Josh Lucas Movies
Josh Lucas was a working actor for over a decade -- which included scene-stealing performances in
Alive (1993),
You Can Count on Me (2000), and
The Deep End (2001) -- before he shot to stardom with high-profile roles in
A Beautiful Mind (2001),
Sweet Home Alabama (2002), and
The Hulk (2003). Born in Arkansas,
Lucas moved with his family to over a dozen U.S. cities before settling in Gig Harbor, WA. There, he joined his high school's competitive acting team and went on to win the state title for dramatic interpretation in both his junior and senior years. After graduation,
Lucas moved directly to California where he made guest appearances on Fox's True Colors and Parker Lewis Can't Lose, ABC's Life Goes On, and CBS' Jake and the Fatman. The actor made his feature-film debut in the
Ethan Hawke vehicle
Alive (1993), before appearing opposite
Patrick Swayze and
Halle Berry in
Father Hood (1993).
Lucas later joined
Mark Hamill,
Malcolm McDowell,
John Rhys-Davies, and the infamous
Ginger Lynn Allen in the cast of the video game Wing Commander II: The Heart of the Tiger.
He also continued to act on the big screen in independent films -- such as
True Blue (1996),
Restless (1998),
Drop Back Ten (1999) -- and appeared opposite
Anson Mount in the Manhattan Theater Club's production of
Terrence McNally's Corpus Christi. Soon enough, formidable parts as a banker in
American Psycho (2000), roughneck deadbeat dad in
Kenneth Lonergan's award-winning
You Can Count on Me, and a doomed gay night-club owner in
The Deep End put
Lucas in the public eye. He went on to earn rave reviews as
Russell Crowe's nemesis-turned-friend in
Ron Howard's
A Beautiful Mind, before securing the plum roles of
Reese Witherspoon's backwoods husband in
Andy Tennant's
Sweet Home Alabama and Bruce Banner's (
Eric Bana) romantic rival in
Ang Lee's much-anticipated adaptation of
The Hulk.
Over the coming decade, Lucas would continue to appear on screen, in movies like Stolen, Daydream Nation, Life As We Know It, and J. Edgar, as well as TV shows like The Firm. ~ Aubry Anne D'Arminio, Rovi