Travis_Fimmel

Travis Fimmel

Travis Fimmel

Australian actor and model


Travis Fimmel (born 15 July 1979) is an Australian actor and former model. He is known for his role as Ragnar Lothbrok in the History Channel television series Vikings (2013–2017),[1][2] and as Anduin Lothar in the live-action adaptation of Warcraft (2016). He also starred in the HBO Max science fiction series Raised by Wolves (2020–2022).

Quick Facts Born, Occupations ...

Early life and modelling

Fimmel was born near Echuca, Victoria, Australia and was raised in Lockington.[3][4] The youngest of three brothers, he is the son of Jennie, a recreation officer for disabled people, and Chris, a cattle farmer.[4] Aspiring to be a professional Australian rules footballer, Fimmel moved to Melbourne to play for the St Kilda Football Club in the AFL, but a broken leg sidelined him before the season began.[5] He was accepted into RMIT for an architecture course, but later deferred to travel abroad.[6][7]

Fimmel's modelling career began when he was spotted working out at a gym in the Melbourne suburb of Hawthorn by the flatmate of Matthew Anderson, a talent scout for the Chadwick Models agency.[8]

Fimmel headed to the United States and was signed on the spot with agency LA Models in 2002 after walking into their office broke and barefoot.[9] Cast by Jennifer Starr, he became the first male in the world to secure a six-figure deal to model exclusively for Calvin Klein for a year, and the last to be personally contracted by the brand's eponymous designer.[10][11] He fronted CK's Crave men's fragrance campaign and modelled the brand's famous underwear.[12] It was reported that one of his London billboards had to be pulled down after complaints from an auto club of traffic congestion and accidents by 'rubbernecking' female drivers, but Fimmel insisted the story started with a rumour spread on the internet.[13]

He was named one of the world's sexiest bachelors by America's People magazine in 2002 and at the time was regarded as "the most in-demand male model in the world".[14][15] It has been suggested by some journalists that Fimmel was the inspiration for Sex and the City heartthrob 'Jerry' Smith Jerrod.[16]

Fimmel has appeared on multiple magazine covers, including Esquire, Rogue, Empire, At Large, Good Weekend, Numero Homme and America's TV Guide.[17] He turned down an offer from Australia's Seven Network to be a guest judge on the TV series Make Me A Supermodel.[18]

Acting career

2001–2012: Early work

Fimmel began his prolific acting career by appearing in the music videos for Janet Jackson's song "Someone to Call My Lover"[19] and "I'm Real" (original version) by Jennifer Lopez, both in 2001.[20]

He studied under Ivana Chubbuck, the Hollywood acting coach of movie stars Brad Pitt and Jared Leto.[21] He took two years to pluck up the courage to audition for his first role, saying "half of acting is overcoming your fears [and] letting yourself be vulnerable in front of people".[6]

He landed the title lead in The WB series Tarzan in 2003, described by CNN as one of the "five hottest things happening in entertainment right now", in which he did most of his own stunts.[22][23][24] In addition, he appeared in two television pilots: The WB's drama Rocky Point with Lauren Holly in 2005,[25] and the Fox crime thriller Southern Comfort with Madeleine Stowe in 2006.[26]

Fimmel has played a diverse spectrum of characters on the small and big screens. In 2008, he portrayed a murderer in the Australian movie Restraint and a party boy in Surfer, Dude with Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson. In 2010, he portrayed a compassionate cowboy in Pure Country 2: The Gift and a forensic photographer in Australian horror film Needle, co-starring Ben Mendelsohn.[27]

He depicted a talented classical pianist in Ivory, a "creative, edgy, out-of-the box" independent film that was an Official Selection in the 2010 Montreal World Film Festival and the Strasbourg International Film Festival.[28] Produced by Academy Award-winner Gray Frederickson and co-starring Martin Landau and Peter Stormare, Ivory "details the troubled lives of classical pianists at a major American conservatory as they confront personal and professional rivalry".[29]

Fimmel played Helweg, a prison guard in the 2010 film The Experiment. It was reported that the role originally went to Elijah Wood, who pulled out of shooting for reasons unknown, so Fimmel instead took the job.[30] The film is based on a real-life experiment on volunteers by Stanford University that was cut short after spinning out of control, with 'guards' exhibiting sadistic behaviour and 'prisoners' suffering depression.[31]

Fimmel starred opposite Patrick Swayze in A&E's 2009 series The Beast.[32] He played rookie undercover FBI agent Ellis Dove partnered with a hardened veteran cop, Swayze's Charles Barker. Production ceased after 13 episodes due to Swayze's death from pancreatic cancer.[33] He played fugitive Mason Boyle in two episodes of NBC's 2010 action-adventure Chase, produced by Jerry Bruckheimer.[34][35]

He appeared in FX's TV pilot Outlaw Country in 2011 with Luke Grimes, described as a "modern drama set against the back drop of a southern organized crime family".[36] According to Variety, he plays a rugged, "hard-drinking gang member and the main character's best friend".[36]

Fimmel played the lead in 2012's Harodim with Peter Fonda as a former intelligence officer trained in black ops tracking down the world's most wanted terrorist who is compromised by his own chain of command.[37]

He co-starred with Billy Bob Thornton and Eva Longoria in the 2012 redneck Southern comedy flick The Baytown Outlaws, playing one of the three hapless Oodie brothers who bites off more than he can chew when he agrees to help a woman get her godson back from her deadbeat ex-husband.[38]

2013–2019: Breakthrough and film work

Fimmel was signed as the lead character for four seasons in the critically acclaimed drama television series Vikings, co-starring Alexander Ludwig, Katheryn Winnick, Gabriel Byrne, Gustaf Skarsgard, and Linus Roache.[39] Premiering in 2013, the show gained a cult following and chronicles "the extraordinary and ferocious world of the mighty Norsemen who raided, traded and explored during The Middle Ages."[40] He played a character loosely based on Ragnar Loðbrók, the legendary Viking leader who is frustrated by the unadventurous tendencies of his local chieftain and strikes out to pillage new lands.[41][42] USA Today described Fimmel's performance as "engaging", while The Huffington Post called it his "breakout role".[1][43][44]

Fimmel starred as military commander Anduin Lothar in Warcraft in 2016, a live-action film adaptation of the Warcraft video game franchise. It was reported that a horse spooked by a wind fan collapsed on Fimmel while performing one of his own stunts but he emerged unscathed.[45][46]

He was cast as a quirky hipster in the romantic comedy Maggie's Plan with Ethan Hawke, Greta Gerwig, Maya Rudolph, Bill Hader and Julianne Moore, and a loving but irresponsible father in Lean on Pete with Charlie Plummer and Steve Buscemi.[47][48]

Named as the Actor of the Year in GQ Australia's 2017 Men of the Year Awards, Fimmel told the audience in his characteristic humorous, self-deprecating style, "I'm not sure how I got this, but I demand a recount".[49]

The storyline was inspired by a 1972 California bank heist.[50]

Fimmel was the lead actor in Danger Close: The Battle of Long Tan, playing the role of Major Harry Smith who led soldiers under his command against the Viet Cong during the Battle of Long Tan in the Vietnam War. It is based on the historic account of 108 Australian and New Zealand soldiers who defeated an estimated 2,000 North Vietnamese soldiers in a rubber plantation near Nui Dat on 17 August 1966.[51][52][53]

He co-stars as a deputy sheriff opposite fellow Australian Margot Robbie in the indie film Dreamland. Set in the 1930s Dust Bowl, the story follows a teenage boy on his quest to beat out the FBI to capture a fugitive bank robber in order to claim a bounty and save the family farm.[54][55]

2020–present:Television and film balance

In 2020, Fimmel featured as a TV presenter in Here Are the Young Men, which was adapted from a novel about three Dublin high school graduates whose epic binge to mark the end of an era is blighted by catastrophe.[56]

From 2020 to 2022, he appeared in HBO Max's science fiction drama Raised by Wolves from director Ridley Scott and Scott Free Productions, which marked Fimmel's return to television.[57][58][59] It was a role that earned him a nomination for Best Actor in a Science Fiction/Fantasy Series at the Critics' Choice Super Awards.[60] The dystopian narrative depicts him as an atheist soldier with a mysterious backstory in a new society created after a war sparked by religious differences decimates Earth.[61]

In a review of his role as a killer-for-hire in the 2021 action-crime thriller Die in a Gunfight, Forbes states that Fimmel "steals every scene he’s in and has what could be the most compelling and morally tangled [character] arc of anyone in the entire story".[62]

Fimmel played a genius, reclusive and kooky inventor in the science fiction, neo-noir film Zone 414. It co-starred Guy Pearce and was set in a colony of state-of-the-art humanoid robots and drew comparisons to Blade Runner.[63]

He also appeared in indie drama Delia's Gone, co-starring Marisa Tomei, based on a short story about a black man with an intellectual disability who is accused of his sister's murder and embarks on a journey to clear his name and find out who's responsible.[64][65]

In One Way, Fimmel plays a mysterious passenger who meets a lifelong criminal played by Colson Baker, aka Machine Gun Kelly, who has stolen from the biggest mob boss in town and boards a bus to flee.[66] He also appeared in Fool's Paradise, a comedy by Charlie Day about a fool for love who becomes an accidental celebrity only to lose it all.[67][68]

Featuring in AMC+ western series That Dirty Black Bag, he was credited as a producer and co-starred with Dominic Cooper, Douglas Booth and Aidan Gillen from Game of Thrones. It shows a clash between an apparently incorruptible sheriff with a dark past and a taciturn bounty killer trapped by a desire for vengeance that cannot be fulfilled.[69][70][71]

Starring in the Stan Original mini-series Black Snow, Fimmel plays cold-case detective on the trail of the killer of a teenage girl from a small Australian South Sea Islander community after the opening of a time capsule unearths a secret.[72] His performance earned him a nomination for Best Lead Actor in a Drama in the 2024 AACTA Awards.[73] In March 2024, Black Snow was renewed for a second series with Fimmel reprising the role.[74][75]

He was cast in Stan's satirical series Caught with Susan Sarandon, Sean Penn, Matthew Fox, Lincoln Younes and real-life Channel 9 TV presenters Karl Stefanovic and Ally Langdon. The storyline centers around four irreverent Australian soldiers mistaken for Americans in a war-torn country who realize they can be social media famous when they produce a hostage video that goes viral.[76]

Helping to bring the bestselling novel Boy Swallows Universe to Netflix, Fimmel stars as a drug-dealing stepdad.[77] The coming-of-age drama features a "captivating blend of magic and innocence intertwined with the brutal truths of the world" as a boy grapples with a lost father, a mute brother, a recovering addict mother, and the unlikely people that shape his world.[77]

He co-starred with Gerard Butler in the 2023 CIA thriller Kandahar, with a script written by a former military intelligence officer and based on his real-life experiences in Afghanistan.[78]

Cast in the controversial western film Rust, production was temporarily suspended in New Mexico when a prop gun with a live bullet allegedly fired by co-star Alec Baldwin killed cinematographer Halyna Hutchins and led to involuntary manslaughter charges.[79] Fimmel plays bounty hunter Fenton "Preacher" Lang who joins a US Marshal in pursuit of Baldwin's character, outlaw Harland Rust, after he helps his 13-year-old grandson break out of prison after being convicted of an accidental murder and sentenced to hang.[80]

Fimmel plays a charismatic soldier with an enigmatic past who seeks to gain the Emperor's trust in the 2024 TV series Dune: Prophecy, a prequel to the 2021 blockbuster movie Dune starring Timothee Chalamet, Zendaya and Jason Momoa.[81][82] The series co-stars Emily Watson and is based on the New York Times bestselling novel Sisterhood of Dune.[83]

Personal life

Fimmel's favourite recreational activities include Australian rules football, fishing, camping, horse riding, surfing, riding motorbikes and going to the beach.[13][84][85][86][87]

Fimmel played a celebrity cricket match in the 2009 Australia vs England Hollywood Ashes with fellow Australian actors Jesse Spencer from House, Cameron Daddo, celebrity chef Curtis Stone, INXS bass guitarist Garry Gary Beers and cricket fast bowler Michael Kasprowicz.[16][88]

Known for his rugged good looks, blue-eyed Fimmel has expressed a preference for being barefoot and presents as mellow in promotional interviews for his work.[89] He has also expressed a desire to return to farm life in Australia once he's finished with Hollywood.[90]

Business ventures

In 2022, Fimmel founded his own beer brand Travla with the winner of the fourth series of MasterChef Australia, Andy Allen, and ex Essendon Football Club CEO Xavier Campbell as one of the investors. [91][92]

Filmography

Key
Denotes works that have not yet been released

Film

More information Year, Title ...

Television

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Awards and nominations

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See also


References

  1. Vikings Renewed for Season 2 by History, The Huffington Post, Retrieved 5 April 2013
  2. "Postie puts her stamp on retirement as 30-year career comes to an end". ABC News. 16 September 2020. Retrieved 27 March 2024.
  3. "Travis Fimmel". People. 3 November 2003. Archived from the original on 25 December 2017.
  4. "Travis Fimmel". TVGuide.com. Retrieved 27 March 2024.
  5. Lee, Luaine 'The Beast's' Travis Fimmel is Happy Down on the Farm The Denver Post, 28 January 2009
  6. Lewis, Felicity Model Hunter, The Age Melbourne Magazine, 29 February 2008
  7. Epaminondas, George, Naked in New York, The Age, 27 January 2002
  8. Blasberg, Derek, In Conversation: Calvin Klein, Gagosian Quarterly, 23 February 2018
  9. Who Magazine [], Retrieved 9 April 2024
  10. Tai, Elizabeth Partners in Crime Drama Archived 6 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine 10 May 2009
  11. People magazine, 24 June 2002
  12. Herald Sun, Former Calvin Klein Model Travis Fimmel Films Horror Movie with Jessica Marais, Luke Wilson" 21 December 2009
  13. The Age, With Stars In Their Eyes 21 August 2003
  14. Hello Magazine, Retrieved 25 March 2011
  15. "Travis Fimmel". ShareTV. Retrieved 8 April 2011.
  16. Looper 24 May 2021
  17. Hello! Magazine Profile: Travis Fimmel Retrieved 9 May 2011
  18. McDaniel, Mike From Jockeys to the Jungle, 20 July 2003
  19. "Rocky Point (WB)". The Futon Critic. Retrieved 27 August 2022.
  20. "Southern Comfort (FOX)". The Futon Critic. Retrieved 27 August 2022.
  21. Official Website Retrieved 6 July 2012.
  22. Price, Matthew, The Oklahoman, Retrieved 6 July 2012.
  23. Sony Lockdown on 'Experiment' The Hollywood Reporter, 4 August 2009
  24. Sydney Morning Herald Patrick Swayze Dead 15 September 2009
  25. "Travis Fimmel". TV Guide. Archived from the original on 21 October 2012. Retrieved 29 April 2011.
  26. Kroll, Justin Travis Fimmel to Star in FX's 'Outlaw Country' Archived 13 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine, 9 September 2010
  27. "Harodim". Terra Mater Factual Studios. Archived from the original on 30 May 2013. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  28. McClintock, Pamela Billy Bob Thornton Redneck Comedy 'Baytown Disco' Adds Three New Stars Hollywood Reporter, 28 April 2011
  29. Looper 21 January 2021
  30. "Minister Deenihan Visits Set Of Irish Film Board Supported TV Series VIKINGS". Irish Film Board. 9 November 2012. Archived from the original on 21 September 2013. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
  31. Bianco, Robert Vikings takes the pillage, raises it to derring-do USA Today, 26 February 2013
  32. Kroll, Justin (26 October 2013). "'Vikings' Actor Travis Fimmel Joins 'Warcraft' (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety.
  33. "Warcraft". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 9 March 2018.
  34. SBS Broadcasting Retrieved 27 January 2024
  35. New York Times 5 April 2018
  36. Hollywood Reporter 14 March 2019
  37. "The Battle of Long Tan". Archived from the original on 19 March 2018. Retrieved 9 March 2018.
  38. The Guardian 10 December 2020
  39. Screen Daily 8 November 2019
  40. Goldberg, Leslie (29 October 2019). "Ridley Scott's 'Raised by Wolves' Moving From TNT to HBO Max". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 4 April 2020.
  41. Nemetz, Dave (10 January 2019). "Vikings Alum Travis Fimmel to Star in TNT Sci-Fi Drama Raised by Wolves". TVLine. Retrieved 4 April 2020.
  42. Decider 5 September 2020
  43. Deadline 19 November 2020
  44. Rotten Tomatoes 3 September 2020
  45. Forbes 15 July 2021
  46. Polygon 3 September 2021
  47. Delia's Gone Official Website Retrieved 26 January 2024
  48. Deadline 21 October 2020
  49. Screen Rant Retrieved 2 September 2022
  50. Movie Web 24 January 2023
  51. Rotten Tomatoes Retried 26 January 2024
  52. Coming Soon Dot Net 18 November 2021
  53. IMDB Retrieved 26 January 2024
  54. Deadline 11 July 2022
  55. AACTA Retrieved 26 January 2024
  56. Keast, Jackie (12 March 2024). "Stan reveals bumper new slate, renews 'Scrublands', 'Bump', 'Black Snow'". IF Magazine. Retrieved 17 March 2024.
  57. Nine Retrieved 26 January 2024.
  58. Netflix Life 11 January 2024
  59. The Hollywood Reporter 24 May 2023
  60. Express UK 25 January 2024
  61. Deadline 14 September 2021
  62. Variety 8 November 2022
  63. IMDB Retrieved 26 January 2024
  64. Movie Web Retrieved 6 November 2023
  65. Ellis, James Travis Fimmel Metro UK, Retrieved 2 May 2011
  66. Facts Dot Net 7 October 2023
  67. TV Insider Retrieved 26 January 2024
  68. Channel Seven Australia 16 September 2020
  69. "New beer Travla a huge hit". riverineherald.com.au. November 2022. Retrieved 1 November 2022.
  70. The Weekend Edition 28 February 2023
  71. Andreeva, Nellie (8 November 2022). "Travis Fimmel To Star In 'Dune: The Sisterhood' HBO Max Series". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
  72. "Best TV Hero - IGN's Best of 2013 Wiki Guide - IGN". 15 December 2013. Retrieved 14 December 2019 via www.ign.com.
  73. "Winners & Nominees/AACTA". Retrieved 9 December 2023 via www.aacta.org.

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