Name : James Caviezel
Birth Name : James Patrick Caviezel
Profession : actor
Date of Birth : September 26, 1968
Place of Birth : Mount Vernon, Washington, USA
Height : 6' 2"
Fan Mail : Pamela Cole - United Talent Agency
9560 Wilshire Blvd., 5th Floor
Beverly Hills, CA 90212
USA.
James Caviezel - Detailed Biography
With his
soulful blue eyes and a dark, almost eerie kind of beauty, James Caviezel has
inspired more than a few comparisons to Montgomery Clift. Thus, it was somewhat
fitting -- and more than a little ironic -- that Caviezel had his screen
breakthrough as The Thin Red Line's Private Witt, a character based upon Clift's
Private Prewitt in From Here to Eternity.
A native of Washington state, Caviezel was born in Mount Vernon in 1968, one of
five children in a devoutly Catholic family. After making his film debut with a
bit part as an airline clerk in Gus Van Sant's My Own Private Idaho (1991),
Caviezel went on to have a similarly minor role in Diggstown the next year.
Subsequently accepted at Juilliard, he declined the school's offer in favor of a
supporting role in Lawrence Kasdan's 1994 Wyatt Earp. Unfortunately, the film
turned out to be a fairly major flop and Caviezel remained stuck in either minor
roles in large films like The Rock (1996) and G.I. Jane (1997) or more
substantial roles in complete turkeys such as Ed (1996). Fortunately, Terrence
Malick came calling, and, in 1998, Caviezel had his breakthrough role in The
Thin Red Line. The film received a number of Oscar nominations, and its stellar
ensemble cast, which included Ben Chaplin, Sean Penn, George Clooney, and Nick
Nolte, earned almost unanimous acclaim. The following year, Caviezel gained
further recognition with his role as one of a group of renegade Civil War
soldiers in Ang Lee's Ride With the Devil and his portrayal of a football
coach's embittered son in Oliver Stone's Any Given Sunday.
In 2000, Caviezel starred in the supernatural thriller Frequency, playing the
son of a long-dead man (Any Given Sunday co-star Dennis Quaid) with whom he is
able to communicate over a ham radio. Later that year, he starred in Pay It
Forward, which cast him as a homeless junkie who is befriended by a young boy
(Haley Joel Osment). A role opposite Jennifer Lopez in the heady romantic drama
Angel Eyes (2001) did little to increase Caviezel's name recognition when the
film died a quick death at the box office. The following year, he took the lead
in the period adventure The Count of Monte Cristo (2002), and though the film
did draw favorable reviews from critics, it didn't necessarily attract
audiences. Before embarking on a blood-soaked revenge spree in Highwaymen
(2004), Caviezel took a turn as a mysterious former Marine in High Crimes and a
lower-key role in the Paul Feig drama I Am David.
Audiences who had followed Caviezel's career thus far had no doubt taken note of
the actor's vocal religious convictions. With his role as Jesus in Mel Gibson's
The Passion of the Christ (2004) -- not to mention the actual suffering that he
endured when his shoulder was separated during the crucifixion sequence -- the
actor truly followed through on bringing the story of the Christian Messiah to
the masses.