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Peter Coyote
Peter Coyote (born Rachmil Pinchus Ben Mosha Cohon; October 10, 1941) is an American actor, author, director, screenwriter and narrator of films, theatre, television and audio books. His voice work includes narrating the opening ceremony of the 2002 Winter Olympics and Apple's iPad campaign. He has also served as on-camera co-host of the 2000 Oscar telecasts.
Coyote was one of the founders of the Diggers, an anarchist improv group active in Haight-Ashbury during the mid-1960s. Coyote was also an actor, writer and director with the San Francisco Mime Troupe; his prominence in the San Francisco counter-culture scene led to his being interviewed for the noted book, Voices from the Love Generation. He acted in and directed the first cross-country tour of the Minstrel Show, and his play Olive Pits, co-authored with Mime Troupe member Peter Berg, won the Troupe an Obie Award from the Village Voice. Coyote became a member, and later chairman, of the California Arts Council from 1975 to 1983. In the late 1970s, he shifted from acting on stage to acting in films. In the 1990s and 2000s, he acted in several television shows. He speaks fluent Spanish and French.
Como intérprete
O Mother Gaia: The World of Gary Snyder
Moment of Contact: New Revelations of Alien Encounters
The Atomic Bowl: Football at Ground Zero -- And Nuclear Peril Today
Black Mountain Blues
Bad Faith
The Program
Good Men
Against All Enemies
Fields of Gold
Spirit of Golf
A Cloud Never Dies
Jerry Brown: The Disrupter
Moment of Contact
The Weight of a Feather: The Liberty Wildlife Story
The Last Stand
Downwinders and the Radioactive West
Nepal Beyond
Marriner Eccles: Father of the Modern Federal Reserve
Wandering...But Not Lost
The Co-op Wars
The Girl Who Believes in Miracles
San Francisco Stories
Sunseed: The Journey
Almost Thirteen
The Phenomenon
About Face: Jewish Refugees in the Allied Forces
Troubled Waters: A Turtle's Tale
Olompali: A Hippie Odyssey
The Atomic Tree
Polanski, le travail à l'oeuvre