
John Emmet Tracy
Acting
Born 1969-07-02 · Chicago, Illinois, USA
In over thirty years as an actor, John has worked extensively in theatre, film, television and voiceovers. He has performed on stages throughout the world, including Shakespeare's Globe Theatre in London, where he was selected as a company member of the Globe's International Actors' Fellowship, and in Japan, where he toured as the title role in Hamlet. He has appeared in over one hundred productions and is the recipient of the 2013 Jessie Richardson Theatre Award for Outstanding Performance by an Actor in a Lead Role for his work in Pi Theatre's production of Mark O'Rowe's Terminus. John is also the creator of The 24 Hour Shakespeare Project, for which he performed continuously for twenty-four straight hours in all thirty-eight of Shakespeare's plays to raise money for British Columbia Children's Hospital. His film work includes appearances in Fifty Shades Freed, If I Stay, American Mary, Stagecoach: The Texas Jack Story and Steven Spielberg's The BFG. He has performed lead, recurring and supporting roles in many television shows, including Altered Carbon, iZombie, The Man in the High Castle, Supernatural, Smallville, When Calls the Heart, The Killing, Continuum, Girlfriends' Guide to Divorce and Sanctuary. John received his education and training at Rose Bruford College, where he earned a Bachelor's Degree in Theatre, as well as at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in London and the National Shakespeare Conservatory in New York. He has directed over thirty theatre productions and has been teaching for twenty years in colleges, conservatories and studios in Canada and the United States.
Known for

Yellowstone
2018 · TV

Supernatural
2005 · TV

iZombie
2015 · TV

Olympus
2015 · TV

Smallville
2001 · TV

Batwoman
2019 · TV

Fringe
2008 · TV

FBI: International
2021 · TV

Psych
2006 · TV

Fire Country
2022 · TV

Continuum
2012 · TV

The Dead Zone
2002 · TV

R. L. Stine's The Haunting Hour
2010 · TV

Altered Carbon
2018 · TV

Sanctuary
2008 · TV

Motive
2013 · TV