Sometimes
Credited as: Alexander O'Loughlin, Alex O'Lachlan, Alex O’Laughlin
Born: August 24th, 1977 in Australia.
Australian Actor Alex O’Loughlin, best known Down Under for his
lead roles in romantic dramas such as “Oyster Farmer” or
even disturbing genre films such as “Feed,” made a splash
in the U.S. as the new cast member on the sixth season of the Emmy-winning
police drama, “The Shield” (FX, 2002- ). While not quite
the big screen debut that 007 would have afforded him, having auditioned
unsuccessfully that same year for the latest “Bond” vehicle,
for O’Loughlin, the role of Detective Kevin Hiatt promised to
not exactly go unnoticed, with the gritty cop show’s popularity
at an all-time high.
Born in 1977 in Sydney, O’Loughlin, was later thought to be the
son of AC/DC frontman Bon Scott – a rumor spread on the Internet
that devastated both his parents. A dedicated actor in film, television
and theater, he first gained popularity with his role of Jack Flange
in the acclaimed 2004 Australian film, “Oyster Farmer.”
Drawing his first major critical notices, he played a man who takes
on a new job as an oyster farmer to pay his sister’s medical bills,
only to discover that it is not enough and that he must hold up an armored
car.
He followed his “Oyster Farmer” role with a part in the
Australian made-for-television crime movie, “Blackjack: Sweet
Science,” followed by the horror film, “Man-Thing”
(2005). Based on the lower-rung Marvel comic book character, he played
Deputy Fraser in the film which, not surprisingly, was broadcast on
the Sci-Fi Network before its release on DVD.
O’Loughlin’s counted as his next project, the Australian
low-budget thriller “Feed” (2005), in which he starred and
produced. Teaming again with “Man-Thing” director Brett
Leonard, O’Loughlin was credited with originating the idea for
the story, centering on an investigator, played by O’Loughlin,
in pursuit of a cyber-criminal suspected of killing women by force-feeding
them to death.
While neither film was a critical success, O’Loughlin’s
star continued its steady rise Down Under, after appearing in the Australian
television movies, “White Collar Blue” (2002) and “Love
Bytes” (2004). He next starred in the Showtime miniseries, “The
Incredible Journey of Mary Bryant” (2005), another homeland hit,
in which he played Will Bryant, the husband of the title character –
a woman who was among the first of the British convicts sentenced to
an experimental penal colony in Australia in the late 1700s. For his
performance, O’Loughlin won an Australia Film Institute Award
for Best Actor. Proving himself on camera, O’Loughlin was also
active in theater, acting in stage productions of “Jarrabin,”
“Country Music,” “Saved,” “The Fruits
of Enlightenment,” “Bodyline – in Transit,”
“Faust is Dead” and “Face to Face.”
O’Loughlin had hoped to land the part of the new James Bond, in
“Casino Royale,” (2006) and auditioned for the role, only
to lose out to Daniel Craig. Instead, his big-screen U.S. debut was
decidedly more modest, as one half of a kissing couple in the Christmas
romantic comedy, “The Holiday.” But O’Loughlin was
still set to make his mark stateside, after winning a pivotal role on
“The Shield.” While serving as an ostensible replacement
for a beloved character who had been killed off in the season five finale
– Det. Curtis Lemansky (Kenneth Johnson) – may not have
been the dream role for an actor new to a show already in its sixth
season, O’Loughlin could not have come aboard at a better time.
Being dropped into a super-charged storyline that promised higher ratings
and more critical attention than ever before, O’Loughlin played
a former Internal Affairs officer newly assigned to the Strike Team,
an elite and often corrupt special unit lead by Vic Mackey (Michael
Chiklis).
Continuing his upswing, O’Loughlin returned to the big screen
with the 2007 teen thriller, “Invisible,” playing a recently
paroled thug dating a troubled girl (Margarita Levieva) who attacks
a high school kid (Justin Chatwin) and leaves his body to die in the
woods, forcing his detached spirit to find help before it’s too
late. He also appeared in “August Rush” (2007) a dramatic
fairy tale starring Keri Russell and child star, Freddie Highmore. Back
on television, O’Loughlin starred in “Moonlight” (CBS,
2007- ), playing a tortured private detective who happens to be a vampire
wrestling with his immortality while trying to reconcile with his love
for a mortal woman (Sophia Myles).
Source: Hollywood.com
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