Ewan McGregor
Biography
McGregor was born in the Scottish coastal town of Crieff on March 31, 1971. After the normal run of school, he joined the Perth Repertory Theatre and then went on to train at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. His studies at Guildhall led to a key role in Dennis Potter’s 1993 Lipstick on Your Collar, a musical comedy set during the Suez Crisis. He also appeared in Scarlet & Black, another 1993 historical adaptation, this time taking the lead. The same year, McGregor made his big-screen debut playing a bit part in Bill Forsyth’s episodic Being Human. He continued to turn up on television on both sides of the Atlantic until late 1996; some of his more notable work included his turn as a beleaguered gunman in an episode of E.R. and the Cold War episode of Tales From the Crypt.
The actor’s breakthrough in motion pictures came with Shallow Grave (1994), a stylish, noir-influenced feature directed by Danny Boyle, in which McGregor essayed the role of Alex, a journalist who finds himself in a horrendous position after a murder. He quickly went on to appear in the British surfing parable Blue Juice and Peter Greenaway’s The Pillow Book before losing almost 30 pounds and shaving his head for his turn as heroin addict Mark Renton in the critically acclaimed Trainspotting, working, once again, with Danny Boyle. Having gained the attention of critics and audiences worldwide with this performance, McGregor proceeded to take something of a stylistic left turn by taking the role of Frank Churchill in the elegant historical comedy Emma (1996).
McGregor continued working at an impressive pace after Emma, appearing in Brassed Off (1996), Nightwatch, The Serpent’s Kiss (1997), and yet another feature for Danny Boyle, the 1997 fantasy A Life Less Ordinary. This latter film concluded on a raffish note, with an animated puppet of McGregor dressed in a kilt, apparently in the McGregor tartan. In 1998, the actor began his work on the Star Wars prequels and appeared in Todd Haynes’ Velvet Goldmine, in which he played an iconoclastic, Iggy Pop-like singer during the glam rock era of the ’70s. In 1999, along with his role in Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace, McGregor appeared as infamous financier Nick Leeson in the biopic Rogue Trader, and had a full slate of projects before him. Some of these projects included several for his own production company, Natural Nylon, which he co-founded with fellow actors Jude Law, Sean Pertwee, Sadie Frost, and fellow-Trainspotter Jonny Lee Miller.
In 2000, McGregor could be seen in one of Natural Nylon’s projects, Nora. Based on the real-life relationship between James Joyce and Nora Barnacle, it starred McGregor as Joyce and Susan Lynch as the eponymous Nora. The actor stayed in period costume for his other film that year, Baz Luhrmann’s Moulin Rouge! Set in 1899 Paris, it starred McGregor as a young poet who becomes enmeshed in the city’s sex, drugs, and Can Can scene and enters into a tumultuous relationship with a courtesan (Nicole Kidman). Following a turn in Black Hawk Down (2001), McGregor would reprise his role as a young Obi-Wan Kenobi in the eagerly anticipated Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones.
In 2003, McGregor would star in director Tim Burton’s Big Fish, in which he played the role of the young Edward Bloom, a man whose son, William (Billy Crudup), only really knows through tall tales, vividly brought to life in flashbacks. In David Mackenzie’s erotic drama Young Adam, which was shown at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival, McGregor played one of two barge workers unlucky enough to dredge up the nearly naked corpse of a young woman. The young actor also starred alongside Renée Zellweger, who, fresh from the success of Chicago, played the unlikely love interest of McGregor’s preening, sexist Catcher Block in Down With Love, director Peyton Reed’s homage to ’60s romantic comedies.
McGregor returned to the role of Obie-Wan Kenobi once again in 2005 for Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith, the final film in George Lucas’s epic saga. That same year, he could also be found lending his voice to the computer-animated family film Robots and starring opposite Scarlett Johansson in Michael Bay’s big-budget sci-fi actioner The Island. ~ Steven E. McDonald, All Movie Guide
Source: Yahoo Movies




