Peter Sarsgaard
Peter Sarsgaard | |
---|---|
Born | John Peter Sarsgaard |
Years active | 1995–present |
Partner | Maggie Gyllenhaal (2002-) |
Awards | BSFC Award for Besy Supporting Actor 2003 Shattered Glass KCFCC Award for Best Supporting Actor 2003 Shattered Glass NSFC Award for Best Supporting Actor 2003 Shattered Glass OFCS Award for Best Supporting Actor 2003 Shattered Glass SFFCC Award for Best Supporting Actor 2003 Shattered Glass |
Peter Sarsgaard (born March 7, 1971) is a Golden Globe Award-nominated American film and stage actor. Known for often playing dark and villainous characters, he has so far predominantly appeared in supporting roles in a wide variety of both low-budget and major studio films, ranging from drama to horror and action thrillers. His most critically praised performance to date was as The New Republic magazine editor, Charles Lane, in Shattered Glass (2003) for which he won several critics' awards such as the Boston Film Critics Award and the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actor.
Biography
Early life
Sarsgaard was born at Scott Air Force Base, Illinois, where his father was an Air Force engineer.[1] His family moved over twelve times during his childhood, following his father's job.[2] Raised Roman Catholic, he served as an altar boy and attended Jesuit boys' school Fairfield Prep in Connecticut.[3] After graduation, he attended Bard College for two years before transferring to Washington University in St. Louis in 1991.[4] He graduated with a degree in history, and while there he co-founded an improvisational comedy troupe "Mama's Pot Roast".[5]
As a child he performed in the teen comedy "Book of Love" under the name "Aeryk Egan." He thought he was done with acting. Sarsgaard originally wanted to become a football player, and took up ballet to help improve his coordination. After several concussions, he gave up football and became interested in writing and theatre.[4] It was at Washington University where he first discovered acting. His first role was as the servant Lawrence in Molière's Tartuffe.
Career
Sarsgaard's first role was a guest spot on Law & Order in 1995. He began his film career later that year with Dead Man Walking, playing one of Sean Penn's murder victims.[6] Sarsgaard followed this with parts in low-budget indie films, such as Another Day in Paradise, Subway Stories: Tales from the Underground, Minor Details, Desert Blue, and Freak City, as well as the ensemble period thriller The Man in the Iron Mask.
Sarsgaard first gained critical recognition in 1999, for Boys Don't Cry, in which he plays a violent, homophobic thug who murders Hilary Swank's transgender character, Brandon Teena.[5]
Attracting further notice in the 2001 Wayne Wang film The Center of the World, Sarsgaard has since proven himself a critical favorite in supporting roles. Other notable roles include a Russian sailor in K-19: The Widowmaker, the meth addict Jimmy the Finn in The Salton Sea (2002), a bisexual university researcher in Kinsey, a bisexual screenwriter in The Dying Gaul, the sarcastic best friend to Zach Braff's character in Garden State, and an air marshal in Flightplan starring Jodie Foster.
During the production of Jarhead, in which he played a "gung-ho marine scout", Sarsgaard injured his knee and ribs.
Sarsgaard has also acted in the theater. He is a member of Douglas Carter Beane's New York City-based company, The Drama Department. He has appeared in the Off-Broadway production Kingdom of Earth starring Cynthia Nixon and directed by John Cameron Mitchell. With the Signature Theatre Company, he appeared in a critically acclaimed revival of Lanford Wilson's Burn This opposite Elisabeth Shue and Laura Dennis.
Sarsgaard hosted Saturday Night Live on January 21, 2006. In his introductory monologue, he tried to point out that he was a nice guy despite his sometimes macabre roles. Video clips were then played of Sarsgaard scaring the SNL regulars, including one clip in which Kenan Thompson walks into a room to find Sarsgaard naked, reading a newspaper in the dark. The SARS global scare was still fresh in many minds, and one of the skits included a promotion for the Peter Sarsgaard "SARS-Guard", a reference to the mania of facemasks worn in public by those fearing infection.
In 2008 he will make his Broadway debut as Trigorin in the Royal Court Theatre production of The Seagull.
Personal life
Sarsgaard has dated burlesque dancer Dita Von Teese and model/actress Shalom Harlow.[7][8] Early in his film career, he dated and lived with photographer Malerie Marder, a close friend from his days at Bard, who had featured Sarsgaard in some of her early work.[9] He met Maggie Gyllenhaal at a dinner in 2001 and has been in a relationship with her since 2002. He is also close friends with her brother Jake, with whom he co-starred in the films Jarhead and Rendition. Sarsgaard and Gyllenhaal announced their engagement in April 2006. Their daughter, Ramona Sarsgaard, was born on October 3, 2006.[10]
Filmography
Year | Film | Role | Other notes |
---|---|---|---|
1995 | Dead Man Walking | Walter Delacroix | |
1997 | SUBWAYStories: Tales from the Underground (TV) | Boy #1 | |
1998 | Minor Details | Scott | |
The Man in the Iron Mask | Raoul | ||
Desert Blue | Billy Baxter | ||
Another Day in Paradise | Ty | ||
1999 | Freak City(TV) | Cal Jackson | |
Boys Don't Cry | John Lotter | ||
2000 | The Cell | Julia Hickson's Fiancee | Uncredited |
Housebound | Tom | ||
2001 | The Center of the World | Richard Longman | |
Bacon Wagon | Cowboy Zombie Victim | ||
2002 | Empire | Jack | |
The Salton Sea | Jimmy the Finn | ||
K-19: The Widowmaker | Vadim | ||
Unconditional Love | Window Washer | ||
2003 | Death of a Dynasty | Brendon III | |
Shattered Glass | Charles 'Chuck' Lane | Golden Globe nomination | |
2004 | Garden State | Mark | |
Kinsey | Clyde Martin | ||
2005 | The Dying Gaul | Robert Sandrich | |
The Skeleton Key | Luke | ||
Flightplan | Gene Carson | ||
Jarhead | Cpl. Alan Troy | ||
Statler and Waldorf: From the Balcony | himself | guest appearance in episode 8 | |
2007 | Year of the Dog | Newt | |
Rendition | Alan Smith | ||
2008 | Elegy | Kenneth Kepesh | |
The Mysteries of Pittsburgh | Cleveland Arning | awaiting release | |
In the Electric Mist | Elrod Sykes | awaiting release | |
An Education | Male Lead | post-production | |
Orphan | John Coleman | post-production |
Awards
Year | Group | Award | Result | Film |
---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | St. Louis International Film Festival | Emerging Actor Award | Won | |
2003 | Boston Society of Film Critics Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Won | Shattered Glass |
San Francisco Film Critics Circle | Best Supporting Actor | Won | ||
Toronto Film Critics Association Awards | Best Supporting Performance - Male | Won | ||
2004 | Chlotrudis Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Nominated | |
Independent Spirit Awards | Best Supporting Male | Nominated | ||
Kansas City Film Critics Circle Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Won | ||
Las Palmas Film Festival | Best Actor | Won | ||
National Society of Film Critics Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Won | ||
Online Film Critics Society Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Won | ||
San Francisco Film Critics Circle | Best Supporting Actor | Won | ||
Golden Globes | Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture | Nominated | ||
Stockholm International Film Festival | Best Actor | Won | Garden State | |
2005 | Satellite Awards | Best Actor in a Supporting Role, Comedy or Musical | Nominated | |
Outstanding Actor in a Supporting Role, Drama | Nominated | Jarhead | ||
Best Actor in a Supporting Role, Drama | Nominated | Kinsey | ||
Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Nominated | ||
Chlotrudis Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Won | ||
Glitter Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Won | ||
Independent Spirit Awards | Best Supporting Male | Nominated | ||
Online Film Critics Society Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Nominated | ||
Washington DC Area Film Critics Association Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Nominated | Jarhead |
References
- ^ McNally, Whitney (August 2004), DOSSIER: PETER SARSGAARD, Details. Retrieved January 12, 2007.
- ^ Hirschberg, Lyn (November 13, 2005}The Empathist, New York Times Magazine. Retrieved January 12, 2007.
- ^ Fischer, Paul (August 3, 2005), Interview: Peter Sarsgaard "The Skeleton Key", Darkhorizons.com. Retrieved March 17, 2007.
- ^ a b Hirschberg, Lyn (November 13, 2005}The Empathist, New York Times Magazine. Retrieved January 12, 2007.
- ^ a b Scott, Richard, (August 3, 2005), TOTTY WATCH: PETER SARSGAARD, Rainbownetwork.com.' Retrieved January 12, 2007.
- ^ Horowitz, Josh (November 7, 2003), BREAKING "GLASS" WITH PETER SARSGAARD, Moveiepoopshoot.com. Retrieved March 17, 2007.
- ^ The Sun, Dita has explosive sex. Retrieved March 7, 2007.
- ^ Biography at Tribute.ca. Retrieved March 7, 2007.
- ^ "The New York Times", The Empathist. Retrieved May 24, 2008.
- ^ Hamm, Liza (October 4, 2003), Gyllenhaal, Sarsgaard Have a Girl, The People. Retrieved March 7, 2007.