Background
Graham Greene is a full-blood Oneida, born on the Six Nations Reserve in southwestern Ontario on June 22, 1952. Greene was the second of six children born to John, an ambulance driver and maintenance man, and Lillian Greene.
Graham Greene is a full-blood Oneida, born on the Six Nations Reserve in southwestern Ontario on June 22, 1952. Greene was the second of six children born to John, an ambulance driver and maintenance man, and Lillian Greene.
At the age of 16, Greene dropped out of school. Two years later he studied welding at George Brown College in Toronto. In June 2008, he was awarded an honorary doctor of law degree from the Brantford campus of Wilfrid Laurier University.
Just after school, Greene went to Rochester, New York, where he worked at a carpet warehouse. Graduating from college, he worked at a Hamilton factory, building railway cars.
In the 1970's Greene worked as a roadie and sound man for Toronto rock bands and ran a recording studio in Ancaster, Ontario. He has also worked as a high-steelworker, landscape gardener, factory laborer, carpenter, and bartender.
Greene took his first acting role (a Native American) in 1974 as part of the now-defunct Toronto theater company, Ne'er-Do-Well Thespians. In 1980 he played a Native American alcoholic in The Crackwalker by Judith Thompson, and in the 1982 theater production of Jessica, co-authored by Linda Griffiths, he played the role of The Crow.
In the 1980's Greene worked with the Theatre Passe Muraille, acting in an "irreverent set of plays, The History of the Village of the Small Huts. "
When not acting, he welded sets and worked lights.
The first film role Greene took came in 1982 in the movie Running Brave; he played a friend of Native American track star Billy Mills. Two years later, in 1984, Greene played a Huron extra in Revolution, a movie about the U. S. War of Independence which was shot in England and starred Al Pacino.
The death of his father in 1984, however, started what Greene described in a Maclean's interview with Brian D. Johnson as a "period of fast cars and guns. " Moving to the country around the same time, Greene found himself out of work and selling hand-painted t-shirts in Toronto by 1988. Events took another upward turn in 1989 when Greene played a cameo role as Jimmy, an emotionally disturbed Lakota Vietnam veteran, in PowWow Highway.
Greene's largest film success came with the 1990 production of Dances with Wolves; the role of Kicking Bird, a Lakota holy man who befriends Kevin Costner.
As his film career took off, Greene continued his theater work, playing "a toothless, beer-guzzling Indian buffoon" in an all-native cast of Dry Lips Oughta Move to Kapuskasing. Television also came into the picture in 1990 when Greene played a Navajo lawyer in "L. A. Law, " and Leonard, a Native American shaman, on the series "Northern Exposure. "
Apart from his supporting role in Dances with Wolves, and his brief cameo appearance in PowWow Highway, Greene is probably most popular for his role as the mystical, murderous, Native activist Arthur in the 1991 Canadian movie Clearcut, based on Toronto writer M. T. Kelly's novel A Dream Like Mine. Two other movie roles that display Greene's acting talents were undertaken by the actor in 1992: the role of Ishi, the last Native American in California to live completely apart from U. S. - Anglo culture, in the made-for-television movie The Last of His Tribe; and the role of Lakota tribal policeman Walter Crow Horse in Thunderheart, a drama loosely based on events in Oglala, South Dakota, in which two FBI agents were shot and killed. Also among Greene's more recent works is the 1991 adventure movie Lost in the Barrens; the role of a baseball catcher in the 1992 TNT movie Cooperstown with Alan Arkin; the role of an Anishinabe/Ojibway grandfather living on the reservation in the made-for- television children's movie WonderWorks Spirit Rider; the Native mentor in Huck and the King of Hearts - a loose and modern adaptation of the adventures of Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn; a local sheriff in the movie Benefit of the Doubt with Donald Sutherland; and a role in the film Maverick with Mel Gibson, Jody Foster, and James Garner.
He appeared in the movie of Thomas King's Green Grass, Running Water, and in the television movie The Broken Chain with other Native actors Wes Studi, Eric Schweig, and Floyd Red Crow Westerman.
Greene also acted alongside Bruce Willis and Samuel L. Jackson in the 1995 film Die Hard with a Vengeance.
In 1999 Greene was featured as Arlen Bitterbuck in the Oscar-nominated The Green Mile.
In 2006, Greene presented the documentary series The War that Made America, about the Seven Years' War (French and Indian War) of the mid–18th century in North America.
In 2007, he appeared as Shylock in the Stratford Shakespeare Festival production of The Merchant of Venice as well as Breakfast with Scot.
He appeared in The Twilight Saga: New Moon, in Longmire, which ran for six seasons from 2012 to 2017 and in the science fiction series Defiance, which ran for three seasons from 2013 to 2015.
In 1989 he received the Dora Mavor Moore Award of Toronto for Best Actor in his role as Pierre St. Pierre in Cree author Tomson Highway's play Dry Lips Oughta Move to Kapuskasing. The role in the film "Dances with Wolves" brought Greene an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor in 1991. He received the Gemini Award for the children's series The Adventures of Dudley the Dragon. He was named a Member of the Order of Canada in 2015.
Greene had a daughter by Toronto actress Carol Lazare in 1981. While shooting Dances with Wolves, he married Hilary Blackmore, a Toronto stage manager.