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Mr. Lahey of Trailer Park Boys (Club Phoenix London Guest on Sept. 3rd '05, Sept. 4th '05, & Nov. 5th '05) |
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Mr. Lahey is a chick magnet, he is eye candy to the babes, he is the master of Ballroom dancing moves!!! And its only the finest, fittest, bustiest females who can stick with his demanding and animal like lead. Every time Lahey is in the house, Club Phoenix London is on fire!!!
Lahey Bio: John Dunsworth (Mr. Lahey) was born in Bridgewater, Nova Scotia, not far from the sea where he now spends most of his time on his yacht when he's not working. John is one of Halifax's most venerable and revered actors. He has appeared in countless CBC radio dramas and has held leading roles in over 25 Neptune Theatre productions. In 1970, long before the days of waterfront renewal, John convinced the city of Halifax to lease to him a run-down old building by the shipyards which he turned into Pier One Theatre – Halifax's first and arguably its most successful alternative theatre company. John first met Mike Clattenburg in the mid-1990s when he auditioned for a small role in Mike's short, One Last Shot. Halfway through shooting, John's small role blossomed into a leading part – a part that garnered him a Best Performance award from the Atlantic Film Festival. From there, John developed that role into the character Jim Lahey, the trailer park supervisor on the series Trailer Park Boys. John’s recent film credits include principle roles in Sleepmurder for CTV, Blessing for CBS, Shattered City: Halifax Explosion for Salter Street Films and Thom Fitzgerald’s Indie film Three Needles. John is an avid bridge player, holding master points. He also
holds, until somebody proves otherwise, the Internet Scrabble record
for having three 7-letter words in a row. Around town, John is
easy to spot. He drives an old truck with a thousand pound winch
that he uses for hauling granite. In 1987, John founded Filmworks
Casting where he worked as Halifax's most successful casting director. Prior
to that, John worked in the transportation industry. To be precise,
he drove a cab for three years and worked the CNR trains from Halifax
and Sydney. |
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