Prison Break Villain Plays Hero While Rescuing Injured Canada Goose In Vancouver
The Canadian Press, 05 Aug, 2016 11:27 AM
VANCOUVER — An American actor who played a psychopathic villain in the television drama Prison Break has a soft spot for Vancouver and a love of Canadians — especially the geese.
Robert Knepper was in Vancouver recently to shoot a revival of the Prison Break series that ran on FOX from 2005 to 2009. In a post on his Instagram page, the 57-year-old describes how he saved one of Vancouver's feathered inhabitants.
Knepper says he and his wife were returning from dinner after "saying goodbye for awhile to one of our favourite cities," when they saw a Canada goose clipped by a car at a busy intersection.
The actor, who is reprising his role as the evil "T-Bag" Bagwell, says they pulled over and with the help of loaned gloves from a transit supervisor and a box provided by a nearby restaurant, scooped up the injured bird and took it to an animal shelter.
Knepper placed his own hoodie over the goose to keep it from struggling and says when the jacket was returned it wasn't full of goose droppings as he expected, but instead contained a single feather.
A photo posted by Robert Knepper (@robert_knepperofficial) on
In his post, Knepper says he took that as a sign of goodwill from the injured bird.
"Hey, thanks for taking the time to help out somebody who took a wrong turn," Knepper writes, as he imagines what the dazed goose might have been thinking.
The Ohio actor, whose Prison Break character has few good outcomes in the TV series, also extends his own thanks to the transit supervisor, the British Columbia SPCA dispatcher and staff at the animal hospital for supporting roles in the happy ending.
Members of The Tenors quickly distanced themselves from a rogue Tenor on Tuesday night after a member of the classical-pop group inserted a political statement into the lyrics of O Canada before the Major League Baseball all-star game in San Diego.
TORONTO — Ontario spent more than $44 million preparing for a correctional and probation workers' strike that never happened, The Canadian Press has learned.
CALGARY — A decision by Earls Restaurants Ltd. to eliminate tipping at a downtown Calgary restaurant and replace it with a mandatory 16 per cent "hospitality charge" is stirring controversy.
"We do not want to be in a battle with the birth midwives," said Pashta MaryMoon of the Canadian Integrative Network for Death Education and Alternatives.
The big international bank says 48 per cent of pre-retirees in the country say they have not started or are not currently saving for their life after work.
HALIFAX — A gay musician says he's angry and upset that he heard someone yell a homophobic slur at him during a recent performance in Halifax that he was then asked to cut short.