TaylorKitsch_
male - 28 years, Kelowna, United States
Blog 3
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Vampire name
The Great Archives determine you to have gone by the identity:
Count of Persia
Known in some parts of the world as:
Wraith of Bucharest
The Great Archives Record:
A youth seduced by darkness and cults. -
Stuff about me
Favorite movies are: State of Grace, Hurly Burly and Dead Man Walking.
In January 2008 participated in Luc Robitaille's Celebrity Shoot Out, a celebrity hockey game that raised money and awareness for the children's charity Echoes of Hope.
Played ice hockey in the Canadian BCHL for the Langley Hornets before a career-ending knee injury.
In September 2007, took part in the Nautica Malibu Triathlon, which benefits the Children's Hospital, Los Angeles. Taylor supports fitness activities for kids.
Favorite book is The Idiot by Fyodor Dostoevsky.
In 2008 took a trip to Africa with Friday Night Lights co-star, Connie Britton. They toured Uganda and Kenya and became more aware of a charity called the African Children's Choir.
In August 2006, appeared on the cover page of the magazine named Dish Entertainment Magazine.
Learned acting from the renowned acting coach Sheila Grey.
At age 25, became the youngest ever cover boy for Men's Health magazine.
Did all his own stunts in the movie 'The Covenant'.
He joined the men of the Friday Night Lights cast in Esquire's October 2006 spread, "There's no I in Coat".
He lives in Vancouver when he isn't filming Friday Night Lights in Austin.
Fumbled his first reading for the part of Gambit in X-men Origins: Wolverine because he was too tired. Got his managers to get him another audition because he felt very confident about the role.
Attended University of Lethbridge in Alberta, where he studied Nutritional Training.
Close friends with his Friday Night Lights co-stars Kyle Chandler, Connie Britton and Zach Gilford.
Favorite actor is Sean Penn.
One of Rolling Stone's Hot 100 List 2009. -
Mini Biography
Best known for his portrayal of troubled high school football star Tim Riggins on NBC's acclaimed television series "Friday Night Lights," actor Taylor Kitsch has scored big with audiences and critics on both the big and small screens.
In "Friday Night Lights," the Emmy-nominated series USA Today called "one of the best acted, best written best produced shows on television," Kitsch stars as the strong, brooding backbone of the Dillon Panthers football team. He brings a poignancy and vulnerability to the role of a Texas high school fullback struggling to find his identity and wrestling with his demons by way of the bottle. Executive produced by actor-director Peter Berg based on his hit Universal Pictures feature, the second season of "Friday Night Lights" premiered on October 5, 2007.
During the show's summer hiatus, Taylor filmed the feature Gospel Hill alongside Julia Stiles, Danny Glover, Angela Bassett and Samuel L. Jackson. Directed by Giancarlo Esposito, the film focuses on the bigoted former sheriff of a southern town and a one-time civil rights worker whose intersecting lives are still haunted by events that took place decades earlier. Old wounds are reopened as residents of a black neighborhood are forced out of their homes to make way for a multi-million dollar development.
Kitsch got serious about acting in 2002 when he moved to New York City to study with renowned acting coach Sheila Grey. His career took off the next year after he returned to his home town of Vancouver and landed his first film major role alongside Samuel L. Jackson in David Richard Ellis' adrenaline fueled action picture Snakes on a Plane. The film was released in August 2006 by New Line Cinema.
Then, Kitsch starred as prep school student Pogue Perry in director Renny Harlin's The Covenant, which opened at No. 1 on the box office chart in September 2006. In the stylish thriller from Lakeshore Entertainment and Sony Screen Gems, four young witches do battle with a powerful, centuries-old supernatural force.
Kitsch's other credits include director Betty Thomas' comedy John Tucker Must Die, opposite Jesse Metcalfe, Ashanti, Sophia Bush and Brittany Snow, which was released by 20th Century Fox in July 2006; the TV series "Godiva's" and the pilot for ABC Family's sci-fie drama "Kyle XY."
When he's not on set, Kitsch pursues children's charity work and enjoys spending time with family and friends.
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