Jeremy Sisto

Born on October 6, 1974 in Grass Valley, CA into an artistic family, actor Jeremy Sisto began his in earnest career at six-years-old, performing regularly in school plays and community theater. His mother, actress Reedy Gibbs, and his father, Dick Sisto, was a jazz vibraphonist, raising their two children—including Sisto’s sister Meadow—in a stone house on a 20-acre farm in Northern California. But when his parents divorced, Sisto moved with his mother to the north end of Chicago where she remarried and Sisto continued to act. Sisto was, however, an unhappy child, a state of mind that was alleviated by disappearing into his imagination where he created his own characters and stories. By the time he was a teenager, Sisto was landing commercials on television and appearing at Chicago’s famed Goodman Theater in a performance of Tennessee Williams’ “A House Not Meant to Stand” while still attending Francis Parker High School. Even at a young age, Sisto was well on his way to becoming an accomplished and sought-after actor.

Sisto continued his stint at The Goodman, starring opposite Brian Dennehy in Bertolt Brecht’s "Galileo.” He soon made his feature film debut, playing the son of Kevin Kline and Mary McDonnell in Lawrence Kasdan's ensemble drama "Grand Canyon" (1991). After a supporting role in "Desperate Choices: To Save My Child" (NBC, 1992), Sisto relocated to Los Angeles once he graduated high school and shortly thereafter tackled the challenging of playing an epileptic and mentally-challenged teenager in a stage production of "The Care and Custody of Barbara Moon," a choice made out of initially being unable to find onscreen work. He stayed patient, however, studying his craft with Howard Fine and finally breaking through with parts in the remake of "The Shaggy Dog" (1994), the low-budget thriller "The Crew" (1994) and the dismal serial killer suspensor "Hideaway" (1995).

Both thrillers mined the dark side of Sisto's persona. "The Crew" cast him as a sexually confused young man who holds six people at gun point on an isolated boat, while "Hideaway,” adapted from Dean Koontz's best-seller, saw him portray a satanic serial killer who is psychically connected to an antiques dealer (Jeff Goldblum). On a lighter note, he reunited with “Hideaway” star Alicia Silverstone to enjoy his first hit with Amy Heckerling's teen comedy "Clueless" (1995), playing Elton, a spoiled brat who is set up with the misfit pal of a popular rich kid (Silverstone). Sisto next appeared as Gwyneth Paltrow's love interest in the female-driven "Moonlight and Valentino" (1995) before delivering another edgy performance as an angry, insecure teen coping with his overbearing father in Ridley Scott's sea-going actioner "White Squall" (1996). Similarly, he appeared in the smart, black comedy-thriller "Suicide Kings" (1997) as a morphine-addicted medical student who helps kidnap a local kingpin (Christopher Walken) and practices his surgical technique by removing one of the mobster's fingers.

In preparation for his role as distance runner Frank Shorter in "Without Limits" (1998), Sisto trained several weeks before production with an Olympic coach. That year also offered him in a comic turn as the pot-smoking gay lover of Andy Dick in the festival-screened "Bongwater.” He gave a soulful performance in "This Space Between Us" (1999), playing a Hollywood screenwriter who returns to his quirky Northern California home town following the untimely death of his wife. In NBC’s two-part miniseries "The '60s" (1999), Sisto landed the role of Kenny Klein, an intense student activist whose zeal leads him to a tragic end. He had perhaps his highest profile role yet, however, in the title role of the CBS miniseries "Jesus" (2000). Despite having little time to prepare—he was on a plane the day after being cast—Sisto pulled off a performance that has proven difficult for other actors, one that was even blessed by the late Pope John Paul II.

Sisto continued to work regularly in supporting roles, appearing in films such as "Angel Eyes" (2001), before he made a major mark with a recurring stint on writer Alan Ball's dark, seriocomic HBO series "Six Feet Under" (2001-2005), playing the mentally unstable Billy Chenowith, the troubled brother of Brenda (Rachel Griffiths) who harbors an unhealthy obsession with his sister. Further appearances in unremarkable films were followed by a prominent role in the flawed historical miniseries "Caesar" (TNT, 2002), playing the titular Roman dictator. His next major turn was in the harrowing teen angst film "Thirteen" (2003), playing Holly Hunter's uninvolved beau. Sisto followed with several low-budget films that were hardly released—“Manifest” (2003), “In Enemy Hands” (2004) and “Dead and Breakfast” (2004) to name a few—before he returned to commercial fare with a supporting role in the Ashton Kutcher-Amanda Peet romantic comedy, “A Lot Like Love” (2005).

Following another trip to low-budget indie territory with a supporting role as the Handcuffed Man in the gripping thriller, “Unknown” (2006), Sisto returned to regular television work with a leading role in the short-lived, “Kidnapped” (NBC, 2006-2007), a serial drama that followed a private investigator (Sisto) trying to find the abducted teenaged son (Will Denton) of a wealthy couple. The series was canceled after airing only five episodes. Meanwhile, Sisto gave a fine performance in the late Adrienne Shelly’s hopeful dark comedy, “Waitress” (2007), playing the loutish husband of a pregnant pie maker (Keri Russell) using her special talents to find the right recipe for love. “Waitress” premiered at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival amidst praise and tears—director Shelly was murdered in her New York City apartment in November 2006 never having known her film made it into the festival, let alone being picked up for distribution.

  • Also Credited As:
    Jeremy Merton Sisto
  • Born:
    Jeremy Merton Sisto on October 6, 1974 in Grass Valley, California, USA
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Screenwriter
Family
  • Daughter: Charlie Ballerina Sisto. Born in June 2009; mother, Addie Lane
  • Father: Dick Sisto. Divorced from Sisto s mother c. 1980
  • Mother: Reedy Gibbs. Divorced from Sisto s father c. 1980
  • Sister: Meadow Sisto.
  • Step-mother: Penny Sisto.
Significant Others
  • Companion: Navi Rawat. Previously dated; no longer together
  • Wife: Addie Lane. Married Oct. 13, 2009 at City Hall in downtown Manhattan
  • Companion: Reese Witherspoon. dated briefly in 1992
Milestones
  • 1991 Made film debut as Kevin Kline s son in Lawrence Kasdan s Grand Canyon
  • 1992 TV debut, opposite Reese Witherspoon, in Desperate Choices: To Save My Child (NBC)
  • 1993 Moved to Los Angeles and landed the role of Andrew, an epileptic and retarded teenager, in The Care and Custody of Barbara Moon at Theatre Geo
  • 1994 Appeared in Disney s ABC-TV remake of The Shaggy Dog as Trey Miller, the hero s cool best friend who invisions himself a teenage Casanova
  • 1994 Starred as a sexually confused, vulnerable and explosive young man in the independent feature, The Crew
  • 1995 Played a serial killer in Hideaway ; first film with Alicia Silverstone
  • 1995 Portrayed Gwyneth Paltrow s love interest in Moonlight and Valentino
  • 1995 Re-teamed with Alicia Silverstone, playing Elton, in Clueless
  • 1996 Co-starred in in the ensemble of White Squall ; directed by Ridley Scott
  • 1997 Acted in the black comedy-thriller, Suicide Kings, as a morphine-addicted medical student drawn
  • 1998 Played distance runner Frank Shorter to Billy Crudup s Steve Prefontaine in Without Limits
  • 1998 Portrayed Frederick Seward in The Day Lincoln Was Shot (TNT)
  • 1998 Was part of the ensemble of the featival-screened, Bongwater, playing Andy Dick s comic love partner
  • 1999 Played the over-the-edge radical Kenny Klein in NBC s miniseries, The 60s
  • 1999 Starred as a young Hollywood screenwriter who deals with the untimely death of his wife in This Space Between Us
  • 2000 Played the title role in the CBS miniseries, Jesus
  • 2001 Cast in the award winning HBO series Six Feet Under as Billy Chenowith, the troubled brother of Rachel Griffith s character Brenda
  • 2001 Cast as Jennifer Lopez s troubled brother in Angel Eyes
  • 2002 Had title role in the TNT miniseries, Julius Caesar
  • 2003 Co-starred in the indie thriller, Wrong Turn
  • 2005 Cast opposite Ashton Kutcher and Amanda Peet in the romantic comedy A Lot Like Love
  • 2006 Cast as a hostage rescue specialist in the NBC drama, Kidnapped
  • 2006 Starred alongside Larry Bryggman, Ali MacGraw and Julianna Margulies in the Broadway production of Festen
  • 2007 Co-starred with Keri Russell in the indie, Waitress ; helmed by Adrienne Shelly, who was murdered before the films release
  • 2007 Joined the cast of NBC s Law & Order as a detective
  • 2007 Played a heroin addict opposite Heather Graham in the indie film, Broken
  • Acted with Chicago s Absolute Theater Company and at the Cherry Street Theater
  • By age eight, started auditioning for various Chicago theaters; hired by Goodman Theater to appear in Tennessee Williams House Not Meant to Stand and opposite Brian Dennehy in Galileo

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