Thorbjørn Harr

Thorbjørn Harr
Born Thorbjørn Harr
(1974-05-24) 24 May 1974
Nationality Norwegian
Occupation Actor
Spouse(s) Tai Victoria Grung (m. 2006)
Children 3

Thorbjørn Harr (born 24 May 1974) is a Norwegian actor.

Harr was discovered in a schoolyard by NRK people who were scouting for actors for youth series. He soon became a familiar face on programs like Blikkbåx and U and also appeared in the popular 1991 television movie Frida – med hjertet i hånden.[1] He later had minor roles in Lille Lørdag in 1995 and a major role in the mini-series Lekestue broadcast on NRK in 2002. His real film debut came in 2003 in Mot Moskva, where he played the leading role of Vassi and was nominated for an Amanda Award, and in 2005 he appeared in Venner for livet.[1] He played the lead role of Mathias in Mars & Venus (2007). He played Jarl Borg in History's Vikings.[2][3] Beginning in 2000, he has also appeared in several stage productions. With comedian Harald Eia and two others, he runs Teatersport Oslo.[4]

Appearances

Stage

Shortly after graduating from the Norwegian National Academy of Theatre in 2000, Harr joined the National Theatre in Oslo. He has appeared there as Håkon Håkonsson in Ibsen's The Pretenders and as the young Speer in the production of the same name.[1] He has played Figaro in Beaumarchais' The Marriage of Figaro, Erhart in John Gabriel Borkman,[1] and Tom in The Glass Menagerie.[4] He has appeared in many productions by Jo Strømgren,[4] including There, which won the 2002 Hedda Award for best play. As of January 2007 he had appeared in almost 20 National Theatre productions.

Filmography

TV

Audiobooks

Awards

Personal life

Harr married Tai Victoria Grung in 2006; they have three children.[8]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Mari Christine Grydeland, "Hyggelige Harr", Interview, Dagbladet magazine, 21 February 2005 (Norwegian)
  2. Hilde Bjørnskau, "'Det gikk med mye eget blod'", Interview, NRK, 28 January 2014 (Norwegian)
  3. Camilla Norli, "Vikings-skaperen hyller Thorbjørn Harr: 'Vil ha ham med i flere prosjekter'", Verdens Gang, 28 February 2014 (Norwegian)
  4. 1 2 3 "Thorbjørn Harr", Store norske leksikon (Norwegian)
  5. "Dømt til evig vinter?", Romerikes Blad, 21 November 2013 (Norwegian)
  6. Mona Levin, "Teaterkritikerprisen 2009/2010 til Thorbjørn Harr ", Kritikerlaget, Norwegian Critics' Association, 30 September 2010 (Norwegian)
  7. Hege Fagerheim, "Blå fugl til Thorbjørn Harr", NRK, 10 February 2011 (Norwegian)
  8. Lise Grønskar, "Thorbjørn Harr er blitt trebarnsfar", Kjendis, Dagbladet, 17 October 2011 (Norwegian)

External links

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