James LeGros

James LeGros
Born: Apr 27, 1962
California
Career: 1984-2010
Countries: USA
Genre/Type: Comedy
Drama
Biography by Michael Hastings
Thanks in large part to the independent film movement of the late '80s, the boyishly handsome James LeGros went from being an underrated bit player in Hollywood schlock to a well-respected character actor. A Minnesota native, LeGros found steady work when he migrated to Los Angeles after college in the early '80s, popping up as a guest star in such TV series as Knight Rider, and in Danny DeVito's directorial debut, the made-for-cable satire The Ratings Game (a.k.a. The Mogul). Sci-fi made up the bulk of LeGros' early feature-film roles, including the dreadful post-apocalyptic teen flop Solarbabies (1986) and the thriller sequel Phantasm II (1988).

It was director Gus Van Sant who afforded LeGros the opportunity to show his skills with a meaty supporting role in 1989's much-acclaimed Drugstore Cowboy. As part of a quartet of drifters stealing their way across the Pacific Northwest, the actor held his own against the iconic Matt Dillon as well as newcomer Heather Graham. More challenging parts followed in the early '90s, including the psychological drama The Rapture (1991), Cameron Crowe's ensemble romantic comedy Singles (1992), and a pair of firearm-obsessed indies, Guncrazy and My New Gun (also 1992). Pairing with director Todd Haynes for his 1995 sophomore feature Safe, LeGros garnered more acclaim as a confidante/romantic interest for the mysteriously ailing character played by Julianne Moore. That same year, he hilariously sent up a narcissistic Hollywood actor -- not-so-secretly based on Brad Pitt -- in director Tom DiCillo's satire on the perils of indie filmmaking, Living in Oblivion.

As the millennium drew to a close, LeGros would re-team with Moore in the ensemble dramedy The Myth of Fingerprints (1997), playing an eccentric New England townie who has a crush on Moore's icy, cosmopolitan yuppie. With the film, LeGros began a long-standing collaboration with the film's writer-director -- and Moore's real-life beau -- Bart Freundlich, who would go on to cast LeGros in his subsequent films, including the road movie World Traveler (2001), the family film Catch That Kid (2003), and the screwball relationship comedy Trust the Man (2006).

In the intervening years, LeGros made a successful return to the medium that gave him his first break: television. He was exposed to perhaps his widest audience to date in 1998 on the venerable medical drama ER, and then on the popular series Ally McBeal, in 2000 and 2001. A starring role on Showtime's gritty, controversial terrorist drama Sleeper Cell followed in 2005.

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Filmography

Movie/Film Released Rating Role Buy
Bitter Feast 2010 Actor [Starring]
Mercy [TV Series] 2009 Actor [Starring]
Dry Rain 2008 Actor [Starring]
Sherman's Way 2008 Actor [Starring]
Vantage Point 2008 Actor [Starring]
Visioneers 2008 Actor [Starring]
Zodiac 2007 Actor [Starring]
The Last Winter 2006 Actor [Starring]
Trust the Man 2006 Actor [Starring]
Sleeper Cell: Season 01 2005 Actor [Starring]
Paradise 2004 Actor [Starring]
SEXual Life 2004 Actor [Starring]
Catch That Kid 2003 Actor [Starring]
November 2003 Actor [Starring]
Straight Into Darkness 2003 Actor [Starring]
Damaged Care 2002 Actor [Starring]
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Videos of James LeGros

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Afm: First Image from Bitter Feast (From Dread Central. 7 November 2009, 2:49 PM, PST) Mercy - New clips in from the NBC series. (From Movie Jungle. 29 October 2009, 12:10 AM, PDT)
James LeGros was born on April 27, 1962
James LeGros was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA

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Awards

Year Movie/Film Role
1995 Independent Spirit Awards Living in Oblivion Best Supporting Actor (Nom)
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