The Niagara Falls Review

‘Spirituall­y Canadian’

Getting to know Cardinal’s Billy Campbell

- BILL BRIOUX

NORTH BAY, Ont. — The life of an actor isn’t always glamorous. Take Billy Campbell, for example. The lanky Virginian sits in a rundown mess hall on a remote and abandoned helicopter airfield. It’s late spring, cold and raining hard. To kill time between shooting scenes on the CTV series Cardinal, he kills mosquitoes.

Campbell wouldn’t have it any other way.

The show’s six-episode second season, set in fictional Algonquin Bay but shot in North Bay and Sudbury, Ont., begins Thursday night. Generous tax credits and other incentives have lured Cardinal and other production­s to towns all over the provinces’ “near north” region. That’s fine with Campbell, who has lived and worked across Canada and owns property in British Columbia.

“I feel spirituall­y Canadian, maybe because I’ve been coming here since I was a young one,” says Campbell, who used to summer with his family in Ontario’s Muskoka-area cottage country.

The 58-year-old plays Det. John Cardinal on the series, a hit on CTV as well as stateside on Hulu; a third season has already been ordered.

Quebecer Karine Vanasse stars opposite Campbell as police partner Lisa Delorme. The new season finds the two investigat­ing a strange case: A young woman (Alex Paxton-Beesley) has survived a gunshot wound to the head but her injuries may be linked to a series of grisly, ritualisti­c murders.

Cardinal is based on a series of six bestsellin­g crime novels by Canadian author Giles Blunt. Campbell has read them all.

Campbell didn’t always want to be an actor. “I wanted to draw comic books,” he says.

He attended a school of comic book art in New Jersey. A visit to a friend at an acting school in Chicago, however, opened his eyes to other possibilit­ies. For one thing, he says, there were more interestin­g women in the acting class. Campbell followed

I guess you could say I had a mid-life crisis. I really felt like I wasn’t living my life at all.” Billy Campbell

one of them to Hollywood and the rest, as they say, is history. In fairly short order he landed a part on Dynasty and starred in the sci-fi adventure flick The Rocketeer.

He says, however, that his career was almost over before it began. His first acting gig was in a long-forgotten TV movie called, appropriat­ely enough, First Steps.

Campbell got on set and froze.

“(It) came the time to shoot and I was a block of wood,” he says.

The director swore loudly, turned his back and “stomped away from the camera.” Campbell still remembers the name of the compassion­ate assistant director who caught up with him later and assured him there’d be better days ahead.

There were, including Campbell’s three-season run opposite Sela Ward in the acclaimed ABC drama Once and Again. By the time that series ended in 2002, however, Campbell felt lost in Hollywood.

“I guess you could say I had a mid-life crisis. I really felt like I wasn’t living my life at all.”

Driven by a longing to experience the sea after reading the Master and Commander novels, Campbell set out for Norway. Over the next four years he sailed around the world twice, part of that time on a tall ship out of Lunenburg, N.S. The ship resembles the famous Bluenose schooner depicted on the Canadian dime. Campbell proudly shows off a photo of the craft on his cellphone.

“The last season I was on board, I met my now wife,” says Campbell. She’s from Norway; the couple and their young child split their time between Copenhagen and her family’s farm in the south of Norway.

Campbell did discover what it was like to be at sea, but mostly, he says, “I discovered things about myself. Oddly, once I started doing that, work became so much more satisfying.”

 ?? BELL MEDIA ?? Billy Campbell in a scene from the second season of CTV’s Cardinal, which debuts Thursday.
BELL MEDIA Billy Campbell in a scene from the second season of CTV’s Cardinal, which debuts Thursday.

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