Alistair Abell Biography: Age, Siblings, Net Worth, Wife, Movies, Career, TV Shows

Alistair Abell Biography: Age, Siblings, Net Worth, Wife, Movies, Career, TV Shows

0 Posted By Haruna Ayuba

Alistair Abell is a Canadian actor, voice actor, producer and director whose work is best known in for dubbing and animation.

He gained recognition for voicing Colin MacLeod in the animated film Highlander: The Search for Vengeance and for his role as Lord Djibril in Mobile Suit Gundam Seed Destiny.

Over the years he has contributed his voice talents to numerous anime series, video games, and live-action productions, and he has also served behind the scenes as a voice director, casting director, and producer.

Profile

  • Full name: Alistair Abell
  • Date of birth: August 3, 1964
  • Age: 61 years old
  • Gender: Male
  • Place of birth: Wawanesa, Manitoba, Canada
  • Nationality: Canadian
  • Profession: Actor, voice actor, voice director, producer
  • Parents: N/A
  • Siblings: Bruce Abell, Paul Abell, Nick Abell
  • Spouse: N/A
  • Children: N/A
  • Relationship status: N/A
  • Net worth: $2.5 million

Early Life and Education

At present, Alistair Abell is 61 years old (born August 3, 1964). He was born in Wawanesa, a small community in Manitoba, Canada. He spent his formative years in the province, and later is known to have attended St. John’s Ravenscourt, a school in Winnipeg, graduating high school around 1988. He has three older brothers—Bruce, Paul, and Nick Abell.

Personal Life

Alistair Abell appears to keep most aspects of his personal life private. There hasn’t been any record of him being in a relationship at this time.

Career

Alistair Abell began working professionally in acting and voice work in the late 1980s and early 1990s. He has become best known for lending his voice to characters in anime dubs, video games, and animated films.

Among his notable roles are Colin MacLeod in Highlander: The Search for Vengeance and Lord Djibril in Mobile Suit Gundam Seed Destiny. In anime, he has voiced characters like Hakkaku in Inuyasha and Future Trunks, Sharpner, and others in Dragon Ball Z (Ocean dub). He has also voiced characters in video games, such as Psymon in SSX On Tour and other additional voices across games and animations.

Beyond voice acting, Abell has taken roles behind the scenes as a voice director (for example in Dead Rising 2: Case 0 and related titles), casting director (e.g. Marley & Me: The Puppy Years), and producer (for films such as Sol Goode and Swap). He is based in Vancouver, British Columbia, where he works in the dubbing and voice production community.

Over the years, he has balanced on-screen acting (in both TV and film) with extensive voice work for animation and video games, making him a multifaceted presence in the entertainment industry.

Net worth

Alistair Abell’s net worth is estimated to be approximately $2.5 million. Based on his sustained career in voice acting, production, and direction, one might expect his earnings to derive from residuals, voice work contracts, production credits, and other associated compensation streams.

Social Media

N/A

Filmography

Live/On-Screen/ TV/Film Roles

  • Freddy vs. Jason (2003)
  • The New Addams Family (TV) (1998)
  • His and Her Christmas (TV movie) (2005)
  • Batwoman (TV) (2022)
  • Stargate SG-1 (TV) (2007)

Voice/Animation/Dubbing/Video Games

  • Dragon Ball Z (TV) (1996)
  • Inuyasha (TV) (2000)
  • Inuyasha: The Final Act (TV) (2009)
  • Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Destiny (TV) (2004)
  • Mobile Suit Gundam 00 (TV) (2007)
  • .hack//Roots (TV) (2007)
  • Highlander: The Search for Vengeance (movie) (2007)
  • Iron Man: Armored Adventures (TV) (2009)
  • Sausage Party (movie) (2016)
  • G.I. Joe: Valor vs. Venom (video game) (2004)
  • SSX On Tour (video game) (2005)
  • Marvel Nemesis: Rise of the Imperfects (video game) (2005)
  • Transformers: Energon (TV) (2004)
  • Black Lagoon (TV) (2006)
  • Shakugan no Shana (TV) (2005)
  • Elemental Gelade (TV) (2005)
  • Death Note (TV) (2006)
  • Galaxy Angel / Galaxy Angel Z (TV) (2001 / 2002)
  • Ranma 1⁄2 (TV) (1989–1994)
  • Star Ocean EX (TV) (2001)

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