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Emmanuel Kabongo

Canadian actor, producer (born 1986) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Emmanuel Kabongo
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Emmanuel Kabongo (born December 25, 1986) is a Canadian actor and film producer.[1][2] Born and raised in Zaire, now present-day Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kabongo immigrated to Canada and began his acting career as an extra before achieving recognition for his performance as the lead protagonist in the Toronto-based web series Teenagers (2014–2017), for which he earned his first Canadian Screen Award nomination.[3] Kabongo also co-produced the series.[1]

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Kabongo subsequently became known for his performances in the CBC Television series 21 Thunder (2017) and Frankie Drake Mysteries (2017–2018) and in films such as The Animal Project (2013), Antibirth (2016), and Brown Girl Begins (2017). He played a gladiator in Paul W. S. Anderson's Pompeii (2014) and has guest-starred in television series such as Murdoch Mysteries (2013) and Star Trek: Discovery (2020). In 2023, he played a supporting role in the sci-fi thriller film Simulant. In 2024, he co-produced and starred in the independent feature film Sway.[4][5]

Kabongo has earned three Canadian Screen Award nominations throughout his career: in 2016 for his performance in Teenagers, in 2022 for his performance in the television film Death She Wrote, and in 2023 for his performance in Chateau Laurier.

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Early life

Kabongo was born and raised in Lubumbashi, a city in Zaire (now known as the Democratic Republic of the Congo),[2][6][7] before relocating with his family to South Africa during the war.[6][7] He has four brothers, including basketball player Myck Kabongo, and one sister.[6][7]

In the 1990s, Kabongo immigrated to Toronto with his family.[7][8][9] Kabongo's father often worked as an extra in film and television, which exposed Kabongo to show business at a young age.[7][8][9] In school, Kabongo played competitive basketball; he later turned down a basketball scholarship from the University of New Brunswick to pursue acting.[6] Kabongo also struggled with scoliosis in his youth.[6]

Before he began pursuing acting, Kabongo worked several jobs, including at a daycare, a Foot Locker, at the Canadian National Exhibition, and vacuuming floors and cleaning toilets at a train station.[8][9]

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Career

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Kabongo in 2016

Kabongo began his acting career in 2009, working as an extra on Canadian television series such as Nikita and Flashpoint.[6] One of Kabongo's early background actor jobs was on the hit 2004 film Mean Girls.[6][7] Kabongo's first role in a full-length feature film came in 2013 with the release of The Animal Project, directed by Ingrid Veninger. The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival and received generally positive reviews.[10]

Throughout the 2010s, Kabongo guest-starred in a variety of television programs, including Call Me Fitz (2012), Murdoch Mysteries (2013), Rookie Blue (2013–2014), and Quantico (2015).[11][9] He completed an actor's residency at Norman Jewison's Canadian Film Centre in 2015.[12]

In 2014, Kabongo portrayed a gladiator in Paul W. S. Anderson's romantic historical disaster film Pompeii. The film won the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television's Golden Screen Award for 2014 as the year's top-grossing Canadian film.[13]

With filmmaker M. H. Murray, Kabongo co-produced the first season of the web series Teenagers.[1][2][14] In 2013, Murray approached Kabongo with the scripts and asked him to help produce the series; they subsequently cast the rest of the characters together using only actors from Toronto.[1][15] Louis Chunovic of Playback published a piece on the series, writing that "the young creators of Teenagers had to have plenty of luck, pluck, talent, and grit to get this far. And that portends a Hollywood ending".[14] Kabongo also starred as the lead male protagonist in the series.[16] Teenagers received positive reviews from critics and was frequently compared to the Degrassi franchise and the UK television series Skins.[17][18] The series amassed millions of views on YouTube over the course of three seasons, from 2014 to 2017.[19] For his performance in the second season of Teenagers, Kabongo earned his first Canadian Screen Award nomination.[2][20]

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Kabongo at a Canadian Film Centre event in 2017

In 2016, Kabongo produced and starred in A Man's Story, a short film for which he received funding from bravoFACT.[21] The short film premiered at the ReelWorld Film Festival.[22] That year, he also played a supporting role in Antibirth, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and was released on September 2, 2016 in the U.S., by IFC Midnight.[23]

In September 2016, CBC announced it had commissioned a one-hour drama series that follows the star players of an under-21 soccer academy in Montreal, titled 21 Thunder, with Kabongo slated to star as one of the lead characters, an Ivory Coast mid-fielder named Junior Lolo.[24][25] The series premiered in Canada on July 31, 2017, to generally positive reviews.[26] Also that year, Kabongo appeared in three episodes of the CBC series Frankie Drake Mysteries as a boxer named Moses,[27] and he starred opposite Mouna Traoré in Brown Girl Begins, a post-apocalyptic science fiction film directed by Sharon Lewis.[28]

In 2020, he starred in an episode of the CBS All Access series Star Trek: Discovery as V’Kir.[29] That year, he also played a supporting role in the Canadian political comedy film Québexit, which premiered at the Cinéfest Sudbury International Film Festival in September 2020.[30]

Kabongo received a second Canadian Screen Award nomination in 2022, for his leading performance in the television film Death She Wrote.[2][31] He received a third nomination in 2023 for this supporting performance in the web series Chateau Laurier.[2][32][33][34] He won several other awards for his performance in Chateau Laurier at web series festivals.

In 2022, he was cast in April Mullen’s sci-fi thriller, Hello Stranger.[35] That film, later retitled Simulant, was released theatrically in Canada by Mongrel Media on April 7, 2023.[36][37][38] Kabongo was featured in the film alongside a cast that included Sam Worthington and Simu Liu.[36]

In 2024, Kabongo starred in and produced the low-budget independent drama feature film Sway.[4][39][5][40][41] Kabongo described the film as a "wild rollercoaster."[42][43][44] The film premiered at the 2024 Pan African Film Festival in the U.S.,[45] and held its Canadian premiere the following week at the 2024 Toronto Black Film Festival with two sold out screenings.[46] It also screened in the Borsos Competition program at the 2024 Whistler Film Festival.[47]

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Influences

Kabongo found early acting inspiration in action films from the 1990s that his mother showed him as a child.[48] In an interview with CBC Arts, Kabongo said that "taking acting serious came from watching how my mom reacted to films of the '90s ... [She] loves Denzel, Van Damme, Sylvester Stallone... My mom watched all those movies growing up, and knowing how that made her feel, I just wanted to do the same thing for her."[48] Kabongo has cited Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Hardy, Mahershala Ali, Viola Davis, and Daniel Day-Lewis as acting inspirations.[7]

Personal life

Kabongo was active during the protests following the police murder of George Floyd in summer 2020.[49] In an interview with Harry Rosen, he said that "it’s important to me as a Black man to stand up for what is right, supporting the cause against police brutality."[7]

Kabongo is a Christian.[34]

Accolades

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Filmography

Film

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Television

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References

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