Bruce Horak (born August 5, 1974) is a Canadian artist[1] and television and stage[2] actor, known for portraying Hemmer on Star Trek: Strange New Worlds. Horak is the first legally blind actor to portray a character in the Star Trek franchise.[3][4]

Early years

edit

Horak was born in Calgary, Alberta. At age 18 months, he was diagnosed with retinoblastoma, which caused him to lose his right eye and over 90% of the vision in his left eye.[3] Horak's father, Karl Horak, was also visually impaired, having lost his left eye to disease.[5] Horak developed an interest in writing and theater in third grade, when a theater company came to his school and put on a play.

Horak attended at Mount Royal University, where he studied theater. He also trained at the Loose Moose Theatre in Calgary.

Theatre

edit

One of Horak's earliest plays was What You Can't See, in 1999, about a boy who hides his visual impairment. In 2001, he co-created The Canada Show, a comedic attempt to distill the history of Canada into a one-hour space. In 2005, he co-created the one-man show This is Cancer, described as a dark comedy. Horak also stars as Cancer in the play.[6] He appeared in the role of Jake in a production of Evil Dead: The Musical in 2009.[7] In 2019, he co-created Goblin: Macbeth, a play which imagines goblins finding the works of Shakespeare, and attempting to act out a play without fully understanding what they are doing.[8]

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds

edit

On Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, Horak plays Hemmer, the Aenar chief engineer aboard the Enterprise. The Aenar are a blind race in Star Trek, closely related to the Andorians, and the producers wanted a visually impaired actor to play the role of Hemmer.[9] Horak, who describes himself as a Star Trek fan, eagerly auditioned for the role and won it. When Horak accepted the role, he was told Hemmer's character would have a limited run in Strange New Worlds. He appeared as Hemmer in six of the ten episodes of Season 1. He later appeared in one Season 2 episode in both a pre-recorded/flashback scene with Uhura and as an illusory Hemmer. In addition to Hemmer, Horak also played the Klingon commander General Garkog in Season 2's "Subspace Rhapsody".[10]

Other artistic endeavors

edit

Horak has painted hundreds of portraits, and has an aim to paint one thousand of them. In one of his plays, "Assassinating Thomson", he paints a portrait of the audience during the play.[11] His paintings have been showcased at several Canadian galleries.

Horak has also recorded an album with Canadian artist Onalea Gilbertson under the name The Rail Birds. The album, called Intensive Care, was made available online in 2020.[12]

Personal life

edit

Horak was married to Rebecca Northan, who he met while at Mount Royal. They did not remain married, but she has been his co-collaborator on many of his plays.

As of 2022, he resides in Stratford, Canada.[8]

Filmography

edit
Television
Year Title Role Notes
2010 Warehouse 13 Philo Farnsworth 1 episode
2022 In the Dark Brendan 2 episodes
2022–23 Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Hemmer, Additional Roles 8 episodes
2023 Transplant Adam Viri 2 episodes
2023 Family History Mysteries: Buried Past Clark Television movie
Other
Year Title Role Notes
2009 Gitch Gitch Short
2023 Star Trek: Very Short Treks Hemmer (voice) 2 episodes

Awards and nominations

edit
Year Award Category Nominated Work Result
2000 Betty Award Outstanding New Play What You Can't See / Quest Theatre Nominated[13]
2007 Betty Award Outstanding Performance by an Actor in a Comedy or Musical This is Cancer / Alberta Theatre Projects Won[13]
2009 Betty Award Outstanding Performance by an Actor in a Comedy or Musical Evil Dead – The Musical / Ground Zero Theatre / Hit and Myth Productions Won[13]
2011 Betty Award Outstanding Performance by an Actor in a Comedy or Musical The Wizard of Oz / Alberta Theatre Projects Nominated[13]
2014 Betty Award Outstanding New Play Legend Has It / Rebecca Northan, with Renee Amber, Bruce Horak, Mark Meer, Jamie Northan, and Sean Bowie Nominated[13]
2019 Betty Award Outstanding Performance by an Actor in a Drama Assassinating Thomson / Lunchbox Theatre and Inside Out Theatre Nominated[13]
2022 Betty Award Outstanding Performance by an Actor in a Drama Richard III / The Shakespeare Company and Hit and Myth Won[13]

References

edit
  1. ^ "Painting without eyesight: how one Calgary artist made the best of a cancer diagnosis". Calgary Journal. April 2, 2019.
  2. ^ "Shakespeare Company takes on the tale of Richard III". Calgary. April 20, 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Meet Bruce Horak, Star Trek's first blind actor, playing Hemmer on Strange New Worlds". CBC. May 16, 2022.
  4. ^ "10 Characters Confirmed To Appear In Star Trek: Strange New Worlds". ScreenRant. May 4, 2022.
  5. ^ "Interview (with SPOILERS): Star Trek's First Blind Actor on Cancer, Family, and Facing Death". Original Cin. June 30, 2022.
  6. ^ "Actor lightens up darkness of cancer with one-man show". "The Globe and Mail". August 10, 2011.
  7. ^ "Evil Dead: The Musical lacks the camp of its source material". The Georgia Straight. October 23, 2009.
  8. ^ a b "The magic of Macbeth: Shakespeare Company brews up a goblin version of the murderous king". Calgary Herald. March 11, 2022.
  9. ^ "'Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' Actor Bruce Horak Explores Devastating Penultimate Season 1 Episode". Hollywood Reporter. June 30, 2022.
  10. ^ Romano, Nick (August 3, 2023). "'Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' Hemmer actor had secret cameo in musical". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on August 3, 2023. Retrieved August 3, 2023.
  11. ^ "All About 'Strange New Worlds' Star Bruce Horak's Other Career: He'll Paint a Portrait of YOU". heavy.com. November 28, 2022.
  12. ^ "The Rail Birds - Onalea".
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Betty Mitchell Awards Past Nominees (official website)
edit