''The Bonfire of the Vanities'' (along with [[F. Murray Abraham]], [[Kirsten Dunst]], [[Richard Libertini]], and the aforementioned Terry Farrell) and in the 1999 Turner Network Television movie ''36 Hours to Die''.
  +
  +
Rubinek had supporting roles in several highly-acclaimed films, including ''Wall Street'' (1987) with [[Jerry Rector]], ''Unforgiven'' (1992, with [[John Pyper-Ferguson]] and [[Anthony James]]), and ''True Romance'' (1993). On the latter, he appeared as an arrogant, cocaine-dealing movie producer opposite [[Christian Slater]]. Rubinek and Slater again worked together in the 2000 political thriller ''The Contender'' and in the 2004 thriller ''Pursued''. Rubinek, Slater, and their co-stars from ''The Contender'' won the Alan J. Pakula Award from the Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards for their work on that film.
  +
 
In addition, Rubinek had roles in two movies revolving around former United States President Richard M. Nixon and featuring other ''[[Star Trek]]'' alumni: 1995's ''Nixon'', with [[Robert Beltran]], [[Paul Sorvino]], [[Bill Bolender]], [[Tony Plana]], and [[Victor Rivers]]; and 1999's ''Dick'', with Kirsten Dunst and [[Teri Garr]]. In the former, he portrayed Nixon aide Herb Klein; in the latter, he played Henry Kissinger, the role Paul Sorvino played in ''Nixon''. Henry Kissinger has also been portrayed by fellow TNG guest star [[Theodore Bikel]] (in the 1989 TV movie ''The Final Days'').
  +
  +
Rubinek's other feature film credits during the 1980s and 1990s include ''Nothing Personal'' (1980, with [[Derek McGrath]]), ''Young Doctors in Love'' (1982, with [[Hamilton Camp]] and [[Deborah Lacey]]), ''Against All Odds'' (1984, with costumes designed by [[Michael Kaplan]]), ''Man Trouble'' (1992, with the aforementioned David Clennon and Michael McKean), ''Death Wish V: The Face of Death '' (1995, with [[Robert Joy]]), ''Getting Even With Dad'' (1994, with [[Ron Canada]]), and the sci-fi thriller ''Memory Run'' (1996, with [[Matt McCoy]]). More recently, Rubinek has been seen in such films as ''The Family Man'' (2000, with [[Ruth Williamson]]), ''Rush Hour 2'' (2001, with [[Harris Yulin]]), ''The Singing Detective'' (2003, with [[Alfre Woodard]]), ''Badasssss!'' (2003, with [[Vincent Schiavelli]]), ''The Express'' (2008, with [[Clancy Brown]]), and ''Julia'' (2009, with [[Jude Ciccolella]]). In 2010, he had a supporting role in the drama ''Barney's Version'', as did [[Bruce Greenwood]].
  +
 
== External links ==
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* {{Wikipedia}}
 
* {{IMDb-link|page=nm0007210}}
 
* {{IMDb-link|page=nm0007210}}
* {{Wikipedia|Saul Rubinek}}
+
* {{NowCasting|saulrubinek}}
   
[[Category:Performers|Rubinek,Saul]]
 
[[Category:TNG performers|Rubinek,Saul]]
 
   
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[[de:Saul Rubinek]]
 
[[es:Saul Rubinek]]
 
[[es:Saul Rubinek]]
 
[[Category:Performers|Rubinek, Saul]]
 
[[Category:TNG performers|Rubinek, Saul]]

Revision as of 13:38, 13 November 2013

Template:Realworld

Saul Rubinek (born 2 July 1948; age 75) is the German-born Canadian actor who played Kivas Fajo in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "The Most Toys".

Rubinek was born in Föhrenwald, Wolfratshausen, Germany, the son of Polish-born Jewish parents. He is married to producer Elinor Reid, with whom he has had two children. He owns a labradoodle.

Television work

Episodic

Regular and recurring roles

Rubinek had a recurring role on the NBC television sitcom Frasier as Daphne Moon's fiancé, Donny Douglas, from 1999 through 2002. That series starred fellow TNG guest actor Kelsey Grammer. Rubinek also had a recurring role as reporter Lon Cohen in the 2001-2002 A&E TV series A Nero Wolfe Mystery (with Bill Smitrovich), after initially playing detective Saul Panzer in the 2000 series pilot, The Golden Spiders: A Nero Wolfe Mystery.

In addition, Rubinek made recurring appearances on the CBS drama The Equalizer (starring Robert Lansing and Keith Szarabajka) and Steven Bochco's crime drama Blind Justice. He also had two-episode recurring roles in the third season (1998-99) of The Practice (working with Paul Dooley, Stephen Macht, Lawrence Pressman, and David Ogden Stiers), in the final season (2001-02) of Once And Again (with William O. Campbell), and in the fourth season (2004) of Curb Your Enthusiasm (with Boris Lee Krutonog, James B. Sikking, and Don Stark).

Rubinek's first regular series role was that of neurotic financial reporter Alan Mesnick in the short-lived (1996-97) CBS comedy series Ink. He is currently starring on the Syfy original series Warehouse 13 as Warehouse guru Artie Nielsen. This series was co-created by Jane Espenson (writer, DS9: "Accession"). In a five-minute behind-the-scenes interview in 2012, [1] Rubinek and Brent Spiner, who has guest starred in several episodes of the series, revealed their long history of friendship since their stage acting days, with fond references to Rubinek's antagonistic portrayals opposite Spiner in TNG: "The Most Toys".

Science fiction shows

Since appearing on TNG, Rubinek has made a few return trips to the realm of science fiction television. He appeared in two episodes of the 1990s revival of The Outer Limits, one in 1995 ("Caught in the Act") and another in 1999 ("Tribunal"). In 2004, he was seen on Sci-Fi Channel's Stargate SG-1, playing Emmett Bregman in the two-part episode "Heroes". The first part also featured Ronny Cox in his role as Senator Robert Kinsey; the second part had Robert Picardo in his first appearance as Agent Richard Woolsey.

In 2005, Rubinek made an appearance on ABC's science fiction-themed hit series Lost, co-created by J.J. Abrams and Damon Lindelof and starring Daniel Dae Kim and Terry O'Quinn. The following year, Rubinek guest-starred on the Sci-Fi Channel original series Eureka, working with Salli Elise Richardson, Matt Frewer, and director Michael Grossman. His association with science fiction currently continues with his regular role on the aforementioned Warehouse 13.

Guest spots

In addition to the above, Rubinek has guest-starred on such drama series as Hill Street Blues (starring James B. Sikking and Barbara Bosson), L.A. Law, Psych (both also featuring Corbin Bernsen), Law & Order, NYPD Blue, and Leverage. In 2008, he was seen on ABC's Boston Legal, where he played the client of an attorney portrayed by Alan Ruck. Also appearing in Rubinek's episode ("Kill, Baby, Kill") were series regulars John Larroquette and William Shatner and fellow guest star Bill Smitrovich.

TV movies

Rubinek was nominated for a Genie Award by the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television for his performance in the 1979 made-for-TV movie The Wordsmith. In 1983, both he and Rosalind Chao appeared in The Terry Fox Story. Rubinek was later featured in the acclaimed HBO movie And the Band Played On, as were Reg E. Cathey, David Clennon, Richard Fancy, Thomas Kopache, Clyde Kusatsu, Dakin Matthews, Lawrence Monoson, Jeffrey Nordling, and Sierra Pecheur.

In 1998, The Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television nominated Rubinek for a Gemini Award for his performance in the 1995 TV movie Hiroshima, in which Ken Jenkins also appeared. Rubinek's subsequent made-for-TV movie credits include 2002's Gleason (starring Terry Farrell), 2003's And Starring Pancho Villa as Himself (with Michael McKean), and 2004's Call Me: The Rise and Fall of Heidi Fleiss (with Corbin Bernsen). He also appeared as Hastings "Hasty" Hathaway in three Jesse Stone movies, 2006's Night Passage, 2007's Sea Change, and 2010's No Remorse. Stephen McHattie appeared in all of these movies; William Sadler had a role in the latter two.

Film work

Rubinek has received Genie Award nominations for his performances in five feature films: Agency (1980), Ticket to Heaven (1981), By Design (1982), The Outside Chance of Maximilian Glick (1988), and Pale Saints (1997). He won for Ticket to Heaven, a drama in which he co-starred with Kim Cattrall and Meg Foster. Rubinek has since worked with Cattrall on Brian de Palma's 1990 film The Bonfire of the Vanities (along with F. Murray Abraham, Kirsten Dunst, Richard Libertini, and the aforementioned Terry Farrell) and in the 1999 Turner Network Television movie 36 Hours to Die.

Rubinek had supporting roles in several highly-acclaimed films, including Wall Street (1987) with Jerry Rector, Unforgiven (1992, with John Pyper-Ferguson and Anthony James), and True Romance (1993). On the latter, he appeared as an arrogant, cocaine-dealing movie producer opposite Christian Slater. Rubinek and Slater again worked together in the 2000 political thriller The Contender and in the 2004 thriller Pursued. Rubinek, Slater, and their co-stars from The Contender won the Alan J. Pakula Award from the Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards for their work on that film.

In addition, Rubinek had roles in two movies revolving around former United States President Richard M. Nixon and featuring other Star Trek alumni: 1995's Nixon, with Robert Beltran, Paul Sorvino, Bill Bolender, Tony Plana, and Victor Rivers; and 1999's Dick, with Kirsten Dunst and Teri Garr. In the former, he portrayed Nixon aide Herb Klein; in the latter, he played Henry Kissinger, the role Paul Sorvino played in Nixon. Henry Kissinger has also been portrayed by fellow TNG guest star Theodore Bikel (in the 1989 TV movie The Final Days).

Rubinek's other feature film credits during the 1980s and 1990s include Nothing Personal (1980, with Derek McGrath), Young Doctors in Love (1982, with Hamilton Camp and Deborah Lacey), Against All Odds (1984, with costumes designed by Michael Kaplan), Man Trouble (1992, with the aforementioned David Clennon and Michael McKean), Death Wish V: The Face of Death (1995, with Robert Joy), Getting Even With Dad (1994, with Ron Canada), and the sci-fi thriller Memory Run (1996, with Matt McCoy). More recently, Rubinek has been seen in such films as The Family Man (2000, with Ruth Williamson), Rush Hour 2 (2001, with Harris Yulin), The Singing Detective (2003, with Alfre Woodard), Badasssss! (2003, with Vincent Schiavelli), The Express (2008, with Clancy Brown), and Julia (2009, with Jude Ciccolella). In 2010, he had a supporting role in the drama Barney's Version, as did Bruce Greenwood.

External links