MICHAEL HORSE, ("Deputy Hawk" in David Lynch's classic cult TV series, "Twin Peaks") is an interesting character on and off camera.
Text files with conversational content and other bio/film credit information are reprinted below.


MICHAEL HORSE - Quote excerpts

• "Most people don't realize that American Indians have an outrageous sense of humor."
• "I find a woman who really doesn't have any respect for me every four or five years and give her my house."
• "I took a picture of [David Duchovny] in a dress to The X-Files set and told the people in the crew that I had dated David's sister."
• "I also do a lot of voice-overs [and] cartoon voices. The directors of animation are some of the most serious directors you'll ever work with. One of them actually screamed at this man- "You're a hamburger, not a hotdog!" I had to stop and think. I guess voice-wise there must be a difference."
• "Some of the elders are hilarious. They say to me, `I saw your last movie. Sucked'. Everyone's a critic."



1. A Man called Horse (Toronto Sun interview)
2. 1997 Canadian (CBC) interview excerpt
3. Michael Horse's speech at the 1996 Peaks Fan Fest
4. ABC Television Twin Peaks Season Two Press Kit bio
5. Michael Horse on racial stereotypes in Hollywood
6. Professional representation
7. X-Files appearance and other acting credits
8. Michael Horse in person (TP 'Close Encounters' segment)
9. Off site link to Mike Dunn's Twin Peaks Star Card character bio





A man called Horse

By CLAIRE BICKLEY
Toronto Sun
November 8, 1995

• Television north of the 49th feels more like home to American actor Michael Horse.

"We're still a cartoon in the States," Horse says of the depiction of native lifestyles in U.S. entertainment.
"The films and TV dealing with native people in Canada are usually much superior to what we have. We get Geronimo The Dysfunctional Family and Pocahontas."

CBC's North Of 60 gets Horse for eight or nine episodes, playing Andrew One Sky, a psychologist and youth counsellor who will become romantically involved with Tina Keeper's character, Michelle Kenidi.

The actor infused the character with some of his own history, making him a Vietnam veteran and giving him a rocky marital path.

"I find a woman who really doesn't have any respect for me every four or five years and give her my house," jokes Horse, who lives in L.A. with fourth wife Sandra.

He'd be interested in joining the series permanently.
"I showed this show to a couple of Hopi elders that were staying at my house this weekend and they loved it. What happens on this reservation happens on any rural reservation everywhere," he says.

Although North Of 60 doesn't air in the U.S., Horse says it has a big native following in border communities and among satellite dish owners.

"What's interesting about this show is it doesn't play the cheap shot. A lot of the things that are written in the States have to do with the medicine man and the vision quest. This isn't. You can see these people, you don't have to talk about it, you can see they have a centre, a balance."

Horse, whose heritage is Zuni, Yaqui, Mescalero and Apache, was born near Tucson fortysomething years ago and lived on a reserve until he was 10. He got into acting sideways, starting as a wrangler and stuntman.

What's happened since is what he calls "an experiment in bizarre booking."

One of his favorite roles was as Deputy Hawk on David Lynch's Twin Peaks. Last season, he guest-starred in an episode of The X-Files, a job that reunited him professionally with David Duchovny, a friend since Duchovny played a transvestite FBI Agent on Twin Peaks.

"I took a picture of him in a dress to The X-Files set and told the people in the crew that I had dated David's sister," Horse says.

He quit The Untouchables after one season because the producers weren't developing his character, played a villain in Passenger 57 and Indian activist Dennis Banks in the cable film Lakota Woman. On the light side, he gives voice to characters on the TV cartoons Gargoyles, Cowboys Of Moo Mesa, Johnny Quest and Captain Planet. Recently, his border collie won a role in a movie called Killer Dogs From Space by doing a bawdy trick at the casting session. Don't ask. Something about how to get ahead in Hollywood.

When Horse needs a reality check, he goes back to Arizona.
"Some of the elders are hilarious," he says. "They say to me, `I saw your last movie. Sucked'. Everyone's a critic."
(-Source site= http://cgi.canoe.ca/Television/)




Michael Horse on Canadian TV

(circa 1997)
Reflecting on his character Andrew One Sky in the Canadian CBC television show North of 60 (which wound up its final season in 1997) Michael Horse laughs ruefully about his role. "I'm a little uncomfortable being a romantic character because I'm basically an action hero. I did my first love scene in Canada after 15 years of acting."

Horse, a native American of Yaqui, Zuni and Mescalero Apache descent, was born on a Yaqui reserve near Tuscon, Arizona. He grew up in a traditional background on the reserve until he was 10 years old, when he moved to Los Angeles with his family. He says any Indian person in the U.S. who has seen North of 60 loves it because the same things happen on reserves all over North America. "They struggle here, too, with the traditional values, family and tribal problems, land claims and whether or not their children are on the right path," he says.

While being an accomplished actor with principal or co-starring roles in more than two dozen film and television projects including Twin Peaks, The X-Files, Lakota Woman and Passenger 57 with Wesley Snipes, he is a well-known native artist. Coming from a long line of jewellers and potters, he painstakingly turns silver, gold, diamonds, coral and turquoise into exquisitely detailed pieces of tribal adornment that he sells at museums and shows.
(-Source site CBC television http://www.tv.cbc.ca/personalities/northof60/horse.html)




'96 Peaks Fan Fest


Michael Horse's Speech from the Kiana Lodge Dinner
August 9, 1996
The Twin Peaks Fan Festival
[Michael said something in his Native American tongue that had Twin Peaks in the sentence but refused to translate his statement]

"Twin Peaks is very special to me--not just as an actor, but as an artist and as an Indian.

I'm very proud of what I think was one of the best contemporary roles for Native Americans I've ever seen on television. Hawk was a man of great dignity. It was a great image. A lot of native people would come up to me and tell me how much they liked that role because he wasn't a traditional role. He was a true human being.

"I think "Twin Peaks" was a piece of television history. It changed the face of TV. It actually spoiled me to a lot of television. I was on a couple of series after "Twin Peaks." I was on "The Untouchables." I quit because I got bored with it. I'm still looking for something that was that good of an experience. I'm doing a series up in Canada right now called "North of 60" -- which is a wonderful series. It's very popular up there, almost like "Twin Peaks." Everywhere I go the fans stop me on the streets.

"I play a lot of villains. I was in "Passenger 57" with Wesley Snipes--I was a terrorist. I play a lot of baby killers and mother-stabbers [laughter].

"Don [Davis] and I are working on a new series that we're trying to put together, which is a wonderful piece.

"I also do a lot of voice-overs. I do a lot of cartoon voices. I do one for "The Tick." I do "Duckman," "Gargoyles"-- I'm a regular on "Gargoyles." It's a really interesting thing to do. The directors of animation are some of the most serious directors you'll ever work with. One of them actually screamed at this man, "You're a hamburger, not a hotdog!" I had to stop and think. I guess voice-wise there must be a difference! [Laughter]

"I often watch "Twin Peaks." I'll go back and watch the reruns and see if it was as good as I thought it was. It was extremely special. It's interesting also because I don't like the upper echelons of the television community. I have no respect for them. I don't think they're very creative. I don't think they care about the public. I think they insult the public. I would watch as the executive from ABC would come in and stare at Michael [J. Anderson] dancing there. They would say, "Well, he [David Lynch] is a genius!"

"I would love to see a reunion. I think it's time. I would like to see a two-hour reunion of what happened on "Twin Peaks." I think it's time people start writing in to ABC.
"It's a pleasure to be here. I sincerely believe that "Twin Peaks" fans are the best fans I've ever had. They're respectful. The questions they ask are always insightful and intelligent. It's an honor to be here.

Thank you."
(-Source site= http://www.onu.edu/user/student/stu0425/stars.htm)




MICHAEL HORSE - Deputy Tommy "Hawk" Hill

(circa 1990 - from the ABC Television Twin Peaks Second Season Press Kit-)
{The Hawk knows things. A watcher and a warrior, he understands the forces of good and evil moving beneath the surface in Twin Peaks.}

An actor and an award-winning, internationally known American Indian artist, Michael Horse was born and raised near Tucson, Arizona. Of Zuni, Mescalero Apache, and Yaqui descent, with some Swedish and Hispanic extraction for good measure, he grew up in a traditional household where he was taught to know and honor his people's religion, languages and culture. When he was 10, he moved with his family to the San Fernando Valley area of Los Angeles.

His mother and aunts were widely known as potters and painters, so at an early age Horse began designing and making silver jewelry. It is a craft he has been perfecting all his life. He completed his studies at the American Indian Art Institute in Santa Fe. Today, he creates both contemporary and traditional pieces from gold and silver - some inlaid with precious gems - that are shown in galleries and museums all around the country and abroad.

For several years, Michael also traveled and worked all over the West. He was a roustabout in the Texas oil fields, a wrangler, a cowboy and rodeo rider, and a premier fiddle player with bluegrass and country-music bands. A Vietnam veteran, he served a tour as a gunner in the Mekong Delta and was wounded twice.

Eventually, he returned to the Los Angeles area to concentrate full-time on his career as a silver artisan.

Horse became an actor almost by chance. He was renting his studio space from an agent, who offered him the role of Tonto in the feature film, "The Lone Ranger." He enjoyed his screen debut enough to take up acting studies with a number of coaches, noteworthy among them: Joan Darling. Horse has appeared in several movies, most of them of the action-adventure variety. He is particularly fond of a musical comedy he appeared in, called "Rented Lips," in which he played a character named Bobby Leaping Mouse. "Most people don't realize that American Indians have an outrageous sense of humor," Michael remarks. "I had a great time playing someone who showed that side."

Michael has guest starred on "Airwolf," "Knight Rider," "Paradise," and "Hollywood Beat." He recently co-starred with Glenn Ford in the upcoming "The Law at Randado" for the Turner Network. He is particularly pleased about a role in "The Legend of Seeks to Hunt Great," one in a series of television films for children that recount Indian myths and lore.

Children, in fact, are an important part of Michael's life. When he is not working, he is a volunteer counselor for inner-city children, especially Indian teenagers. "Los Angeles has the largest urban Indian population in the country," explains Michael. "I want to help the kids feel proud of who they are and look to the future."

[
Los Angeles PBS station KCET, producers of the program 'Storytime', invited Horse to transcribe children's books to audio tape, and he did so, joining dozens of fellow celebrities wishing to 'do something for the kids' including: Gabriel Byrne, Patrick Swayze, Jason Alexander, Geena Davis and Janeane Garafalo.]

Horse will also admit to being a world-class fisherman. He makes his home in the San Fernando Valley.
(-Source= http://www.twinpeaks.org/archives/articles/press_kit_season_two)


Minorities In Television


By Chas. Floyd Johnson and Diane Kerew

At a meeting of the Committee on Minorities and the Affirmative Action Department of the Screen Actors Guild, issues of minority casting and the portrayal of minorities in our shows were discussed. The actors proved to be a lively, articulate group, and our meeting stretched to two hours as we shared ideas and viewpoints. We were so impressed with the unique perspectives that they brought to the table that we asked committee members to contribute a few paragraphs each on the subject of race and television.

"In film and television, the Native American has been the most misunderstood and stereotyped of all the ethnic groups. We are usually portrayed as violent, drunk, or the all-knowing sage. We are not seen on television or film as doctors, lawyers, businessmen, or as everyday people.

"The message this sends to Native American children (which have the highest suicide rate in the nation) is that there is no place for us in modern society, that we are an antiquated culture.

"We are trying to live in both worlds: the traditional and the modern. Help us show that this is possible."
-- Michael Horse


(-Source site= http://www.leonardo.net/caucus/what/qindexes/sum93/minorities.html)
© 1993 The Caucus For Producers, Writers, and Directors. All rights reserved.



Acting credits


Michael Horse is one of at least ten Twin Peaks alumni to have resurfaced on The X-Files; others include David Duchovny, Richard Beymer ("Sanguinarium"), Jan D'Arcy ("Tooms"), Kenneth Welsh ('Millenium Man' in "Revelations"), Don Davis, who plays Dana Scully's father (Captain William Scully), Claire Stansfield (the travelling judge's clerk, Sid, in Twin Peaks/ "The Jersey Devil" in an X-Files episode of the same name), Frances Bay (Peaks' 'Mrs. Tremond) as Dorothy in the X-Files episode "Excelsius Dei", and Michael Anderson ("Humbug").

The X-Files episode "Shapes"
first aired April/1/94
(w: Marilyn Osborn d: David Nutter)
The shooting of a Native American draws Mulder's attention as the murderer believed he had shot an animal of some sort. But an Indian myth and some strange evidence seem to indicate the possibility of lycanthropy, (the ability to mutate form) the very phenomenon which opened the very first X-File.
"I was glad to see Michael Horse again. He managed to convey stoicism, pride, and stubbornness all within a few minutes in the first scene in his office."
(-excerpt from Sarah Stegall's X-Files Episode Reviews page

Ish ............................ Jimmy Herman
Sheriff Charles Tskany ......... Michael Horse
Lyle Parker .................... Ty Miller
Gwen Goodensnake ............... Renae Morriseau
Jim Parker ..................... Donnelly Rhodes

(-Source site=http://www.euronet.nl/~fredvk/text/xfiles.txt)

• Complete current list of screen credits for Michael Horse
Filmography and credits listing
(-Source site= http://us.imdb.com)





• Professional representation


Michael Horse
c/o Bauman/Hiller
5757 Wilshire Blvd.,
Los Angeles, CA 90036
(-Source site= Sundance Productions http://www.montana.com/sundance/contact.htm)

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