If it was not for the American art house success "Croupier" (2000), a taut crime thriller that was ignored in his native Britain, actor Clive Owen might possibly have remained an unknown commodity. Owen spent the better part of his early career giving strong, often hypnotic performances in low-budge British films that barely saw the light of day. Once "Croupier" hit American shores, however, audiences and critics suddenly stood up and took notice. He was immediately hailed as the second coming of Sean Connery and attracted large amounts of attention from Hollywood. He cemented his status with strong turns in "Gosford Park" (2001) and "The Bourne Identity" (2002), establishing the late-starter as a bona fide talent. But Owen's true moment came when he won a Golden Globe - which led to an Oscar nomination - for his wicked performance in Mike Nichols' brutal relationship drama, "Closer" (2005) - a role that firmly catapulted his status as both a serious actor and bona fide movie star with an overt appeal to both sexes.
Born on Oct. 3, 1964 in the small town of Coventry, England, Owen was raised in a fairly rough neighborhood by his country-western singing dad, who was divorced from his mom in 1968. Owen knew early on that he wanted to be an actor after playing the Artful Dodger in a school production of "Oliver!" When he was 13-years-old, he joined a youth group run by the Coventry Theatre while a student at Binley Comprehensive. Accustomed to poverty and occasional violence, Owen spent two years after graduating high school on the dole while trying to jumpstart his acting career. He previously tried applying to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA), but decided instead to drop out of civil society and make it on his own terms. Two soul-sucking years later, Owen reapplied to RADA and got in. He was fortunate enough to be working with a group in school that was workshopping a Howard Barker play that had yet been put to market. The play later opened at the Royal Court, attracting agents wishing to represent young Owen before he had the chance to even graduate.
After graduation, he took to the stage at the Young Vic, playing Romeo in "Romeo and Juliet" - where he met his soon-to-be wife, Sarah-Jane Fenton, who played Juliet - and Claudio in "Measure for Measure." Owen made his feature debut in "Vroom" (1988), a story about three people - Owen, David Thewlis and Diana Quick - who escape their dreary surroundings and go on a road trip that suddenly turns disastrous. That same year, he displayed his darker side as a psychopath in the BBC adaptation of "Precious Bane," which aired in the USA on PBS' "Mystery!" before turning roguishly heroic for the British TV series, "Chancer" (1990-91). Owen delivered a strong portrayal of an ambitious businessman who is seduced by his older sister (Saskia Reeves), then becomes obsessed when she tries to break the affair off in Stephen Poliakoff's excellent drama "Close My Eyes" (1991). Owen was tapped again by Poliakoff; this time to play a Jewish doctor who clashes with the head of a medical center (Charles Dance) in the period piece "Century" (1993).
He crossed the Atlantic to appear in the ABC drama "Class of '61" (1993), as an Irish graduate of West Point who goes off to fight in the Civil War. Owen received strong notices for his seductive hedonist in "The Return of the Native" (CBS, 1994) and as Halle Berry's lover in "The Rich Man's Wife" (1996). After starring as a British private investigator in the series "Sharman" (1996), Owen essayed his most challenging role to date, playing a concentration camp inmate in Sean Matthias' film version of "Bent" (1997). As Max, the actor gave a powerful performance, skillfully negotiating the characters evolution from selfish and debonair decadent to caring individual. Owen and co-star Lothaire Bluteau worked off one another to great effect, with both delivering star-making performances.
After co-starring on the London stage in "Closer" (1997), the actor appeared opposite Alex Kingston in director Mike Hodges' absorbing crime drama "The Croupier" (1999), the film that would provide his breakthrough role. As a hard-boiled dealer who conspires to defraud a casino, Owens' performances prompted critic Roger Ebert to compare his steely reserve to that of Sean Connery, noting "he doesn't give himself wholly to the action, but seems to be keeping a part of his mind outside of it, measuring and calculating." Not surprisingly, Owen quickly began topping the lists of potential successors to the James Bond role after Pierce Brosnan. Meanwhile, the actor's popularity increased when he starred in a series of four "Second Sight" telepics for the BBC, playing hot shot British detective Ross Tanner in 1999-2000, and he became an icon of cool as The Driver in a series of advertising-driven, Avant-garde action shorts sponsored by BMW and helmed by directors John Woo, Ang Lee, Guy Ritchie, Tony Scott, Joe Carnahan and John Frankenheimer.
On the big screen, Owen again impressed with his turn in "Gosford Park" (2001), director Robert Altman's delightful ensemble riff on British drawing room murder mysteries, playing the brooding Robert Park, who emerges as a central figure in the storyline. Off that success, he was cast in the big budget studio adaptation of Robert Ludlum's spy thriller "The Bourne Identity" (2002) as the ruthless, steel-nerved assassin The Professor. Owen next starred opposite Angelina Jolie in the disappointing melodrama "Beyond Borders" (2003), the story of a disaster-relief worker who falls in love with a socially conscious wealthy woman. He rebounded strongly, however, when he reunited with Hodges for the noirish "I'll Sleep When I'm Dead" (2004), playing a retired British gangster who emerges from his secluded countryside life to investigate the death of his brother.
Next up was Antoine Fuqua's supposedly "demystified" retelling of the legend of "King Arthur" (2004), a big budget, action-oriented film that cast Owen as England's once and future king, this time set in a more historically correct context - if indeed a King Arthur actually existed. Owen then appeared in the highly literate, often romantically brutal drama "Closer," directed by Mike Nichols. Playing part of two couples (including Natalie Portman, Julian Roberts and Jude Law) who become messily intertwined in a love/sex gender war, it was his hard-edged performance that was the most heavily cited by critics and viewers. Not surprisingly, Owen took home the Golden Globe trophy for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture. Hot off his Globe win, Owen earned a spot in the Best Supporting Actor category for the Academy Awards.
Amid furious rumors that he was being courted to become the next James Bond (he later admitted he wasn't interested in the role, which ultimately went to Daniel Craig), Owen appeared to splendid effect in director Robert Rodriguez and writer-artist Frank Miller's co-venture "Sin City" (2005), a visceral, visually stunning adaptation of Miller's crime noir comic book series. Headlining the segment drawn from Miller's story arc "The Big Fat Kill," Owen played the hard-edged but noble Dwight McCarthy, who becomes embroiled in a sudden, violent battle over control of Sin City's Old Town, where prostitutes armed to the teeth reign. A portion of Owen's storyline, the eerie sequence in which he drives the talking corpse of the corrupt cop Jackie Boy (Benicio del Toro) was also directed by Quentin Tarantino. Next was the thriller "Derailed" (2005), which cast Owen and Jennifer Aniston as two married business executives having an affair who are forced into violent and illicit acts by a sadistic criminal, and must turn the tables to save their families.
After the blackmail thriller came and went without much notice, Owen starred in Spike Lee's impressive genre piece, "Inside Man" (2006), playing a brilliant and cool-headed thief who remains one step ahead of a smooth-talking hostage negotiator (Denzel Washington) in an effort to pull off the perfect heist. Owen rounded out the year on a high note, starring in Alfonso Cuarón's multi-award nominated "Children of Men" (2006), a futuristic dystopian tale about a former political activist (Owen) turned down-and-out bureaucrat who is convinced by a former lover (Julianne Moore) to help transport a young woman pregnant (Clare-Hope Ashitey) with the world's only child after all humanity has become infertile - to the fabled Human Project in order to save the future. Owen followed with "Shoot-Em-Up" (2007), an action thriller about a mysterious man who delivers a baby during a shoot out and is entrusted with protecting the child. He was next cast as Sir Walter Raleigh in "Elizabeth: The Golden Age" (2007), Shekhar Kapur's follow up to "Elizabeth" (1998) in which the Virgin Queen (Cate Blanchett) becomes involved in a relationship with the famed poet and explorer during one of the British Empire's many entanglements with Spain.
Family
DAUGHTER: Hannah Owen. Born in 1997.
DAUGHTER: Hannah Owen. Had one; survived him.
DAUGHTER: Eve Owen. Born in September 1999.
DAUGHTER: Eve Owen. Has eight younger.
Companion
WIFE: Sarah-Jane Fenton. Paternal; hauled borax out of Death Valley, earned enough to buy timberland and establish a sawmill in 1873 on Peckinpah Mountain in Sierra Nevada; sold sawmill and bought general store and way station.
WIFE: Sarah-Jane Fenton. Actor. Met when they appeared together as "Romeo and Juliet"; married 1995.
Milestone
Became a member of the Young Vic, performing in several plays, such as "Romeo and Juliet"
1988: Feature film debut, "Vroom"
1989: Made American TV debut in "Precious Bane," a two-part segment of the PBS series, "Mystery!"
1990 - 1991: Played the series lead in "Chancer"
1991: Won praise for his performance as an incestuous brother in Steven Poliakoff's "Close My Eyes"
1993: Directed by Poliakoff in "Century"
1996: First major Hollywood film, "The Rich Man's Wife"
1996: Starred in the ITV series, "Sharman"
1997: Played the leading role in the film adaptation of Martin Sherman's "Bent"
1999: Received international acclaim for his role in Mike Hodges' "Croupier"
1999: Appeared in the BBC series "Second Sight" as Chief Inspector Ross Tanner (aired on PBS in the US)
2000: Co-starred opposite Helen Mirren in "Greenfingers"
2001: Appeared in a series of advertisements for BMW shown over the Internet at bmwfilms.com
2001: Played a valet in Robert Altman's "Gosford Park"; second collaboration with Helen Mirren
2002: Had a villainous turn, opposite Matt Damon in "The Bourne Identity"
2004: Re-teamed with Hodges for "I'll Sleep When I'm Dead"
2004: Played the title role in Antoine Fuqua's version of "King Arthur"
2004: Co-starred with Julia Roberts, Natalie Portman and Jude Law in "Closer"; directed by Mike Nichols and based on the play by Patrick Marber; earned first Academy Award nomination
2005: Cast as Dwight in the adaptation of comic book icon Frank Miller's uber-noir series, "Sin City"; co-directed by Miller and Robert Rodriguez
2005: Starred opposite Jennifer Aniston in the thriller, "Derailed"
2006: Played a mysterious bank robber in Spike Lee's "Inside Man"
2006: Starred in Alfonso Cuaron's highly acclaimed, "Children of Men"; worked on the screenplay, although he was uncredited
2007: Starred alongside Paul Giamatti in the film, "Shoot 'Em Up"
2007: Appeared as Sir Walter Raleigh, opposite Cate Blanchett, in the film "Elizabeth: The Golden Age"
2009: Teamed with Naomi Watts and director Tom Tykwer for "The International"
2009: Re-teamed with Julia Roberts to play corporate spies in "Duplicity"
2009: Played a grieving single parent trying to raise his equally grieving son in "The Boys are Back"
Education
Royal Academy of Dramatic Art - London, England - drama - 1984-1987 - Classmates with Ralph Fiennes
On his role in "The Rich Man's Wife", Owen was quoted: "It was an amazing experience. I was there for three months and was given the complete Hollywood treatment. It was a real treat to go to the States and work in L.A., but Hollywood's a crazy place. I wouldn't like to live there but equally I wouldn't have missed the opportunity for anything."
"Parenthood and family come first for me... when I'm not working I'm cool with the 'Teletubbies.'"---Owen to Biography, Summer 2004.
"When I got into drama school," he says. "I really felt like someone plucked me out of the life I was in and put me on the path to somewhere else."---Owen to GQ, March 2005.