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  1. Chapelle Jaffe is a Canadian film, television and stage actress. She is most noted for winning the Canadian Film Award for Best Actress in a Non-Feature at the 29th Canadian Film Awards in 1978 for the television film One Night Stand, [1] and receiving a Genie Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress at the 3rd Genie Awards in 1982 for The ...

    Year
    Title
    Role
    Notes
    2014
    The Christmas Parade
    Wendy Thomas
    TV film
    2010
    Joyce Fitzpatrick
    Episodes: "The Rabbit Hole", "Being ...
    2010
    Martha
    Episode: "ArachnoFaebia"
    2009
    Mrs. Hill
    Episode: "Perfect Storm"
  2. Actress: The Dead Zone. Chapelle Jaffe is known for The Dead Zone (1983), The Butterfly Effect (2004) and Andromeda (2000).

    • Actress, Script And Continuity Department
    • Chapelle Jaffe
  3. Actress. Awards, Honors: Canadian Film Award, best performance by a lead actress, 1978; Genie Award nomination, best performance by an actress in a supporting role, Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television, 1982, for The Amateur. CREDITS. Film Appearances: Kathy, Me, 1975. Maggie O'Connal, Who Has Seen the Wind, Astral, 1977.

  4. In 1995, under the direction of Artistic Director Kim Selody, The New Play Centre merged with The Betty Lambert Society to become Playwrights Theatre Centre and in 1999, under the leadership of Chapelle Jaffe, PTC acquired offices and a studio theatre on Vancouver’s Granville Island.

  5. Sep 19, 1986 · Confidential: Directed by Bruce Pittman. With August Schellenberg, Chapelle Jaffe, Neil Munro, Tom Butler. The year is 1949 and reporter Hugh Jameson is looking for a story. He focuses on Emma Porter, a woman who was accused of the axe murder of her father thirty seven years earlier.

    • (62)
    • Crime, Thriller
    • Bruce Pittman
    • 1986-09-19
  6. Nov 11, 2013 · 28 Heroes: Directed by Paul Kilback. With Chapelle Jaffe. Heroes brings to life the harrowing exploits of a Canadian platoon who fought to hold their vulnerable outpost in the face of repeated attacks during the Korean War.

  7. With competent performances from usually stalwart Canadians August Schellenberg, Chapelle Jaffe and Neil Munro, it's not the acting that's at fault. And with the focus on sleazy strip joints, cars with fins and private detectives with crooked grins, it does succeed in evoking the clichéd atmosphere of a '40s detective flick.