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Tracker is an American action drama television series developed by Ben H. Winters and based on the 2019 novel The Never Game by Jeffery Deaver. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The series stars Justin Hartley as Colter Shaw, a skilled survivalist and tracker who earns his living by assisting law enforcement and private citizens in exchange for reward money.
Justin Hartley's CBS series Tracker was tasked with writing off a major cast member after a surprising exit — but how did the show execute the onscreen change? During the season 2 premiere ...
Tracker fans are in for a cast shakeup when the show returns for season 2. Robin Weigert, who played Teddi Bruin on the first season, will not return as a series regular, according to TVLine. The ...
CBS’ Tracker has enlisted Manifest vet Melissa Roxburgh to play Colter Shaw’s sister Dory. The casting was first confirmed by Colter himself, Justin Hartley, who shared a photo with his new TV ...
Justin Scott Hartley [1] (born January 29, 1977) is an American actor, television producer, and director. He has played Fox Crane on the NBC daytime soap opera Passions (2002–2006), Oliver Queen on the WB/CW television series Smallville (2006–2011), and Adam Newman on the CBS daytime soap opera The Young and the Restless (2014–2016) which earned him a Daytime Emmy nomination.
Middleton appeared as a recurring cast member on The Blacklist in which he played Glen Carter, a DMV worker who moonlights as a tracker. This is arguably his most well-known role. In 2017, he was cast as Charlie, Audrey Horne's husband, in the Showtime Network series, Twin Peaks: The Return, the sequel to the 1990s TV series, Twin Peaks.
Tracker fans will probably get answers sooner rather than later about that surprising cast exit. Lead and executive producer Justin Hartley teased some of the season 2 story lines for the main ...
Trackers is an internationally co-produced crime thriller television series produced by Three River Fiction and Scene23. [1] It is an adaptation of Deon Meyer's 2011 novel of the same name, [2] and it was adapted for television by British showrunner Robert Thorogood, leading a team of South African writers. [1]