John Krasinski Movies
Best known to small-screen devotees as sales representative Jim Halpert, the eternally patient, undeclared admirer of Pam Beesly (
Jenna Fischer) on
Greg Daniels' hit NBC sitcom/mockumentary
The Office, Massachusetts native
John Krasinski graduated from Rhode Island's Brown University in 2001 as an honors playwright, but quickly segued into acting. Within three years launched himself into films, predominantly with bit roles and supporting parts, but consistently echoing the promise that he would soon find himself among number-one box-office draws and Tinseltown heartthrobs. By 2006, in fact, People Magazine featured
Krasinski in its "Sexiest Men" issue, a testament to the actor's rapidly growing recognition in the eyes of the public.
Born October 20, 1979,
Krasinski grew up and attended high school in Newton, an affluent western suburb of Boston. After receiving his degree from Brown,
Krasinski studied at the National Theater Institute. 2004 marked the actor's "breakthrough year," with fleeting appearances in no less than four A-list productions. That year, he had bit parts as Ben in the American Zoetrope film
Kinsey, a biopic of sex researcher
Alfred Kinsey, directed by
Bill Condon and starring
Liam Neeson; Bob Flynn in
Matt Mulhern's finely wrought (and underappreciated) alcoholism drama
Duane Hopwood starring
David Schwimmer; Messenger #3 in
Tim Story's urban comedy
Taxi, with
Queen Latifah and
Jimmy Fallon; and the British CG-animated fantasy
Doogal (aka,
The Magic Roundabout), which didn't find U.S. release until early 2006. The first two of these films were widely lauded sleepers, the last two critically despised (though they failed to hurt
Krasinski's career, given the low profile of his involvement).
The Office followed in 2005. Adapted by
Daniels from a hit 2001 British series of the same title, the program -- a ratings bonanza on NBC -- stars
Daily Show vet
Steve Carell as Michael Scott, the tactless, vain, pushy, and loudmouthed (yet well-meaning) director of the Dunder-Mifflin paper company. While
Carell's off-the-wall antics spiked the series with a never-ending source of hilarity, the gradually developing relationship between
Krasinski's Jim and
Fischer's Pam (two straight roles) brought the series weight and solicited interest from those viewers seeking deeper and more meaningful character development. Perhaps sensing this,
Daniels opted to stretch their courtship at a snail's pace over the course of several seasons.
Krasinski would appear in several movies even as The Office's success continued on the small screen, like
Jarhead,
The Holiday,
For Your Consideration,
License to Wed,
Leatherheads,
Away We Go, and Big Miracle. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi