Scott Hylands

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Scott Hylands
Born
Scott Hylands Douglas

1943 (age 8283)
OccupationActor
Years active1965–present
SpouseVeronica Hylands
Children2

Scott Hylands (born 1943), born Scott Hylands Douglas,[1] is a Canadian actor who has appeared in movies, on television, and on the stage. Due to his longevity and versatility, critics have called him "one of Canada's greatest actors."[2]

Early years

Hylands was born in 1943 in Lethbridge, Alberta.[3] His mother, Ruth (née White) Douglas (1913-2005), was a public health nurse, later a mathematics teacher, and his father, Walter Norman Douglas, was killed in action in 1945 during World War II.[1][4] He was raised and educated in southwest British Columbia, where he attended Shawnigan Lake Boys School[5] on Vancouver Island. He then attended the University of British Columbia in Vancouver and graduated in 1964.[6] Hylands initially studied zoology, but when the university began a theater arts major, he transferred into that program.[7]

Upon graduation, he left Canada to pursue an acting career in New York City, where his first role was as the lead in an off-Broadway production of the comedy Billy Liar.[8]

Career in the United States

After that 1965 debut role, he spent several years in San Francisco, acting with the American Conservatory Theater. Then, in 1968, he was asked by Canadian-American Hollywood film director Mark Robson to audition for a movie role.[9] His first film appearance was in the 1969 suspense film Daddy's Gone A-Hunting. He got good reviews, but his movie debut was overshadowed by another film that came out at the same time, Midnight Cowboy.[10]

In August 1975, Hylands appeared onstage as Mercutio in the Los Angeles Free Shakespeare Society production of Romeo and Juliet at the John Anson Ford Theater, known at the time as The Pilgrimage Theatre, in the Cahuenga Pass.[11] He won some critical praise, both for his acting skill and for his good looks.[12]

While he did not become a household name, he worked regularly, appearing in a number of movies, as well as in some American television shows. Among the TV shows in which he acted were Cannon, The Waltons, Kung Fu, Baretta, and Ironside.[13]

On American television, he became well known for playing tough guy characters and villains: as he noted in an interview, if an actor is not the leading man, he generally plays a "heavy."[14]

Career in Canada

In the early 1980s, Hylands returned to Canada.[15] He got an opportunity to play a good guy, Detective Kevin "O.B." O'Brien on the television series Night Heat,[16] a police drama, produced in Toronto; it aired on both Canadian (CTV) and American (CBS) TV, from 1985 to 1989. This was his first television starring role.[17]

After Night Heat was canceled, Hylands continued to live in Canada, settling in Salt Spring Island, British Columbia, where he lived for 25 years with his wife, Veronica, a nurse, and their two children. They later relocated to Victoria.[13] He worked in both American and Canadian productions. He appeared as Father Travis in the ABC-TV series V.[18]

He was seen on numerous other programs, including the 1992 TV movie To Catch a Killer, a 1995 episode of the hit cop drama NYPD Blue, and on four episodes of the remade version of The Outer Limits from 1996 to 2001.[19] He also returned to the Canadian stage, playing leading roles in such productions as Waiting for Godot (2015), and The Tempest (1994), among others. He produced and directed a 2008 version of Waiting for Godot, and performed in a solo version of A Christmas Carol. In addition, he directed, as well as performed in, a 2006 production of Under Milk Wood that was staged in Victoria BC.[2]

In 2021, at age 78, he expressed no interest in retiring, and continued to be involved with theater until sidelined by health issues.[20]

Health

In 2021, shortly before his daughter's wedding, the actor was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia. A GoFundMe account was set up by his wife to help pay for the well-regarded but expensive medication, Venclexta, needed for Hylands' chemotherapy treatment.[21]

Filmography

Film

Television

Scott Hylands television credits
YearTitleRoleNotes
1971Earth IIJim CapaTV movie
1972The Sixth SenseJason1 episode
1972–1974IronsideJoe Grainger / Philip Thomas2 episodes
1973GriffAssassin1 episode
1973Kung FuRandy Bucknell / Saunders2 episodes
1974The MagicianHal1 episode
1975Harry OLuke Turner1 episode
1976CannonJoe Gantry2 episodes
1976BarettaHatfield1 episode
1977Wonder WomanPaul Bjornsen2 episodes
1977Baa Baa Black SheepPadre John1 episode
1977Police StoryLt. Carl Inforzato2 episodes
1978The Winds of Kitty HawkGlenn CurtissTV movie
1978CentennialLaseterTV miniseries
1981The WaltonsCurt Willard Packard1 episode
1982Hart to HartAlan Chambers1 episode
1982ShocktraumaDr. "Tex" GoodnightTV movie
1984George WashingtonGeneral GreeneTV miniseries
1984Blue ThunderPeter Anson1 episode
1985–1989Night HeatDetective Kevin O'Brien96 episodes
1991 Counterstrike Colonel Nathan Episode: "The Dilemma"
1992To Catch a KillerDelta Squad Sergeant Mike PaxtonTV movie
1993Ordeal in the ArcticFred RitchieTV movie
1993Scales of JusticeHarry OakesEpisode: "Rex v De Marigny"
1993Kung Fu: The Legend ContinuesGant1 episode
1995NYPD BlueRoy Sandquist1 episode
1996TitanicJohn Jacob Astor IVTV miniseries
1996–2001The Outer Limits(various)4 episodes
1997The X-FilesGen. Benjamin Bloch1 episode
1998Stargate SG-1Dr. Timothy Harlow1 episode
2007Anna's StormClint CorbinTV movie
2009VFather Tarvis11 episodes
2011SupernaturalJudge Tye Mortimer1 episode
2012The Horses of McBridePrestonTV movie
2017FargoEnnis Stussy3 episodes
2019HeartlandLucky Butch Connelly1 episode
2020Wynonna EarpWyatt Earp1 episode

References

  1. Shields., Roy (10 April 1965). "B.C. to B'Way-- In a Hurry". Toronto Star. p. 31.
  2. Chamberlain, Adrian (23 February 2006). "Milk Wood Memories". Times Colonist. Victoria B.C. p. D7.
  3. Haugeneder, Rudy (15 July 1972). "Massive Fire Climax of Movie". Lethbridge Herald. Alberta. p. 14.
  4. "Flight Lieutenant Walter Norman Douglas". veterans.gc.ca. 20 February 2019. Retrieved 14 July 2023.
  5. Chamberlain, Adrian (10 December 2009). "Dickens Classic a One-Man Show". Times Colonist. Victoria. p. D8.
  6. Hylands, Scott (19 March 2012). "Readers Pay Tribute to Vancouver Playhouse". Vancouver Sun. p. A10.
  7. Conlogue, Ray (26 June 1982). "This Macho Man Has Many Faces". Globe & Mail. Toronto. p. E3.
  8. Gault, Carol (19 April 1986). "Night Heat Gives Hylands the Right Slot". Globe & Mail. Toronto. p. 7.
  9. MacDonald, Marci (7 December 1968). "How Scott Hylands Became a Matinee Idol Without a Suit". Toronto Star. p. 69.
  10. Bawden, Jim (24 March 1985). "Night Heat". Toronto Star. p. G1.
  11. Progress Bulletin from Pomona California, 20 July 1975, pg. 25. Accessed 5 February 2018.
  12. Helen Bullock. "Acting is for the Hardy", Toronto Star, 22 June 1982, pg. F1.
  13. Michael D. Reid. "Actor Exults in Beckett's Booby-Traps", Victoria Times-Colonist. 13 March 2015, pg. C12.
  14. Carol Gault. "Night Heat Gives Hylands the Right Slot", Toronto Globe & Mail, 19 April 1986, pg. 7.
  15. Chamberlain, Adrian (21 January 1994). "Scott Hylands news". Victoria Times-Colonist. p. 1.
  16. Newhouse, Miriam; Messaline, Peter (1 February 1999). The Actor's Survival Kit. Dundurn Press Ltd. pp. 29–. ISBN 9780889242784. Retrieved 4 July 2012.
  17. Diane Smith. "Great Scott." Toronto Star, 29 March 1986, pg. S4.
  18. Christine Van Reeuwyk. (Sidney, B.C.) Peninsula News Review. 10 December 2009, pg. 18
  19. Eirik Knutzen. "TV Talkback", Toronto Star, 20 April 2002, pg. S8.
  20. Michael D. Reid. "Actor Exults in Beckett's Booby-Traps", Victoria Times-Colonist, 13 March 2015, pg. C12.
  21. Braun, Liz (22 November 2021). "GoFundMe set up to help beloved Canadian actor Scott Hylands". Toronto Sun. Retrieved 1 August 2023.