Noam Zylberman (born June 30, 1973) is an Israeli-born Canadian voice
actor.Zylberman was born in Haifa, Israel to Jewish parents. His
family relocated to Canada when he was 2 years old. The name Noam
means "pleasantness" in Hebrew. He attended Vaughan Road Collegiate
school in Toronto, and has an older sister, Ilana.While growing up in
Richmond Hill, Ontario, Zylberman booked his own audition for a
Crunchie commercial at age ten, and had landed several voice acting
jobs in animated TV series by the time he was 13 years old. He went on
to provide voices for many characters on animated series such as The
Raccoons, ALF Tales, Garbage Pail Kids, Sylvanian Families, and The
Care Bears.He gained some notoriety playing the title role in The
Outside Chance of Maximilian Glick, a coming-of-age feature film about
being Jewish in a multicultural rural Manitoba town. In a year-end
arts review for 1988, the Toronto Star's Sid Adilman called Zylberman
"the best newcomer to English-Canadian movies this year". He was
slated to reprise the role in a subsequent CBC Television series, Max
Glick, but more than two years passed before production on the series
started, and by that time he had grown too tall for the role.
actor.Zylberman was born in Haifa, Israel to Jewish parents. His
family relocated to Canada when he was 2 years old. The name Noam
means "pleasantness" in Hebrew. He attended Vaughan Road Collegiate
school in Toronto, and has an older sister, Ilana.While growing up in
Richmond Hill, Ontario, Zylberman booked his own audition for a
Crunchie commercial at age ten, and had landed several voice acting
jobs in animated TV series by the time he was 13 years old. He went on
to provide voices for many characters on animated series such as The
Raccoons, ALF Tales, Garbage Pail Kids, Sylvanian Families, and The
Care Bears.He gained some notoriety playing the title role in The
Outside Chance of Maximilian Glick, a coming-of-age feature film about
being Jewish in a multicultural rural Manitoba town. In a year-end
arts review for 1988, the Toronto Star's Sid Adilman called Zylberman
"the best newcomer to English-Canadian movies this year". He was
slated to reprise the role in a subsequent CBC Television series, Max
Glick, but more than two years passed before production on the series
started, and by that time he had grown too tall for the role.
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