Ewan McGregor- Biography

Also Credited As:

Ewan G McGregor, Ewan Gordon McGregor

About Ewan McGregor

In perhaps one of the fastest rises in Hollywood, actor Ewan McGregor emerged onto the scene six months shy of graduating drama school to star in his first miniseries. A mere two years later, he was the toast of the independent circuit with his brave performance in Danny Boyle's highly regarded "Trainspotting" (1996), which propelled the young actor to stardom virtually overnight. Ever since his acclaimed portrait of a heroin addict struggling to put his drug days behind him, McGregor was a consistent presence in small features like "Emma" (1996) and "A Life Less Ordinary" (1997) as well as amazed fans and critics alike with his romantic leading man appeal and singing talent in the smash musical, "Moulin Rouge" (2001). Never shy to speak his mind, he routinely lambasted big budget Hollywood movies, only to find himself playing one of the most beloved characters in one of the most popular film franchise of all time. As Obi-Wan Kenobi in the three "Star Wars" prequels - "The Phantom Menace" (1999), "Attack of the Clones" (2002) and "Revenge of the Sith" (2005) - McGregor deftly channeled the character created by Sir Alec Guinness, while at the same time making it his own. Though he slipped a little with films like "The Island" (2005) and "Deception" (2008), McGregor nonetheless remained a viable performer capable of playing just about any role he wished.

Born on Mar. 31, 1971 in Crieff, Scotland, McGregor was raised by his father, James, and his mother, Carol, both of whom were teachers. But McGregor was not much of a student. In fact, he was demoted from math class to typing, eventually quitting school altogether when he was 16, but with the blessing from both his parents. After leaving Morrison's Academy, where his father was the gym teacher, McGregor worked a series of odd jobs and attended Kirkcaldy College of Technology - later renamed Fife College - where he studied drama. He also worked with the Perth Repertory Theatre. Moving to London, he continued his dramatic studies at Guildhall School of Music and Drama, but left six months before graduating to star in his first major production, Dennis Potter's six-part miniseries, "Lipstick on Your Collar" (Channel 4, 1993), in which he played a young, rock 'n' roll-loving British serviceman stationed in the War Office as a Russian translator. That same year, he starred as a 19th-century Frenchman who dreams of becoming another Napoleon, but is betrayed by the married woman who loves him, in the television miniseries "Scarlet & Black" (BBC2, 1993).

With two solid starring roles under his belt right off the bat, it was no surprise that McGregor soon made his feature film debut, appearing in director Bill Forsyth's intriguing, but ultimately uneven "Being Human" (1994), starring Robin Williams as a man who searches for his family in various incarnations throughout human history. He forged a beneficial relationship with Danny Boyle, who directed McGregor in the acclaimed crime thriller "Shallow Grave" (1995). McGregor deftly played Alex Law, a cocky young journalist who becomes enmeshed in murder. A mere two years after turning professional, McGregor was vaulted into international stardom when he starred in "Trainspotting" (1996), Boyle's kinetic and visceral comedic drama about young heroin addicts in Edinburgh. McGregor was superb in the leading role of Mark Renton, a charming junkie who tries to straighten up his act in London, only to get sucked back into old criminal behaviors with his longtime mates. The popularity of "Trainspotting," both with critics and audiences, officially launched McGregor's career, thanks in no small part to his harrowing and disarming performance, which earned him a London Film Critics Circle Award for Best British Actor.

Building on his success, McGregor landed more high profile feature roles, including playing the dashing Frank Churchill opposite Gwyneth Paltrow in "Emma" (1996), Douglas McGrath's winning adaptation of the Jane Austen classic. McGregor next played a British expatriate used by a poet (Vivian Wu) as a writing pad in Peter Greenaway's erotic "The Pillow Book" (1997). Displaying his romantic side opposite Tara Fitzgerald, McGregor was an unemployed mineworker performing in a brass band in the well-received comedy "Brassed Off" (1997). After an appearance as a burglar who comes up against a vampire in a 1996 episode of "Tales from the Crypt" (HBO, 1989-1996), McGregor reached mainstream American television viewers as a petty crook whose attempted robbery of a convenience store goes awry in an episode of "ER" (NBC, 1994-2009), which earned him an Emmy Award nomination for best guest-starring appearance. Reteaming with Boyle and writer John Hodge, the actor was cast as a recently fired janitor who seeks revenge on his employer by kidnapping the man's daughter (Cameron Diaz), only to fall in love with the help of two angels (Holly Hunter and Delroy Lindo) in the quirky romantic fantasy, "A Life Less Ordinary" (1997).

McGregor continued to display his prodigious talents as a Dutchman who romances a mother (Greta Sacchi) and her daughter (Carmen Chaplin) in the period drama "A Serpent's Kiss" (1997); as an innocent man who becomes the prime suspect in a murder in "Nightwatch" (1998); and as a glam-rock musician a la Iggy Pop in Todd Haynes' "Velvet Goldmine" (1998) - a film in which he famously offered up full frontal nudity - something he would, in fact, become known for having little qualms about doing, in comparison to most working actors. The never bashful star rounded out the year with an uncharacteristic, but well-played role in "Little Voice" (1998), in which he played a painfully shy telephone installer who keeps carrier pigeons. In a rare stage appearance, McGregor starred in the London Comedy Theatre's production of "Little Malcolm and His Struggle Against the Eunuchs" (1999). Though he has publicly decried the big-budget blockbuster on numerous occasions, McGregor made headlines and magazine covers when he landed the coveted role of a youthful Obi-Wan Kenobi in George Lucas' highly anticipated "Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace" (1999). Though the film itself was a colossal artistic disappointment, faltering from the modern fairy tale feel of its predecessors that attracted the actor to the project in the first place, it nonetheless struck box-office gold and turned McGregor into a bona fide star.

After playing a man somewhat innocently stalking a woman (Ashley Judd) in the promising, but ultimately unsuccessful "Eye of the Beholder" (2000), McGregor was impressive in his portrayal of James Joyce in "Nora" (2000), a little-seen biopic of the legendary Irish author's longtime love that was produced by Natural Nylon, a company McGregor formed with fellow actors Jude Law, Jonny Lee Miller, Sadie Frost and Sean Pertwee. The following year, he won raves and an entire new wave of fans - particularly of the female persuasion - as the star of Baz Luhrmann's popular musical spectacular "Moulin Rouge!" (2001). An often over-the-top production, "Moulin Rouge!" benefited greatly from McGregor's heartfelt turn as the talented, but naive writer who falls in love with a magnetic but doomed courtesan (Nicole Kidman). The film also offered the actor the opportunity to showcase his very capable singing voice, with several challenging numbers that led Luhrmann to claim that the actor "could be the Frank Sinatra of this new period." That same year, McGregor was featured in Ridley Scott's fact-based war film "Black Hawk Down" (2001), bringing strength and vulnerability - as well as an impressive American accent - to his role as a desk jockey soldier who sees his first combat in the 1993 Somalian humanitarian mission that turned into a devastating battle.

McGregor reprised the role of Obi-Wan Kenobi in Lucas' anticipated but again, lackluster "Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones" (2002), which he followed with another singing and dancing role as the Rock Hudson-esqe swinging playboy Catcher Block opposite Renee Zellweger in "Down With Love" (2003), director Peyton Reed's tribute to the fluffy Doris Day-Rock Hudson sex comedies of the 1960s. McGregor delivered a wonderfully dry and winking performance in the well-reviewed, but little-seen film. The actor closed out the year with a part in director Tim Burton's bizarre fantasy, "Big Fish" (2003), playing the role of Young Ed Bloom in the fanciful, mythically embellished flashbacks, as related by Albert Finney as the older version of the same character. Now going back and forth between studio features and small independents with ease, McGregor appeared in the erotic noir thriller, "Young Adam" (2004), based on Alexander Trocchi's Beat Generation novel. Mixed reviews trickled in for the bleak tale about an amoral drifter who descends into increasingly erratic behavior while carrying on with the wife (Tilda Swinton) of a co-worker (Peter Mullan).

After narrating the motorcycle racing documentary "Faster" (2004), McGregor provided the voice of Rodney Copperbottom, a genius inventor who finds himself out of work in "Robots" (2005), an animated sci-fi tale about a world entirely inhabited by robots. Once again, he reprised Obi-Wan for the third and final prequel "Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith" (2005). Although he had publicly voiced disappointment in the earlier films, the actor dutifully fulfilled his role for the final outing and in the process turned in his best performance as the Jedi Knight, who discovers his apprentice (Hayden Christensen) has embraced the Dark Side. Ever the physical actor, McGregor also continued to demonstrate his commitment and facility with a weapon in the film's extensive light saber battles. Meanwhile, prior to the release of "Episode III," McGregor and friend Charley Boorman embarked on an across-the-globe motorcycle ride that spanned four months, 18 countries and over 20,000 miles. The result was "Long Way Down" (BBC2, 2007), a six-part television series documenting the extraordinary journey.

In June 2005, McGregor sang and danced on stage when he starred as Sky Masterson in a London production of "Guys and Dolls" at the West End's Piccadilly Theatre alongside Jane Krakowski. The actor returned to the big screen for the sci-fi actioner "The Island" (2005) as Lincoln Six Echo, a man who lives in an orderly facility seemingly in a post-Apocalyptic world, hoping to win the right to relocate to the only remaining pure bio-zone on the planet, only to discover his world was a facade disguising a more sinister existence. "The Island" failed to score with audiences, as did "Stay" (2005), a murky psychological thriller that cast McGregor as a shrink with a suicidal patient (Ryan Gosling) who somehow begins invading his dreams and blurring the lines of their realities and individualities. After starring opposite Renée Zellweger in the period drama "Miss Potter" (2006), McGregor was part of the ensemble cast in the romantic comedy "Scenes of a Sexual Nature" (2006). He next starred in Woody Allen's rare turn into dark crime thriller territory "Cassandra's Dream" (2007) and followed with a starring turn opposite Hugh Jackman and Michelle Williams in the little-seen erotic thriller, "Deception" (2008).

Returning to blockbuster films, McGregor was the Camerlengo of the Catholic Church, who takes control of the Vatican after the mysterious death of the Pope in "Angels & Demons" (2009), which he followed with a turn as an investigative journalist who uncovers bizarre military experiments in "The Men Who Stare at Goats" (2009). Rounding out a busy year, McGregor was the sensitive cellmate of a convicted con man (Jim Carrey) who falls in love with him in the dark comedy "I Love You Phillip Morris" (2009), before playing aviation pioneer, Gene Vidal, who entered into business and allegedly an affair with Amelia Earhart (Hilary Swank) in the underrated biopic "Amelia" (2009). In Roman Polanski's political thriller "The Ghost Writer" (2010), he was the titular unnamed ghost writer who is hired to write the memoirs of a British prime minister (Pierce Brosnan), only to become embroiled in a conspiracy that endangers his life. After that McGregor had a supporting turn in the lighter family film, "Nanny McPhee Returns" (2010), and went on to play the son of a man (Christopher Plummer) who comes out as a gay man following the death of his mother in the acclaimed drama, "Beginners" (2010). Following a turn opposite MMA fighter Gina Carano in Steven Soderbergh's lean-and-mean spy thriller, "Haywire" (2011), McGregor was a man with Asperger's syndrome who falls for Emily Blunt in "Salmon Fishing in the Yemen" (2012). The role in the latter garnered him a Golden Globe nod for Best Actor in a Comedy or Musical. He capped off the year with a gripping performance opposite Naomi Watts as a man literally ripped away from his family during the catastrophic 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami in the harrowing drama "The Impossible" (2012).

Partners

Wife

Eve Mavrakis. French; met 1994 while working on British series "Kavanagh QC" (ITV); married July 22, 1995

Family

Brother

Colin McGregor. Born c. 1969

Daughter

Anouk McGregor. Born January 2011; wife, Eve Mavrakis

Daughter

Clara Mathilde McGregor. Born in February 1996; mother, Eve Mavrakis

Daughter

Esther Rose McGregor. Born Nov. 7, 2001; mother, Eve Mavrakis

Daughter

Jamiyan McGregor. Mongolian; adopted in April 2006 at four years of age by McGregor and his wife Eve Mavrakis

Father

James McGregor.

Grandmother

Phyllis Lawson.

Mother

Carol McGregor.

Uncle

Denis Lawson. Appeared in the first three "Star Wars" movies

Education

Kirkcaldy College of Technology

Guildhall School of Music and Drama, London , England

Morrison's Academy

Career Milestones

Left home at age 16 to work with the Perth Repertory Theatre in Scotland

1993

British TV debut, "Lipstick on Your Collar" (Channel 4)

1993

Feature film debut, "Being Human"

1993

Had first leading role as Julien Sorel in the BBC TV miniseries "Scarlet and Black"

1994

First collaboration with Danny Boyle, "Shallow Grave"; scripted by John Hodge

1996

American TV debut, an episode of HBO anthology series "Tales From the Crypt"

1996

Breakthrough screen role as a heroin addict in Boyle's "Trainspotting"; written by Hodge

1996

Had featured role opposite Gwyneth Paltrow in "Emma"

1997

Earned Emmy nomination for his guest-starring role on the NBC medical drama "ER" as a robber who takes Nurse Hathaway (Julianna Margulies) hostage

1997

Reteamed with Danny Boyle and John Hodge for "A Life Less Ordinary" opposite Cameron Diaz

1998

Garnered praise for his turn as an American glam rocker in "Velvet Goldmine"; performed songs on the soundtrack

1998

Returned to the London stage for the revival of "Little Malcolm and His Struggle Against the Eunuchs" staged by his uncle Denis Lawson

1999

Cast as the young Obi-Wan Kenobi in "Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace"

1999

Portrayed financier Nick Leeson, who brought down Barings Bank, in the biopic "Rogue Trader" (Cinemax)

2000

Cast as Irish writer James Joyce in the biopic "Nora"

2001

Appeared in the fact-based war film "Black Hawk Down"

2001

Portrayed a penniless writer who falls for a courtesan (Nicole Kidman) in the film musical "Moulin Rouge!"; the duet with Kidman called "Come What May" was a hit and placed on charts around the world

2002

Reprised role of Obi-Wan Kenobi in "Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones"

2003

Had lead opposite Renee Zellweger in "Down With Love"

2003

Portrayed a young Albert Finney in the movie "Big Fish"; Tim Burton's story about fathers and sons

2004

Appeared with fellow actor Charley Boorman on a motorcycle journey across Europe, Asia and North America, which was filmed for a reality type series aired on Bravo

2004

Starred opposite Tilda Swinton in the thriller "Young Adam"

2005

Co-starred with Scarlett Johansson in the sci-fi drama "The Island," directed by Michael Bay

2005

Made his musical theater debut in a remake of "Guys and Dolls" in London's West End

2005

Once again cast as Obi-Wan Kenobi in "Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith"

2005

Voiced genius inventor Rodney Copperbottom in the animated feature "Robots"

2006

Cast in "Alex Rider: Operation Stormbreaker" based on Stormbreaker, the first novel in the Alex Rider series

2006

Re-teamed with Renee Zellweger in the biopic "Miss Potter" about 'Peter Rabbit' author Beatrix Potter

2008

Co-starred with Colin Farrell as down on their luck brothers in Woody Allen's "Cassandra's Dream"

2008

Co-starred with Hugh Jackman and Michelle Williams in "Deception"

2009

Co-starred with George Clooney in "The Men Who Stare At Goats"

2009

Played a powerful Vatican insider in the film adaptation of Dan Brown's novel "Angels & Demons"

2009

Portrayed Gene Vidal, Earhart's lover in Mira Nair's biopic "Amelia"

2010

Cast alongside Emma Thompson in the family comedy "Nanny McPhee Returns"

2010

Co-starred opposite Pierce Brosnan, in Roman Polanski's "The Ghost Writer"

2010

Co-starred with Jim Carrey in "I Love You Phillip Morris"

2010

Played the son of an elderly cancer victim (Christopher Plummer) in "Beginners"

2011

Joined an all-star cast including Michael Douglas, Bill Paxton and newcomer Gina Carano in the action thriller "Haywire," directed by Steven Soderbergh

2012

Cast opposite Naomi Watts in "The Impossible," about a family's struggle to survive devastating 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami

2012

Co-starred with Emily Blunt in "Salmon Fishing in the Yemen," based on the novel by Paul Torday