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Trail-blazing actor Gary Farmer on his career, Indigenous representation and receiving the August Schellenberg Award of Excellence

For Farmer, advancing honest Indigenous representation onscreen and behind the scenes has been a key pillar of his work.

4 min read
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Despite an industry that, for a large chunk of Farmer’s career, has neglected to tell authentic Indigenous stories and continually sidelined Indigenous artists, Farmer has managed to carve out a four-decade career that has seen him become one of the most prolific and versatile artists of his generation.


As trail-blazing Indigenous actor and broadcaster Gary Farmer watched his peers, one by one, be typecast as stereotypical “Indian” characters, he was adamant about never stepping into those roles. So he shielded himself the only way he knew how.

“I stayed chubby to protect myself,” said Farmer, 69. “I was going to tell contemporary stories because I knew I was too chubby to be a starving Indian from the 19th century. And I was fine with that.”

Joshua Chong

Joshua Chong is a Toronto-based culture reporter for the Star. Follow him on X: @joshualdwchong.

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