Martin Randez
- Actor
- Producer
- Director
Stuntman, actor, writer, director and graduate of higher learning,
Martin Randez is a rarity in the world of Canadian cinema. A native
francophone who speaks impeccable English, Randez worked exclusively in
Quebec film until he moved to Toronto in 1993. He set out to learn
English at the age of 22, a time when most people, having learned a
second language in their formative years, are mastering the unique
idioms of speech. Randez shunned conventional English lessons, opting
instead to watch hours of stock American television -- from Oprah to
Roseanne -- to learn the rudiments of colloquial English. Bridging the
language gap paid off handsomely -- his breakthrough into the popular
North American marketplace came with an ABC made-for-television movie,
where Randez played opposite two-time Academy Award-nominee Judy Davis
in "Life With Judy Garland: Me and My Shadows." Randez plays Mark
Herron, Garland's fourth husband. Renowned Quebec filmmaker and a
director known internationally as the 'enfant terrible' of
French-speaking cinema, André Forcier discovered Randez. After
Forcier's triumph at the 1990 Montreal World Film Festival -- where his
seminal "Une Histoire Inventée" won Most Popular Film -- he cast Randez
in the lead role of his next feature film, "Le Vent du Wyoming" (A Wind
from Wyoming). The movie was an Official Selection at the Cannes Film
Festival that year and won Best Canadian Film and Critic's First Prize
at the Montreal World Film Festival in 1994. Randez's repertoire is
ample in substance. He's portrayed a series of psychologically complex
leading characters for various independent short film productions. In
addition to film, Randez has appeared in numerous Canadian television
shows. Furthermore, Randez is an accomplished classically trained stage
actor, having performed in nearly 20 theatrical productions for
Canadian Stage, Toronto French Theatre, Pounds Per Square Inch, and
others.