Colin Farrell

Irish actor
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Also known as: Colin James Farrell
Colin Farrell
Colin Farrell
In full:
Colin James Farrell
Born:
May 31, 1976, Castleknock, Ireland (age 47)
Awards And Honors:
Golden Globe Award (2023)
Golden Globe Award (2009)
Golden Globe Award (2009): Best Actor in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy

Colin Farrell (born May 31, 1976, Castleknock, Ireland) is an Irish actor who gained fame for his roles in big-budget action movies in the early 2000s and for a notorious “bad boy” persona before growing into more versatile and complex roles in independent films and television series.

Early life

Farrell grew up in a suburb of Dublin and is one of four children born to Rita (née Monaghan) and Eamon Farrell. His father and uncle were professional football (soccer) players for the Shamrock Rovers, and Farrell also played the sport while growing up. In a 2008 interview with talk-show host David Letterman, Farrell recalled: “I played until I was about 15 and I thought it was what I wanted to do. And then I realized I’d do something less meaningful—like acting.” In his teens he did some modeling, auditioned unsuccessfully for the Irish boy band Boyzone, and worked as a country and western line dancer in a dance troupe. He briefly attended the Gaiety School of Acting in Dublin before dropping out when he landed a role in the BBC drama Ballykissangel in 1998.

Career

After small parts in several television movies and feature films, his breakout role came in 2000 when he was cast as the rebellious Pvt. Roland Bozz in the film Tigerland, a Vietnam War drama directed by Joel Schumacher. Although the film was not a box-office success, his performance caught the attention of Hollywood casting directors and filmmakers. Lead and supporting roles in action thrillers and war films quickly followed, including Hart’s War, Minority Report, and Phone Booth in 2002 and The Recruit, Daredevil, and S.W.A.T. in 2003. He portrayed a petty thief in the Irish crime comedy Intermission (2003), which features a strong ensemble cast including Cillian Murphy, Kelly Macdonald, and Colm Meaney.

By 2004 Farrell was a popular Hollywood actor who had become equally famous for his hard partying and rumored romances with various famous women. He impressed critics with a sensitive performance as a young man caught in a love triangle with a woman and his childhood friend in A Home at the End of the World (2004). However, his next few film projects were big-budget disappointments, beginning with director Oliver Stone’s historical drama Alexander (2004), in which Farrell plays Alexander the Great opposite Anthony Hopkins, Angelina Jolie, and Val Kilmer. The film earned scathing reviews and was a commercial failure. Director Terrence Malick’s The New World (2005), in which Farrell stars as Capt. John Smith in a historical epic about the founding of the Jamestown Colony in Virginia, was better received but failed to find commercial success.

In the mid-2000s legal disputes involving harassment from a stalker and Farrell’s appearance in a homemade sex tape threatened to derail his career. Additionally, his increasing alcohol consumption and drug abuse came to a head during the filming of Miami Vice (2006), director Michael Mann’s big-screen version of his iconic 1980s television series. Farrell plays detective Sonny Crockett opposite Jamie Foxx as his partner, Rico Tubbs, and both the film and the actors’ performances garnered mixed reviews. Farrell later said he could barely remember making the film due to his struggles with addiction. He entered rehab immediately after the movie finished production.

He turned his career around in 2008 with a role in filmmaker Martin McDonagh’s dark comedy In Bruges, which Farrell initially turned down out of fear that his reputation might bring the movie negative attention. The independent film, which stars Farrell as a suicidal hit man alongside Brendan Gleeson and Ralph Fiennes, was a surprise critical and commercial success. Farrell won a Golden Globe Award for best performance by an actor in a comedy or musical motion picture.

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Over the next few years, he took roles in more independent and art-house films. Notable among these are Neil Jordan’s Ondine, Terry Gilliam’s The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, and Scott Cooper’s Crazy Heart (all three released in 2009), the workplace comedy Horrible Bosses (2011), Miss Julie (2014), The Beguiled (2017), Widows (2018), and After Yang (2021). He worked with McDonagh again on the ultraviolent crime film Seven Psychopaths (2012) and starred in two films by director Yorgos Lanthimos, The Lobster (2015) and The Killing of a Sacred Deer (2017).

In 2015 Farrell starred with Vince Vaughan and Rachel McAdams in the second season of the anthology crime drama series True Detective. He went on to narrate the fantasy television series Legend of Cambria (2018) and perform in the miniseries The North Water (2021). He was nearly unrecognizable as the Penguin in the superhero film The Batman, which was released in 2022. That same year he worked with McDonagh and Gleeson again in The Banshees of Inisherin, in which he plays a farmer living on a small Irish island who becomes distressed when his best friend (Gleeson) suddenly ends their friendship. Farrell received numerous award nominations for his performance, including Academy Award and BAFTA nominations for best actor. His wins for The Banshees of Inisherin include the Golden Globe Award for best actor in a comedy or musical motion picture and the Volpi Cup for best actor at the Venice Film Festival. Also in 2022, he starred with Viggo Mortensen in director Ron Howard’s action adventure film Thirteen Lives.

The father of a son who has been diagnosed with a genetic disorder known as Angelman syndrome, Farrell is an active supporter of organizations for children and adults with special needs, and he has served as an ambassador for the Special Olympics. He also campaigned for same-sex marriage rights in his native Ireland in 2015, and he supported the strikes by the Writers Guild of America and the Screen Actors Guild–American Federation of Television and Radio Artists in the United States in 2023.

René Ostberg