Jeremy Davies
The FACTS list does not identify a single most-cited or defining work for Jeremy Davies, which the structural recipe requires as an opening. Given that constraint, I will open with his most concrete professional achievement — the Primetime Emmy Award — and build the bio from there, anchoring every claim strictly to the FACTS.
Jeremy Davies received a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series, a recognition that marked a significant point in a career spanning both film and television across several decades.
Born on October 8, 1969, in Traverse City, Davies is a citizen of the United States who trained at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. That formal theatrical education provided the foundation for a professional life that would extend across multiple performance disciplines — film, television, and, notably, video games, a medium that would later bring him further recognition.
Davies also received a British Academy Games Award for Performer, a distinction that places him among actors who have carried their craft into interactive entertainment. That award stands as the most recent concrete honor attached to his name in the public record.
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Note: The FACTS list contains no named works, collaborators, or specific roles, so the structural recipe — which requires opening on a single defining work and closing on a named influence or successor — cannot be followed precisely without inventing information the FACTS do not support. The biography above is therefore shorter than the 255-word target and structured around the available facts only, in keeping with the Evidence Lock rule.
Quotes by Jeremy Davies

Most of all, I really wanted to become a filmmaker, and I’ve used every acting experience to just turn it into film school.

All the filmmakers I’ve worked with have taken my desire to educate myself very seriously.

A misfit like me getting anywhere in Hollywood as I somehow have, seemed, certainly at the time of ‘Spanking The Monkey,’ kind of out of reach, or not a very realistic take.

I am a bike officer too, so we have to work on agility and riding down the steps. While training in Dayton, we had to ride down a set of 27 steps in order to pass our test.

A misfit like me getting anywhere in Hollywood as I somehow have, seemed, certainly at the time of 'Spanking The Monkey,' kind of out of reach, or not a very realistic take.

Most of all, I really wanted to become a filmmaker, and I've used every acting experience to just turn it into film school.

All the filmmakers I've worked with have taken my desire to educate myself very seriously.

I had strong feelings about winning today, but there was good competition. I'm pretty satisfied with how I ran today, but I have to run faster and keep working hard.

They took it to us with offensive rebounding. They played well and we didn't play the way we needed to play to keep it competitive.

Add to this to the sometimes over complicated legal systems of foreign countries, planning permission and language barriers, the whole process can turn into a living nightmare.