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Name: Anthony LaPaglia
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Date of Birth:
January 31, 1959
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Place of Birth:
Adelaide, Australia
Mini-bio:
A former school teacher in his native Australia, engaging character playerAnthony LaPaglia moved to NYC and began acting in the theater, his bigbreak coming Off-Broadway in "Bouncers", a play in which...( read more) he demonstratedhis versatility and talent for accents while rendering eight differentcharacters. Guest work on series like "Amazing Stories" (NBC), "Magnum,P.I." (CBS), "Hunter" (NBC) and "Trapper John, M.D." (CBS) preceded hislanding the title role of the TV biopic "Frank Nitti: The Enforcer" (ABC,1988), after which he made his feature debut in a small role in JamesIvory's "Slaves of New York" (1989). LaPaglia gained widespread attentionfor his scene-stealing performance in Alan Alda's mild comedy "Betsy'sWedding" (1990), playing the surprisingly courtly and charming nephew of aMafia boss.Similar, and often all too standardized, roles followed as the industry's"typing" of LaPaglia as characters "whose names end in a vowel or whocarry a gun" provided a steady diet of work. Although George Gallo's "29thStreet" (1991) did cast him as a NYC Italian-American, the richly seasonedscript offered him one of his better roles as the son of Danny Aiello, andhe portrayed Barry 'The Blade', a flashy organized crime underling in thecommercial courtroom suspense drama "The Client" (1994) with the expresspurpose of catching the eye of independent filmmakers whose work heprefers. The successful strategy led to his critically-acclaimedangst-ridden hit man in "Bulletproof Heart" (1995) and a part inindie-heavyweight Steve Buscemi's "Trees Lounge" (1997). LaPagliaincreased his profile further with his TV series debut on the ABC legaldrama "Murder One", joining the cast for the 1996-97 season as JimmyWilder, a former district attorney turned defense counsel who was willingto bend the law to his clients' needs. Despite offering a strongperformance, he shed few tears when its cancellation freed him from thegrind of series production.LaPaglia has returned again and again to indulge himself with fineportrayals on the NYC stage. 1993 saw him Off-Broadway as the co-star of aSteve Tesich play, "On the Open Road". He received raves for hisperformance opposite Mercedes Ruehl in the 1995 Broadway revival ofTennessee Williams' "The Rose Tattoo" and he was back on the Great WhiteWay as Eddie Carbone in a revival of Arthur Miller's "A View From theBridge" (1998), for which he picked up a Tony Award. Among his many TVappearances, LaPaglia garnered a CableACE Award nomination for his work inthe HBO movie "Criminal Justice" (1990) and played college basketballcoach Jim Valvano in the CBS biopic "Never Give Up: The Jimmy V Story"(1996). LaPaglia has also acted in two Australian features with hissignificant other and fellow Aussie Gia Carides, "Paperback Romance"(1994) and "Brilliant Lies" (1996).La Paglia appeared in several high profile movies over the next fiveyears, including "Summer of Sam" and "Sweet and Lowdown," both in 1999 and"The House of Mirth" and "Lantana," for which he received rave reviews anda wealth of awards and nominations, in 2001. He also has a brief butmemorable recurring stint on the popular sit-com "Frasier" as Daphne'sboorish brother Simon Moon, a role that earned him and Emmy forOutstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series in 2002. That same year he alsoappeared in "The Salton Sea" and starred with Keifer Sutherland in theaction movie "Dead Heat." After years of solid performances and therespect of his professional peers, LaPaglia finally achieved mainstreamrecognition when he took on the lead role of FBI Missing Personsinvestigator Jack Malone in the popular television crime drama "Without aTrace" (CBS, 2002 - ), for which he won a Golden Globe for BestPerformance by an Actor in a Television Series Drama in 2004. He alsostarred alongside Sigourney Weaver in "The Guys" (2003), a film inspiredby the heroism of New York City firefighters during the 2001 attacks onthe World Trade Center. After playing a once promising writer hiding inthe shadows of his famous author father in the low-budget indie, "HappyHour" (2003), LaPaglia gave a strong performance as a New Jersey widowertrying to get on with life with his two teenage sons (Aaron Stanford &Mark Webber) in the well-reviewed ensemble drama, "Winter Solstice"(2005).