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Lee Pacer

Following his breakthrough performance in Soldier's Girl and several
acclaimed turns on the stages of New York, Lee Pace stars this fall
in ABC's highly anticipated new series, Pushing Daisies.
Written expressly for Pace by executive producer Bryan Fuller (Heroes),
Pushing Daisies' protagonist Ned is a man who brings people back
from the dead with a single touch. Pace previously co starred as
Aaron Tyler, the older brother of a young woman who takes advice
from inanimate objects in Fox's cult series Wonderfalls, created
by Fuller and Todd Holland.
In theatres Pace stars alongside Amy Adams and Frances McDormand
next year in Bharat Nalluri's Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day. Based
on the novel by Winifred Watson, the Focus Features release concerns
a dowdy governess sent to the home of a glamorous up and coming
actress in 1938. Pace portrays Michael, a wild misfit piano player
who, upon his return from prison, returns to persuade the actress
(Adams) to marry him.
In Tarsem's epic fantasy The Fall (which premiered at the 2006
Toronto Film Festival), Pace stars as stuntman Roy Walker/The Black
Bandit. He co starred opposite Matt Damon in Robert De Niro's CIA
drama, The Good Shepherd. He also played Dick Hickcock in Infamous,
Doug McGrath's take on Truman Capote's chronicle of the Clutter
family murders which featured Toby Jones, Sandra Bullock and Daniel
Craig, and stars opposite Sarah Michelle Gellar in Joel Bergvall's
Addicted later this year.
Pace received a Gotham Award, Golden Globe and Independent Spirit
Award nominations for his performance as nightclub performer Calpernia
Adams in Frank Pierson's Soldier's Girl. His motion picture credits
also include James Ivory's The White Countess with Ralph Fiennes
and Natasha Richardson.
A Juilliard School alumnus, Pace began his career on stage. He
most recently garnered a 2007 Lucille Lortel Award nomination for
Outstanding Leading Actor for Guardians, Peter Morris' two character
play inspired by the Abu Ghraib scandals. Jason Moore directed Guardians
for the Culture Project. For his performance as a haunted Bosnian
economics student/Oedipus in Craig Lucas' Small Tragedy (a play
within a play, directed by Mark Wing Davey for Playwrights Horizons),
Pace received his first Lucille Lortel Award nomination for Outstanding
Actor and shared an Obie Award with the ensemble. He portrayed a
gangster in Janusz Glowacki's The Fourth Sister (director: Lisa
Peterson, Vineyard Theatre), and a painter whose obsession with
a French artist sends his life into a tailspin in the Playwrights
Horizons production of Keith Bunin's The Credeaux Canvas, directed
by Michael Mayer.
- from ABC.com
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