Megan Follows | |
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![]() Follows atSan Diego Comic-Con in 2014 | |
Born | Megan Elizabeth Laura Diana Follows (1968-03-14)March 14, 1968 (age 57) Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Occupations |
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Years active | 1977–present |
Known for | Anne of Green Gables Anne of Green Gables: The Sequel Anne of Green Gables: The Continuing Story Booky Makes Her Mark Booky and the Secret Santa Booky's Crush |
Spouse | |
Partner | Stuart Hughes (1996–2010) |
Children | 2 |
Father | Ted Follows |
Relatives | Sean O'Bryan (brother-in-law) |
Megan Elizabeth Laura Diana Follows (/ˈmiːɡən/MEE-gən; born March 14, 1968)[1] is a Canadian-American actress and director. She is known for her role asAnne Shirley in the 1985 Canadian televisionminiseriesAnne of Green Gables and its twosequels. From 2013 to 2017, she starred asCatherine de' Medici, Queen of France, in the television drama seriesReign.
Follows was born inToronto, Ontario, the youngest of four children, in an acting family. Her father was a Canadian theatre actor and directorTed Follows (1926–2016) and her mother is Canadian actress Dawn Greenhalgh (b. 1933). Her parents later divorced.[2]
Her three siblings are all in the entertainment industry. Her elder sister Edwina is a writer, while her brother Laurence and sister Samantha Follows (who is married to American actorSean O'Bryan) are also actors.[3]
Her first acting job came at nine when she landed a spot in a commercial forBell Canada. She was directed to make an impudent gesture out of a school bus window – like sticking out her tongue - but ended up making a rather obscene adult gesture instead.[4] She found steady work in Canada, appearing in a few TV series such asMatt and Jenny,The Baxters, andThe Littlest Hobo, in which she guest-starred with her entire family in a three-part episode. She also starred in the short filmsThe Olden Days Coat (1981) andBoys and Girls (1983), the latter of which won an Academy Award for Best Short Subject.[5]
Follows' breakthrough occurred when she was cast asAnne Shirley in the 1985miniseriesAnne of Green Gables (as well as its two sequels).[6] The part of "Anne" was a coveted role that she won over 3,000 other young girls when director, producer, and writerKevin Sullivan chose her despite early worries during the audition process that she might be too old for the part. The miniseries, wholly produced in Canada, became successful worldwide and remains the highest-rated drama in Canadian television history.[citation needed]
Her performances earned her twoGemini awards as best actress for the first two miniseries,Anne of Green Gables andAnne of Green Gables: The Sequel,[6] and a Gemini nomination for the third Anne installment,Anne of Green Gables: The Continuing Story.[7] She did not reprise the role for the fourth film,Anne of Green Gables: A New Beginning, andBarbara Hershey took over the role.[6]
In 2023, Follows directed an audiobook dramatisation. She said, "I loved the idea of going back and deeply immersing myself in the text, in the writing of Lucy Maud Montgomery."[8]
Follows has made many appearances on both Canadian and U.S. television. In 1989, she starred in an episode ofThe Ray Bradbury Theater, "The Dwarf". In 1991, she starred with actorsDavid Soul andDavid Morse in the made-for-television movieCry in the Wild: The Taking of Peggy Ann in the titular role. The plot is based on the true story of the abduction of Peggy Ann Bradnick by an ex-convict and ex-mental patient William Diller Hollenbaugh which took place inShade Gap, Pennsylvania on May 11, 1966. It aired on NBC on May 6, 1991. In 1995, as Megan Porter Follows (as she was then known, by her married name) starred inThe Outer Limits episode "The Choice" (along withThora Birch) and as the title character in the 1995 "Home Care[9]" episode ofMurder She Wrote, starringAngela Lansbury. In Canada, she appeared in a popular made-for-TV movie,Hockey Night, around the time she appeared inAnne of Green Gables. She played Cathy, a young girl who played hockey on a previously all-male team. Other Canadian television appearances include leading roles in the period dramaUnder the Piano[6] and police dramaMajor Crime.[10] She appeared in several episodes of the CBC comedy-drama television series,Heartland as Ty Borden's mother, as well as directed episodes of the series.[6][11]
In 2005, she guest-starred in the Canadian ensemble dramaRobson Arms as one of the tenants of the Robson Arms apartment complex. She also appeared in the hospital dramaOpen Heart[12] as a nurse fighting a physician of malpractice, and inShania: A Life in Eight Albums, as Sharon Twain. Most recently, she starred as Booky's mother in the three movie adaptations ofBernice Thurman Hunter's "Booky" series:Booky Makes Her Mark,Booky and the Secret Santa, andBooky's Crush.[13]
Among her earliest American television appearances were roles inThe Facts of Life (as a cousin ofJo Polniaczek in Episode 23 of Season 3 that was intended as abackdoor pilot for a proposedspin-off) in 1982, and in the short-lived seriesDomestic Life asMartin Mull's character's daughter in 1984. She appeared in two TV movies,Sin of Innocence andShattered ... If Your Kid's On Drugs (both 1986). In 1993–94, she was part of the ensemble in the CBS television seriesSecond Chances. Since 2000, she has appeared onLaw & Order,ER,[6]The X-Files,CSI: Crime Scene Investigation,CSI: Miami,Cold Case, andLie to Me, among others.[14]
In 2004, Follows was part of the ensemble cast of the Hallmark moviePlainsong, which includedAidan Quinn,Rachel Griffiths, andAmerica Ferrera. In 2009, she made a guest appearance onBrothers and Sisters. In 2011, she had a guest role onHouse. In 2012, she played Beth inHollywood Heights. Also in 2012, she appeared as Alice Stewart in one episode ofLongmire, and in the Starz seriesWorld Without End, playing Lady Maud. In 2013, she was cast asCatherine de' Medici onReign,[6] a historical drama series onThe CW, based on the early life ofMary, Queen of Scots. The series ran for four seasons.[15]
In 2018, it was announced that Follows would be the lead director onHeld, a psychological web series produced by marblemedia.[16] She has a recurring role as the mother of the titular character onWynonna Earp. In 2020, it was announced that Follows would directShe Came Back, which was released in 2024 starringAmybeth McNulty.[17]
Follows has appeared in some feature films. She co-starred withCorey Haim andGary Busey in the 1985 film adaptation ofStephen King's novella,Silver Bullet.[18] In 1990, she was the voice of Clara from the cartoon Christmas filmThe Nutcracker Prince.[6] Her later film credits includeChristmas Child,A Foreign Affair (2003; released on DVD asTwo Brothers and a Bride), and a cameo in Laurie Lynd'sBreakfast with Scot.[6] She also had a brief uncredited cameo as a grocery store clerk in the movieI Am Number Four (2011).[citation needed]
Even though the career of Follows' parents was anchored in the theatre, she did not appear in many stage productions until the 2000s. Her first stage credit was inThe Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds, in which she starred alongside her mother, Dawn, and her sister, Samantha, in 1988 in Toronto. In 1992, she was offered the role of Juliet in theStratford Festival's production ofRomeo and Juliet, which she reprised the following year in Los Angeles. Other notable stage credits includeA Doll's House (Minneapolis'Guthrie Theater),Othello (Edmonton's Citadel Theatre and Ottawa's National Arts Centre),Uncle Vanya (Atlantic Theatre Festival), andNoël Coward'sHay Fever, in which she appeared with her siblings, and which was directed by her father.[19]
Recent years have seen the return of Follows on stage as a regular of the Toronto-basedSoulpepper Theatre Company. In 2005, she had the leading role of May in their production ofFool for Love bySam Shepard.[4] The following year, she took on the role of Annie inTom Stoppard'sThe Real Thing which ran at Ottawa'sNational Arts Centre as a co-production between Soulpepper and NAC English Theatre. Following this run, the play made its way to Toronto as part of Soulpepper's 2006 season at theYoung Centre for the Performing Arts. In 2007, she played the role of Marlene in the critically acclaimed summer production ofCaryl Churchill'sTop Girls with Soulpepper.[citation needed]
Soulpepper's 2008 season, marking the company's tenth anniversary signaled the continuation of Megan's prolific theatre career. Just like the past season, she appeared in two productions. The first wasMarsha Norman's'night, Mother, in which she co-starred opposite her real-life mother, Canadian actress Dawn Greenhalgh.[20] The second was Soulpepper's remount ofTop Girls.[21]
She returned to the stage in 2010 in Mirvish Productions's revival of Churchill'sCloud 9. In 2011, she returned to the stage to star in the Canadian premiere ofMelissa James Gibson'sThis at theVancouver Playhouse directed by Amiel Gladstone and, in 2012, she starred in the lead role of "Penelope" at theNightwood Theatre's production ofThe Penelopiad.[22]
In 1991, Follows married Christopher David Porter, a Canadiangaffer and photographer she met on the set ofDeep Sleep. They have two children, Lyla Anne Porter (b. 1991) and Russell Porter (b. 1994).[23] The couple divorced in 1996. Follows was subsequently in a long-term relationship with actorStuart Hughes; they broke up around 2010.[24]
Follows has served as a spokeswoman for the relief organizationWorld Vision Canada. She travelled to both Rwanda and Tanzania as a spokeswoman and a photographer. She also participated in the 2005 benefit concertCanada for Asia held to support the relief efforts for Asia after the2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami.[25]
She travelled to Cambodia in 2007 with the directorHeather Connell to filmSmall Voices: Stories of Cambodia's Children, a documentary about how the children of Cambodia living on the street and garbage dumps face their living conditions amid poverty and abuse and how they view their future.[26]
Follows is a member of the Canadian charity Artists Against Racism.[27]
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1985 | Silver Bullet | Jane Coslaw | [18] | |
1987 | Stacking | Anna Mae Morgan | ||
1988 | A Time of Destiny | Irene | ||
1989 | Termini Station | Micheline Dushane | [28] | |
1990 | The Nutcracker Prince | Clara Stahlbaum | Voice | [6] |
1993 | When Pigs Fly | Kathleen | ||
1998 | Reluctant Angel | Cheryl | ||
2003 | A Foreign Affair | Lena | ||
2007 | Breakfast with Scot | Barbara Warren | Cameo | [6] |
2011 | I Am Number Four | Supermarket Cashier | Uncredited | |
2019 | Lie Exposed | Diane | [14] |
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1978-79 | A Gift to Last | Uncredited | [14] | |
1979-80 | Matt and Jenny | Jenny Tanner | Main cast | [14] |
1980 | The Great Detective | Charity | Episode:A Family Business | |
1981 | The Olden Days Coat | Sal | TV movie | |
1981-82 | The Littlest Hobo | Marti Kendall | 4 episodes | [14] |
1982 | The Facts of Life | Terry Largo | Episode:Jo's Cousin | |
1982-84 | Hangin' In | Cassie | 3 episodes | |
1983 | Boys and Girls | Margaret | TV movie | |
1984 | Domestic Life | Didi Crane | Main cast | [29] |
Hockey Night | Cathy Yarrow | TV movie | [30] | |
1985 | Anne of Green Gables | Anne Shirley | TV movie | [31][6] |
1987 | Anne of Green Gables: The Sequel | TV movie | [6] | |
ABC Afterschool Special | Dana | Episode:Seasonal Differences | ||
1988 | Inherit the Wind | Rachel Brown | TV movie | |
1989 | Champagne Charlie | Louise Heidsick | Main cast | [14] |
The Ray Bradbury Theater | Aimee | Episode:The Dwarf | ||
1990 | Back to Hannibal: The Return of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn | Becky Thatcher | TV movie | [32] |
1991 | The Chase | Gloria Whipple | TV movie | [14] |
Cry in the Wild: The Taking of Peggy Ann | Peggy Ann Bradnick | TV movie | [14] | |
1993 | The Hidden Room | Deanna Matthews | Episode:Happily Ever After | |
1993-94 | Second Chances | Kate Benedicts | 10 episodes | [33] |
1995 | The Outer Limits | Karen Ross | Episode:The Choice | |
Murder, She Wrote | Lila Nolan | Episode:Home Care, credited as Megan Porter Follows | [14] | |
Under the Piano | Rosetta Brasilio | TV movie | [6] | |
1999 | Big Wolf on Campus | Violet Thorne | Episode:Interview with a Werewolf | |
2000 | Anne of Green Gables: The Continuing Story | Anne Shirley Blythe | TV movie | [6] |
Law & Order | Megan Parnell | Episode:Endurance | [14] | |
Made in Canada | Mandy Forward | Episode:Beaver Creek | ||
The Fugitive | Paula Bennett | Episode:Miles to Go | ||
Family Law | Nancy Quinn | Episode:Generations | ||
2001 | ER | Christy Larkin | Episode:A Walk in the Woods | [6][14] |
The X-Files | Kath McCready | Episode:Per Manum | [14] | |
Mentors | Annie Oakley | Episode:Hero | ||
The Division | Science Teacher | Episode:Anything You Can Do | ||
2002 | Strong Medicine | Dana's Doctor | 3 episodes | |
That's Life | Stella | Episode:Gutterball | ||
2003 | Threat Matrix | Denise | Episode:Veteran's Day | |
2004 | CSI | Beth Darian | Episode:Bad To The Bone | [14] |
Christmas Child | Meg Davenport | TV movie | [14] | |
2005 | CSI: Miami | Chloe Grand | Episode:Whacked | [14] |
Robson Arms | Janice Keneally | 4 episodes | ||
Odd Job Jack | Herself | Episode: "Iron Temp" | ||
Shania: A Life in Eight Albums | Sharon Twain | TV movie | ||
Cold Case | Maura | Episode:A Perfect Day | [14] | |
Crossing Jordan | Beth | Episode:Code of Ethics | ||
Booky Makes Her Mark | Francie Thomson | TV movie | ||
2007 | Booky and the Secret Santa | TV movie | ||
2008 | The Border | Moira Davis | Episode:Good Intentions | |
2009 | Booky's Crush | Francie Thomson | TV movie | |
Lie to Me | Lorraine Burch | Episode:Do No Harm | [34] | |
Brothers & Sisters | Maggie Stephens | Episode:Missing | [14] | |
Raising the Bar | Reanne Chrisman | Episode:No Child's Left Behind | [14] | |
2009-21 | Heartland | Lily Borden | 9 episodes | [6][11] |
2011 | House | Jennifer Williams | Episode:Changes | [14] |
2012 | Longmire | Alice Stewart | Episode:A Damn Shame | [14] |
Hollywood Heights | Beth | 2 episodes | ||
World Without End | Maud | 3 episodes | [6] | |
2013-17 | Reign | Catherine de'Medici | Main, 78 episodes | [6] |
2014 | Republic of Doyle | Warden Barton | Episode:Dirty Deeds | [14] |
2015 | Pirate's Passage | Meg O'Leary | Animated TV movie | |
2017 | Murdoch Mysteries | Megan Byrne | Episode:Home for the Holidays | [6] |
2018 | Wynonna Earp | Michelle Gibson | 6 episodes | |
2020 | October Faction | Edith Mooreland | 8 episodes | |
2021 | The Republic of Sarah | Ellen Cooper | 7 episodes | [14] |
2023 | Hudson & Rex | Detective Sidney Scott | Episode:Northern Rexposure &Due North | [6] |
Rabbit Hole | Senator Evers | 2 episodes |
Year | Association | Category | Work | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1986 | Gemini Awards | Best Performance by a Lead Actress in a Single Dramatic Program or Miniseries | Anne of Green Gables | Won | [6] |
1988 | Anne of Green Gables: The Sequel | Won | [6] | ||
1990 | Genie Awards | Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role | Termini Station | Nominated | [35] |
2015 | Canadian Screen Awards | Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Dramatic Program or Mini-Series | Reign | [36] | |
2016 | [37] | ||||
2017 | Best Performance by an Actress in a Continuing Leading Dramatic Role | [38] |
director Megan Follows describes it as an entirely different kind of approach to the novel. This is a return to the story for Follows, who played red-haired orphan Anne Shirley in a 1985 CBC-TV miniseries adaptation that is almost as beloved as the book itself.
First he must convince his plucky older sister, Jane (Megan Follows)
Micheline (Megan Follows)
He tells his adolescent daughter (Megan Fellows)
but at least a young Megan Follows makes the most of her starring role.
The performances of the leads – Megan Follows as Anne
Becky Thatcher (the goldilocked Megan Follows)