![]() Avg.User Rating: Rate this person: Actor Born: May 22, 1940 in Québec City, Canada Biography:Born in Canada and trained for an acting career in New York, "Michael Sarrazin" made his earliest movie appearances through the auspices of the National Board of Canada. Arriving in Hollywood in 1967, Sarrazin was almost immediately lionized critically for his supporting work opposite "George C. Scott" in "The Flim-Flam Man" (1967). He went on to co-star with "Jane Fonda" in "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?" (1969); with "Paul Newman" and "Henry Fonda" in "Sometimes a Great Notion" (1971); and with "Barbra Streisand" in "For Pete's Sake" (1974). Though his Hollywood commitments have kept him hopping, Sarrazin has never abandoned his Canadian rootings, appearing in such above-the-border productions as "The Groundstar Conspiracy" (1972), "Double Negative" (1979), and "Joshua Then and Now" (1985). On television, "Michael Sarrazin" played the creature in "Frankenstein: The True Story" (1973), adhering to... Full Biography
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