Rodrigo Santoro

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Rodrigo Santoro

Santoro as "Randy Emmers" in Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle (2003)
Birth name Rodrigo Junqueira dos Reis Santoro
Born August 22, 1975 (age 31)
Flag of Brazil Petrópolis, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Notable roles Paulo in Lost
Xerxes I in 300

Rodrigo Junqueira dos Reis Santoro, pron. IPA: [ho'dɾigu ʒũ'kejɾɐ dus 'hejs sɐ͂'tɔru], (born August 22, 1975) is a Brazilian actor.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Early life and career

Rodrigo Santoro was born in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, to an Italian father and a Brazilian mother of Portuguese descent. He decided to try his luck as an actor in Rio de Janeiro and after working for many years on Brazilian television productions, he was offered roles in Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle, the TV movie The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone and Love Actually. He also refused a role in ABC show Alias in 2004. He had joined the cast of the ABC hit show Lost for the series' third season, but recently his charchter has been killed off. [1]

Santoro had shown interest for the stage since his childhood. At home, he organized a puppet theater for his family on holidays like Christmas and Easter. At Colégio Aplicação, where he studied, with the help of a Portuguese teacher, he adapted TV movies to what they used to call "musical-literary sessions". He was said to have a great stage presence, through which he met his first girlfriend, at the age of 14.

As it usually happens to young people who live in the suburbs, by the time of his 17th birthday, Santoro realized that the focus of his life had shifted to Rio de Janeiro. He frequently travelled to the "big city", to surf with friends, study for the vestibular (the standard Brazilian college admission exams) and audition for TV Globo, in hopes of starting his acting career.

In 1993, he was admitted to PUC as a marketing and advertising major. That same year, he got his first acting role on a TV production, as a secondary character in the soap opera Olho no Olho. At this time he was still living at the university dorms, having left his first apartment in the seaside neighbourhood of Copacabana in fear after nearly getting hit by a stray bullet from a nearby favela.

[edit] Career

His first prime time role came in 1994, in the soap opera Pátria Minha. Poor ratings and reviews caused the production to be shortened, but Santoro managed to make enough money to be able to rent his own flat again, this time in the upscale neighbourhood of Leblon, where he could often be seen jogging by the beach.

In 1996, he was cast as the male lead character in the soap opera O Amor Está no Ar. The production, which involved an intergeneration love triangle and extraterrestrial beings, brought him some trouble: his performances and the soap itself weren't greatly praised by critics, but the hectic filming schedule forced him to quit college. Santoro made his big screen debut that same year, in the acclaimed short Depois do Escuro.

He gained further big screen experience with a part in the 1998 movie Como Ser Solteiro, which was somewhat obscured by his critically acclaimed performance as Frei Malthus in the TV Globo mini-series Hilda Furacão. Until then, he had been regarded as merely a capable actor, and his talent for more serious and prominent roles had often been questioned by critics. Santoro has stated that working on Hilda Furacão was one of the toughest experiences in his career, due to the dramatic load of the character, a young Franciscan priest who falls in love with Hilda, a prostitute.

Santoro was the voice of Stuart Little in the Brazilian release of the 1999 film, as well as its 2002 sequel. Also in 1999, he played a prominent part in the ill-fated soap Suave Veneno, and a small part in the comedy film O Trapalhão e a Luz Azul, by Brazilian comedian Renato Aragão.

His first major role in a cinema production would come in 2001, with Bicho de Sete Cabeças (Brainstorm) by Laís Bodansky. At the time, he was under heavy criticism for his role in the soap Estrela-Guia and was even booed at the first showing of the film at the 2000 Brasília Brazilian Cinema Festival. By the end of the film, he received a standing ovation from the audience and critics praised his portrayal of a young man who is sent to a psychiatric clinic by his father after being caught smoking marijuana. He also went on to win the festival's best actor trophy.

After Bicho, his reputation as an actor had been solidified and he was cast as the male lead in the much-praised Abril Despedaçado (Behind the Sun), one of the nominees for best foreign film in the 2002 Golden Globe Awards.

He had another critically acclaimed performance in the 2003 Hector Babenco film Carandiru, where he played a transexual prisoner known as Lady Di.

Canadian director Robert Allan Ackerman signed Santoro for his TV production The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone after being mesmerised by his performance on Bicho de Sete Cabeças. Since Santoro didn't have an agent in North America, Ackerman contacted Santoro's father. He spent two months filming in Rome, alongside renowned actors such as Helen Mirren and Anne Bancroft.

Soon after he finished shooting for "Mrs. Stone", he received an offer from Columbia Pictures for a part in the blockbuster Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle.

His performance in "Charlie's Angels" kick-started his career in Hollywood. After "Charlie's Angels," he played the character of Karl, the "enigmatic chief designer" and love interest of Laura Linney's character, in the romantic comedy Love Actually, alongside Hugh Grant, Emma Thompson, Keira Knightley and Rowan Atkinson.

He also started getting work in the advertising business as he appeared in a Credicard's campaign called "the Best of the Life" with Gisele Bundchen in 2002 and in a 2-minute-long commercial for Chanel, directed by Baz Luhrmann alongside Nicole Kidman in 2004.

In 2006, Santoro joined the cast of Lost as survivor of Oceanic Flight 815, Paulo. His first appearance was in episode titled, "Further Instructions". He was accidentally buried alive in a later episode

Santoro was cast as Persian emperor Xerxes I in the movie 300, based on the Frank Miller comic of the same name, in 2007. The role had many special requirements, such as extensive CG work to portray the 6'-2" Santoro as the 7-foot god-king, a four-and-a-half-hour makeup application process, and the complete removal of Santoro's body hair first by waxing and then by shaving when that proved too painful.[1] His eyebrows were kept intact, however, covered over with prosthetics and drawn in rather than being shaved.[2] Santoro claims to have read the works of Herodotus, an Ancient Greek historian, in order to prepare for his part. Regarding Xerxes I, he says:

"He's rich, he's arrogant, he's a very unstable megalomaniac. He just wants to conquer the world. His ambition is unlimited. He wants glory; he wants victory; he wants eternal fame. Underneath all that wanting, though, he's ultimately weak and very insecure." [3]

Despite his successful international career, Santoro has said he doesn't want to move to Los Angeles and would like to stay in Rio. He practices transcendental meditation and sports when time allows, is a fan of The Doors and likes to read William Shakespeare's works. His favorite actors are Robert De Niro and Al Pacino.

[edit] Awards and nominations

  • Cinema Brazil Grand Prize
    • 2004 - Best Actor for Carandiru (Nominated)
  • São Paulo Association of Art Critics Awards
    • 2002 - Best Actor for Bicho de Sete Cabeças (Won)
  • Cinema Brazil Grand Prize
    • 2001 - Best Actor for Bicho de Sete Cabeças (Won)
  • Brasília Festival of Brazilian Cinema
    • 2001 - Best Actor for Bicho de Sete Cabeças (Won)
  • Recife Cinema Festival
    • 2001 - Best Actor for Bicho de Sete Cabeças (Won)

[edit] Other nominations and honors

[edit] Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
2007 300 King Xerxes I
Dare to Love Me Carlos Gardel
Não Por Acaso Unknown
2004 A Dona da História Luiz Cláudio/Young
Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle Randy Emmers
Love Actually Karl
2003 Carandiru Lady Di
2002 Stuart Little 2 Stuart Little (Brazilian release)
2001 Behind the Sun Tonho

[edit] Television work

Year Title Role Notes
2006-7 Lost Paulo TV series
2005 Hoje É Dia de Maria Amado TV special
Hoje É Dia de Maria 2 Dom Chico Chicote TV special
2003 Mulheres Apaixonadas Diogo Nogueira Ribeiro-Alves soap opera
The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone Young Man made-for-tv film
2002 Pastores da Noite Priest miniseries
2001 Estrela-Guia Carlos Charles Pimenta soap opera
1999 Suave Veneno Eliseo Vieira soap opera
1998 Hilda Furacão Friar Malthus miniseries
1997 O Amor Está no Ar Léo soap opera
1995 Explode Coração Serginho soap opera
1994 Pátria Minha Fernando soap opera
1993 Olho no Olho Pedro soap opera

[edit] Music

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.ropeofsilicon.com/news.php?id=5477
  2. ^ http://www.rottentomatoes.com/news/comments/?entryid=405883
  3. ^ http://www.ropeofsilicon.com/news.php?id=5477

[edit] External links