Frank Moore

Frank Moore (born 1946 in Bay de Verde, Newfoundland) is a Canadian film, television and stage actor. He won the Canadian Film Award for Best Supporting Actor in 1976 for the film The Far Shore, and was also a nominee for Best Actor in 1978 for The Third Walker.

Cast

Forget and Forgive

(George Shelton)

Rabid

(Hart Read)

Trouble In The Garden

(Rob)

Stone Cold Dead

(Teddy Mann)

The Italian Machine

Hostage for a Day

Blood & Donuts

(Pierce)

Seeds Of Doubt

The Far Shore

(Tom McLeod)

Jack Reed: Death and Vengeance

(Billy)

Kings and Desperate Men

(Pete)

City of Shadows

(Lt. Johnson)

Master Spy: The Robert Hanssen Story

(Agent Bunky)

The Idiot

(Mr. Tom Amerson)

Food of the Gods II

(Jacques)

Shadow Zone: The Undead Express

(Harv)

The Long Kiss Goodnight

(Surveillance Man)

Thrillkill

(Caspar)

Jesus Henry Christ

(Stan Herman)

Face-Off

(Barney)

Bye, See You Monday

(Robert Lanctôt)

Bad As I Wanna Be: The Dennis Rodman Story

The Apprentice

(Judge Edward Neaher)

Undue Influence

(Mail Carrier)

The Reagans

(Don Regan)

The Devil's Mile

(Mr. Arkadi)

Once Upon a Murdoch Christmas

(Lance Henderson)

The Day Reagan Was Shot

(Lt. Col. Taylor)

The Absolute Truth

(Mike Tormel)

Street Justice

(Vince Carolla)

The Supreme Kid

(Ruben)

Flood: A River's Rampage

(Malcolm Oswald)

W.W. and the Dixie Dancekings

(June Ann's Boss)

Murder at 1600

(Captain Ford Gibbs)

My Date with the President's Daughter

(Dan Thornhill)

Giant Mine

(Roger Warren)

When Love Is Not Enough: The Lois Wilson Story

Dirty Pictures

(Ruberg)

Teleplay

(Fred)

Orphan Black

(Board Member #1)

Killjoys

(Hillary Oonan)

Mayday

(Captain Merten)

Killjoys

(Hills Oonan)

Earth: Final Conflict

(Hubble Urich)

Killjoys

(Hills)

Murdoch Mysteries

(Jeb Cutler)

Sue Thomas: F.B.Eye

(Senator Fenton)

Due South

(Johnstone)

Poltergeist: The Legacy

(Dr. Warren Sloan)

Mutant X

(McAllister)

Self Made: Inspired by the Life of Madam C.J. Walker

(John D. Rockefeller)

The New Alfred Hitchcock Presents

(James Stuyvesant)

Nuremberg

(Hans Frank)