When his hulking, icy, evil countenance brought shudders to the spines of the audience applauding "Fargo" (1996), many left the theater wondering and asking "Who was that guy?" Tall, with Nordic blond hair, Peter Stormare, who was teamed with Steve Buscemi as the kidnapping pair in "Fargo", is more than just "a guy". He is, in fact, a celebrated actor, director and playwright who had a fifteen-year association with Ingmar Bergman at the Royal National Theatre of Sweden. Stormare has also been a performer in international films since 1983 and a New York stage actor since he moved to the USA in 1992.During his long tenure at Sweden's Royal National Theatre, Stormare acted in productions of "Don Juan," "Cyrano de Bergerac" and "The Curse of the Starving Class" and wrote and directed "El Paso" and "The Electric Boy". When the company mounted a Bergman-directed "Hamlet" at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in 1988, Stormare won raves in the title role. On the company's world tours, the actor also played in "Long Day's Journey Into Night", "King Lear" and "Miss Julie".
Stormare made his feature film debut for Bergman with a bit role in "Fanny and Alexander" (1983). He had his first lead playing the older brother trying to save his younger brother from a life of crime in "Der Frusna Leoparden/The Frozen Leopard" (1986). Stormare was the beekeeper in "Malaprirater" (1987) and made his American film debut as the neurochemist who doubts Robin Williams in Penny Marshall's "Awakenings" (1990). Stormare also co-starred in Louis Malle's "Damage" (1992) before settling in the USA. In 1993, he appeared in "The Swan" at NYC's Public Theatre opposite leading lady Frances McDormand, who is married to Joel Coen. Two years later, when the Coen brothers were casting "Fargo", Stormare landed his breakthrough role. In 1997, he played one of the dinosaur hunters in Steven Spielberg's "The Lost World: Jurassic Park", supported David Duchovny and Timothy Hutton in "Playing God" and reunited with the Coens for "The Big Lebowski".
What followed was a string of roles in which Stormare brought his distinctive sly humor to an array of usually eccentric supporting characters in a long string of films, most notably "Armageddon" (1998), "8MM" (1999), "Chocolat" (2000), "The Million Dollar Hotel" (2000), "Dancer in the Dark" (2000), "Windtalkers" (2002), "Minority Report" (2002), "Spun" (2002), "Bad Boys II" (2003) and "Birth" (2004). He appeared as Ingvar in the experimental Julia Louis-Dreyfus sitcom "Watching Ellie" (NBC, 2002-2003), and Stormare was especially amusing playing a loopy but still fearsome Satan in a pivotal appearance in the third act of horror/action hybrid "Constantine" opposite Keanu Reeves. Another off-kilter, heavily accented performance, as the bewigged Italian Cavaldi in diector Terry Gilliam's fictionalized fantasy "The Brothers Grimm" (2005), started out with great comedic (even Pythonesque) promise but quickly grew wearisome when the director became overreliant on Stormare's outrageous performance for comic relief. The actor then joined the cast of the TV death row thriller "Prison Break" (Fox, 2005 - ) as imprisoned former mob boss John Abruzzi.
Profession(s):
Actor, director, playwright
Sometimes Credited As:
Peter Ingvar Rolf Storm
Peter Rolf Stormare
2008 Featured in the comedy "Witless Protection" with Larry the Cable Guy
2005 Cast in Terry Gilliam's "The Brothers Grimm" with Matt Damon and Heath Ledger
2005 Cast as imprisoned former mob boss John Abruzzi, in the death row series "Prison Break" (Fox)
2004 Cast in Jonathan Glazer's "Birth" starring Niccole Kidman
2002 Had regular role on the NBC sitcom "Watching Ellie" starring Julia Louis-Dreyfus
2002 Acted opposite Tom Cruise in "Minority Report" directed by Steven Spielberg
2000 Cast opposite Juliette Binoche and Lena Olin in Lasse Hallström's "Chocolat"
1998 Played the Russian Cosmonaut in "Armageddon" opposite Bruce Willis and Ben Affleck
1998 Reuinited with the Coen brothers for "The Big Lebowski"
1997 Appeared in "The Lost World: Jurassic Park"
1996 Breakthrough film role, as Steve Buscemi's partner in the Coen brothers' "Fargo"
1996 US episodic TV debut in guest spot on the UPN series "Swift Justice"
1992 Had featured role in Louis Malle's "Damage" starring Jeremy Irons and Juliette Binoche
1992 Moved to the USA
1988 Played "Hamlet" in Sweden, directed by Bergman; production also played at Brooklyn Academy of Music
1983 Feature film debut, bit role in Bergman's "Fanny and Alexander"
Worked with Ingmar Bergman and the Royal National Theatre of Sweden for 15 years as actor, director and playwright