Luke Wilson
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| Luke Wilson | |
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Wilson photographed by Jerry Avenaim for Entertainment Weekly, 2003 |
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| Born | Luke Cunningham Wilson September 21, 1971 Dallas, Texas, United States |
Luke Cunningham Wilson (born September 21, 1971) is an American film actor. He is the brother of Owen Wilson and Andrew Wilson.
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[edit] Biography
[edit] Early life
Wilson was born in Dallas, Texas, the son of Laura Wilson (née Cunningham), a photographer, and Robert Andrew Wilson, an advertising executive and operator of a public television station.[1] His family is Irish and Roman Catholic.[2] Luke has two older brothers, fellow actors Owen and Andrew (the eldest).
Wilson attended St. Mark's School of Texas and Occidental College, where he was initially more interested in the school's athletics department than he was in drama or theater. He excelled at track and field at Occidental, and later at Texas Christian University, once he transferred.
[edit] Career
Wilson's film acting career began with the lead role in the film Bottle Rocket in 1994, which was co-written by Wilson's older brother Owen and director Wes Anderson. Bottle Rocket was later made into a feature-length film in 1996.
After moving to Hollywood with his two brothers, he was cast opposite Calista Flockhart with romantic designs in Telling Lies in America and made a cameo appearance in the film-within-the-film of Scream 2 (both 1997). Wilson filmed back-to-back romantic films opposite Drew Barrymore, Best Men, about a group of friends who pull off a heist on their way to a wedding, and Home Fries (both 1998), about two brothers interested in the same woman for very different reasons. (Off-screen, the actor won the girl; he and Barrymore became a couple, but parted ways in 1998.) Wilson remained in demand, playing the doctor beau of a schoolteacher in Rushmore (also 1998), directed by Anderson and co-written by brother Owen.
A starring role opposite Reese Witherspoon in the 2001 comedy Legally Blonde elevated him to a major name in Hollywood and was followed up by hits like Old School and The Royal Tenenbaums. As a result of these and other roles, he became known as a part of the Frat Pack, a set of actors including his brother Owen Wilson, Ben Stiller, Jack Black, Will Ferrell, Vince Vaughn, and Steve Carell who often work in each other's movies.
Luke Wilson also made a notable role in the television show That '70s Show, as Michael Kelso's charming and athletic brother Casey Kelso. He appeared sporadically on the show from 2002 through 2005.
In 2006, Wilson starred Idiocracy, Mike Judge's first film since 1999's Office Space. Wilson portrayed an especially ordinary serviceman who is chosen for a cryogenics project. He awakes hundreds of years in the future where America is significantly less intelligent. The film was initially dropped by Fox Studios, but re-distributed in 2006. Wilson expressed his sentiments towards Fox's move as "total bullshit".
In early 2007 Luke took on a more serious role opposite Kate Beckinsale in the horror thriller Vacancy. In July 2007, he worked on Henry Poole is Here in La Mirada, California.
He is currently filming Tenure at Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania (April 15, 2008).
[edit] Filmography
[edit] Television
- The X-Files episode "Bad Blood" (1998) (guest appearance)
- That 70s Show (2002-2005) (on/off appearance)[3]
- Saturday Night Live (November 20, 2004; musical guest U2)[4]
- Late Night with Conan O'Brien (August 22, 2007; guest appearance)
- Entourage (first season; guest appearance)
- Looks Like The Israeli Eyal Kitzis
[edit] References
- ^ Luke Wilson Biography (1971-)
- ^ The Brothers Grin - washingtonpost.com
- ^ Luke Wilson (I)
- ^ SNL Archives | Episode

