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A burly redhead, Brendan Gleeson first gained notice as Haimish, one of the
mates of Mel Gibson's William Wallace in the Oscar-winning epic "Braveheart"
(1995). But the actor had already amassed an impressive resume. A Dublin
native, Gleeson had harbored a desire to perform as a child, and began by
appearing in local plays and concerts. At age 18, he even briefly spent time
as a street musician. While completing his education at University College,
Gleeson continued to act but a disastrous audition for the famed Abbey
Theater led him to pursue a career as a high school teacher.
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Still, he kept his hand in the arts, performing, writing and directing for
Paul Mercier's company The Passion Machine. After a decade in the classroom,
and at Mercier's urging, Gleeson opted to pursue his dream. Ironically, his
first professional role was at the Abbey.
It wasn't long afterwards that Gleeson landed his first screen role, either,
playing a quarryman in Jim Sheridan's "The Field" (1990). Over the course
the next five years, he played his share of small roles, like a policeman in
"Far and Away" (1992) and a bar patron in "The Snapper" (1993). Although he
had won notice for his rendition of Irish patriot Michael Collins in the TV
production "The Treaty" (shown in the USA in 1998), Gleeson lost the role to
the better-known Liam Neeson in Neil Jordan's 1996 biopic and instead was
cast in a supporting part. Jordan made it up to the actor by casting him in
the pivotal role of a caring priest in "The Butcher Boy" (1998). But it was
Gleeson's back-to-back portrayals of two very different thieves that
solidified his standing as a performer of note. In "I Went Down" (1998), he
offered a rich comic turn as the sideburn-wearing, cowboy-obsessed and dim-witted
Bunny, a low-level gangster forced to work with a recently released prisoner
(Peter McDonald). On the heels of that deft performance came the tour de
force as true-life Irish criminal Martin Cahill in John Boorman's "The
General" (also 1998). Gleeson bore an uncanny physical resemblance to Cahill
which only added additional layers to his well-wrought characterization with
Cahill emerging as a complex figure, at once charming and moral yet also
capable of extreme brutality.
Gleeson displayed his impressive range as the titular "Sweety Barrett"
(1998), an illiterate circus performer who runs afoul of a corrupt policeman.
Further adding to his rising profile, Gleeson was cast as a Rupert Murdoch-like
mogul in John Woo's sequel to the Tom Cruise vehicle "Mission: Impossible"
(2000). The actor reunited with John Boorman for the spy drama "The Tailor
of Panama" (2001) and was tapped by director Steven Spielberg for the role
of Lord Johnson-Johnson in the sci-fi parable "AI: Artificial Intelligence"
(2001) before teaming with Irish director Danny Boyle for the offbeat, post-modern
zombie film "28 Days Later" (2002) and made an appearance as Monk, a
survival-minded Irish immigrant, in director Martin Scorsese's bloody epic "Gangs
of New York" (2002). Gleeson delivered a particularly menacing turn as a
thoroughly corrupt police official in "Dark Blue" (2003). That same year, he
was seen in the sci-fi thriller "28 Days Later" and turned in a winning
performance as Stobrod, the once-abusive, now-penitent father of earthy Ruby
(Renee Zellweger) in "Cold Mountain" (2003) before moving on to action-epic
territory with his role as Menelaus in "Troy" (2004) and the popcorn
thriller genre as a grieving father in M. Night Shyamalan's "The Village"
(2004).
Gleeson next appeared in Wolfgang Petersen’s “Troy” (2004), playing Menelaus,
king of Sparta, whose wife, Helen (Diane Kruger), is kidnapped by Paris, the
prince of Troy (Orlando Bloom). Despite the presence of Brad Pitt as über-warrior
Achilles and a massive budget with which to launch a thousand ships, the
movie failed to please a majority of critics, though box office totals—particularly
overseas—made critical calls of mediocre filmmaking and lackluster
performances moot. He then played a prominent member of the South African
police who ran torture chambers during apartheid in the John Boorman drama,
“In My Country” (2005), starring Samuel L. Jackson and Juliette Binoche.
Gleeson then appeared in “Kingdom of Heaven” (2005), Sir Ridley Scott’s
evenhanded take on the Crusades of the 12th century. Following a supporting
role in “Breakfast on Pluto” (2005), Neil Jordan’s strange tale about the
exploits of Patrick Braden (Cillian Murphy), a tough, but deceptive
transvestite bounding about 1970’s London, Gleeson made his first appearance
as Alastor “Mad Eye” Moody in “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire” (2005). |
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BRENDAN GLEESON PICTURES |
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