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Evan Adams

Evan Tlesla II Adams is a Coast Salish physician and actor from Tla’amin Nation near Powell River, BC, Canada.

Evan is a full-scholarship alumnus of St. Michaels University School and of Lester B. Pearson College of the Pacific of Victoria, BC. He stars in the Emmy-winning TV-movie “Lost in the Barrens” (1990) and its nominated sequel “Curse of the Viking Grave” (1991). Besides numerous episodics like “The Beachcombers” and “Black Stallion”, he also appears in the feature film “Toby McTeague” and the Fox-TV movie “Lakota Moon”. On the stage, some of his highlights include the role of Edmund in Women in View’s “Lear”, Creature Nataways in the Arts Club Theatre’s production of Dry Lips Oughta Move to Kapuskasing, and Jamie in Headlines Theatre’s “Mamu.”

Evan stars as Thomas Builds-The-Fire in ShadowCatcher Entertainment’s SMOKE SIGNALS, written by Sherman Alexie and directed by Chris Eyre. SMOKE SIGNALS won the coveted Audience Award for best film and the Filmmakers Trophy at the Sundance Film Festival in 1998. He also won Best Actor awards from the American Indian Film Festival, and from First Americans in the Arts, and a 1999 Independent Spirit Award for ‘Best Debut Performance’. He has been a regular on the CBC TV-series DA VINCI’S CITY HALL and APTN’s RAVEN TALES. He won a 2011 Gemini Award for co-hosting the National Aboriginal Achievement Awards along with Adam Beach. Evan was recently seen on the critically acclaimed FX series RESERVATION DOGS, and was nominated for a Leo Award 2024 – Best Guest Appearance in Marie Clements’s CBC TV Mini-Series BONES OF CROWS.

Aside from his career in the arts, Evan has completed 3 years of pre-med studies at the University of British Columbia (UBC), a Medical Doctorate from the University of Calgary in 2002, and a Family Practice residency (as Chief Resident) in the Aboriginal Family Practice program at St. Paul’s Hospital in Vancouver, BC. Dr. Adams has a Masters of Public Health (2009) from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, MD. He is the past-President and V-P of the Indigenous Physicians Association of Canada. He was the Deputy Provincial Health Officer for the province of BC from 2012 to 2014. He spent 3 years (2020-2023) with the First Nations & Inuit Health Branch (FNIHB), Indigenous Services Canada, as the Deputy Chief Medical Officer of Public Health. He is a past Acting Associate Dean Indigenous Health at SFU School of Medicine, is currently the Deputy Chief Medical Officer of the First Nations Health Authority of BC, and will be the Canadian Harkness Fellow for 2024/25 at the John A. Burns School of Medicine in Honolulu.