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Philip Ettinger

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Philip Ettinger
Philip Ettinger promoting The Evening Hour at the International Film Festival Rotterdam 2020
OccupationActor
Years active2008–present

Philip Ettinger is an American actor who first gained attention for his supporting role as the troubled environmental activist, Michael, in Paul Schrader's First Reformed (2017). Other significant roles have been as Garrett Drimmer in the CBS All Access series, One Dollar (2018), as the young-adult version of Mark Ruffalo's twin characters, Dominick and Thomas Birdsey, in HBO's I Know This Much is True in 2020, and in the lead role of Cole Freeman, in Braden King’s cinematic adaptation of the Carter Sickels novel,The Evening Hour (2020).

Early life

Philip Ettinger was born in 1985, to a Jewish family in Fair Lawn, New Jersey.[1][2][3] He began studying film directing at Emerson College, Boston, Massachusetts.[1] After unexpectedly winning the lead role in a play his freshman year, however, he enrolled in a summer acting program at William Esper Studio, New York City, where a teacher encouraged Ettinger to transfer to the Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey.[1][4] This course included spending a year in England studying at the Globe Theatre in London.[1] He graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree.[5]

Acting career

Philip Ettinger, whose professional career began in 2008, has spent his career running the gamut of a working actor; performing in plays, television, short films, and feature-length films, appearing in bit parts, ensembles, supporting roles, and as a lead. Directors he has collaborated with have cast him in roles that have allowed him to explore a wide range encompassing everything from psychos, stoners, well-spoken prep schoolers, salt-of-the-earth blue-collar workers, mischievous pranksters, agitated sensitives, and even the-boy-next-door, playing some of these types in both drama and comedy.

In 2014, Ettinger was nominated for a Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play, for his work in Joshua Harmon's Bad Jews. (The awards are to recognize excellence in New York Off-Broadway Theatre).[6] Ettinger starred alongside Ethan Hawke and Amanda Seyfried in the supporting role of Michael, the troubled husband of Seyfried's character, Mary, in Paul Schrader's film First Reformed, which was premiered at the 2017 Toronto Film Festival.[4] The performance was a breakthrough for the actor; so much so, that the LA Times film critic, Justin Chang stated in an article, regarding his personal choices for what should land on the 2018 Oscar nomination ballot, "When lead performances sneak into the wrong categories, it makes it all the harder for an organization to recognize a genuinely supporting turn — like, for example, Ettinger’s galvanizing work in “First Reformed,” which lasts all of one scene and continues to stay with me.."[7] Ettinger continued to make strides in 2018, starring as Garrett Drimmer, a young steel mill worker raising a toddler on his own, in CBS All Access ensemble series, One Dollar, and appearing in the Sebastián Silva-directed film Tyrel, which premiered at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival.[4]

Ettinger continued to gain momentum, landing the job of playing the 17 - 19 year-old versions of Mark Ruffalo's twin characters, Dominick Birdsey and his paranoid schizophrenic twin, Thomas, in HBO's I Know This Much is True, to considerable critical notice, with Dan Seddon of NME noting, "Actor Philip Ettinger (among the series' supporting players) makes a case for himself too, whose stint as the college-aged twins during flashbacks is a raw and fascinating portrayal of the Birdseys complicated youth."[8] Vanity Fair's Richard Lawson examined Ettinger and star Mark Ruffalo's collaboration on the twins with favor, "The relationship between Dom and Thomas is drawn with aching clarity, one brother trying to be good to the other while resentments build up around them. Crucially, neither Ruffalo nor Ettinger overplay Thomas’s condition. Though he is volatile, and frustrating, and wounded, there is nothing childlike about him, really—at least not in the style of so many misbegotten depictions of mental illness on screen... In the other role, Ruffalo and Ettinger both keenly express Dom’s agony over his assumed responsibilities and all they deny him in his own life. It’s particularly heartbreaking to watch Ettinger’s youthful appetite for escape dissipate as he realizes just how serious his brother’s situation is, how much time and attention and patience it will require. I Know This Much Is True is wise enough to both regret and accept that onus, gradually allowing Dom to find the ragged purpose in a life he feels has been robbed of that very thing. Ruffalo communicates that hopeful resignation quite well, building on Ettinger’s more wide-eyed performance to craft a man in full. Haaretz's Adrian Hennigan pointed out Ettinger's success in portraying both twins, "The actors (including Donnie and Rocco Masihi) playing the younger versions of the twins are also outstanding: Philip Ettinger subtly delineates how these identical twins are very different characters..."[3] [9] [10]

Earlier that year Philip Ettinger attended both the 2020 Sundance Film Festival and the International Film Festival Rotterdam, in the Netherlands, to promote his first lead role, (that of Cole Freeman), in Braden King’s cinematic adaptation of the Carter Sickels novel,The Evening Hour.[11][12][13] In it, Ettinger depicts a young nursing home aid struggling to support himself, and his grandparents, in economically depressed Appalachia, by buying excess pain meds from members of his West Virginian community, and reselling them to others in that same area. The film is slated for a 2021 release.[14]

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes
2010 Twelve Hunter McCulloch
2011 The Brooklyn Brothers Beat the Best John John
2012 Compliance Kevin
2012 Sleepwalk with Me Doug
2013 The Maid's Room Brandon Crawford
2014 Chu and Blossom Donnie
2014 No Place Like Home Richard Short
2015 Anesthesia Roger
2016 Indignation Ron Foxman
2016 Last Call Alexi
2017 One Percent More Humid Billy
2017 The Pirates of Somalia Alex
2017 First Reformed Michael Mensana
2017 Brawl in Cell Block 99 Derrick
2017 November Criminals Mike Lorriner
2018 Tyrel Charles
2018 Holy Moses Justice Short
2019 The Undiscovered Country Richie
2020 The Evening Hour Cole Freeman
2020 Viena and the Fantomes Boyer
2020 Broken Soldier Cabbot Completed
2021 Safe Danny Short

Television

Year Title Role Notes
2008 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Alec Bernardi Episode: "Babes"
2009 The Closer Jake Burrell Episode: "Maternal Instincts"
2010 Mercy Nathan Episode: "We're All Adults"
2011 Blue Bloods John John Episode: "Innocence"
2012 Girls Zach Episode: "The Return"
2013 The Good Wife Michael Episode: "A Precious Commodity"
2014 Manhattan Watts Episode: "Last Reasoning of Kings"
2016 Elementary Toby Dannon Episode: "Down Where the Dead Delight"
2017 The Mist Nash 2 episodes
2017 Chicago Med Eric Adams Episode: "Trust Your Gut"
2018 One Dollar Garrett Drimmer 10 episodes
2020 I Know This Much Is True Young Dominick and Thomas Birdsey 2 episodes
2021 Cinema Toast Man 1 episode: "Warehouse Friends"

Theatre

Year Title Role Venue Notes
2010 Edgewise Ruckus Walkerspace [15]
2012 Bad Jews Jonah Haber Black Box Theater [16]
2013 Bad Jews Jonah Haber Laura Pels Theatre [17]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Philip Ettinger on the fun of getting caught in a family feud in the off-Broadway hit Bad Jews". broadway.com. October 17, 2013.
  2. ^ Ortved, John. "12 of Broadway's Brightest Young Stars Show Off Their Style". Fashionista. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
  3. ^ a b "Philip Ettinger's role on 'I Know This Much Is True' hits close to home". nypost.com. June 10, 2020.
  4. ^ a b c "Philip Ettinger Biography". cbs.com. 2020.
  5. ^ Philip Ettinger - One Dollar Cast Member, retrieved 2021-02-26
  6. ^ "Lucille Lortel Award Records the complete list of 2014 nominees". theatermania.com. April 2, 2014.
  7. ^ "Oscar nominations: From 'Black Panther' to 'Zama,' our film critic picks his dream ballot". Los Angeles Times. 2019-01-12. Retrieved 2021-03-14.
  8. ^ "'I Know This Much Is True' review: Mark Ruffalo has never been better". NME. 2020-05-11. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
  9. ^ Lawson, Richard. "Mark Ruffalo Suffers Two Times the Tragedy in HBO's I Know This Much Is True". Vanity Fair. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
  10. ^ "I know this much is true: you need to watch this show on HBO". Haaretz.com. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
  11. ^ "IFFR Big Screen Tour". iffr.com. January 2020.
  12. ^ ""We Wanted It to be Natural, Believable": DP Declan Quinn on The Evening Hour". filmmakermagazine.com. February 3, 2020.
  13. ^ "the-evening-hour". www.sundance.org. Retrieved 2021-02-26.
  14. ^ "Coming Soon". Strand Releasing. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
  15. ^ "Edgewise". Page 73. Retrieved 2021-03-12.
  16. ^ Stasio, Marilyn (2012-10-31). "Bad Jews". Variety. Retrieved 2021-03-12.
  17. ^ Cox, Gordon (2013-01-31). "'Bad Jews' back at Roundabout". Variety. Retrieved 2021-03-12.