Misplaced Pages

Tyrone Benskin

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Canadian actor, theatre director and politician

Tyrone Benskin
Member of the Canadian Parliament
for Jeanne-Le Ber
In office
2 May 2011 – 19 October 2015
Preceded byThierry St-Cyr
Succeeded byDistrict Abolished
Personal details
Born (1958-12-29) 29 December 1958 (age 65)
Bristol, England
Political partyNew Democratic Party
Residence(s)Montreal, Quebec, Canada
ProfessionActor, Theatre director, Unionist

Tyrone Benskin (born 29 December 1958) is an English-Canadian actor, theatre director and politician. He was elected Member of Parliament in the Jeanne-Le Ber riding, in Montreal, Quebec, in the 2011 Canadian federal election and served as an MP until 2015.

Life and career

Benskin was born in Bristol, England but moved to Canada in 1968 at age nine.

Artistic career

Having studied theatre at both CEGEP and university levels in Montreal, Benskin has become a significant presence in theatre, film, television and music. His theatre credits include features appearances on such celebrated stages as the Stratford Shakespeare Festival, the National Arts Centre and the Centaur Theatre in Montreal.

Benskin also supplied the voice of Kobalt in the 1996 animated series of Flash Gordon and Bo and Wimzie's father Rousso in the children's television series Wimzie's House.

In politics

On 30 January 2011, Benskin was announced as the federal New Democratic Party candidate in the Montreal-area riding of Jeanne-Le Ber in the 2011 federal election. During the election, his candidacy was seen as one of the NDP's better chances for a gain in Quebec, and NDP leader Jack Layton described him as having minister potential. On 2 May 2011, he was elected to the House of Commons of Canada with a substantial margin, defeating Bloc Québécois incumbent Thierry St-Cyr.

Benskin was named the Official Opposition's critic for Canadian Heritage, and later transferred to the Official Languages file as deputy critic. He was dropped from the shadow cabinet after party leader Thomas Mulcair learned that Benskin owed the Quebec revenue agency $58,000 for unpaid taxes from 2007 to 2011. Benskin apologized, attributing the non-payment to having precarious employment as an artist prior to becoming an MP. Benskin did not stand as a candidate in the 2015 federal election, having lost the local party's nomination to Allison Turner.

Electoral record

2011 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
New Democratic Tyrone Benskin 23,293 44.66 +28.96 25,255.34
Bloc Québécois Thierry St-Cyr 12,635 24.22 -10.69 91,577.01
Liberal Mark Bruneau 10,054 19.28 -12.98 93,534.65
Conservative Pierre Lafontaine 4,678 8.97 -2.22 17,698.39
Green Richard Noël 1,377 2.64 -2.14 3,679.20
Marxist–Leninist Eileen Studd 121 0.23 0.00
Total valid votes 52,158 100.00
Total rejected ballots 637 1.21 +0.01
Turnout 52,795 59.61 +1.95

Filmography

Film

Television

Animation

Video games

References

  1. "Stratford Festival Archives | Details".
  2. Patry-Cloutier, David. "Layton compte sur des candidats ministrables." Rue Frontenac, 15 April 2011.]
  3. "Photo Galleries 1.1366303". 24 May 2013.
  4. Nouvelle candidate du NPD, by Catherine Vaillancourt; in Métro; published 30 March 2015; retrieved 23 January 2022

External links

Categories: