Aden Young

Canadian-Australian actor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Aden Young (born 30 November 1971[1][2]) is a Canadian-Australian actor. He is best known for his portrayal of Daniel Holden in the SundanceTV drama Rectify, for which he was twice nominated for the Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Actor in a Drama Series. He has appeared in American, Canadian and Australian productions and since 2024 has performed the lead role of Det. Henry Graff in Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent.[3]

Born (1971-11-30) 30 November 1971 (age 54)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada[1][2]
OccupationActor
Yearsactive1991–present
SpouseLoene Carmen (m. 2014)
Quick facts Born, Occupation ...
Aden Young
Young at the 2012 AACTA Awards
Born (1971-11-30) 30 November 1971 (age 54)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada[1][2]
OccupationActor
Years active1991–present
SpouseLoene Carmen (m. 2014)
Children2
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Early life

Young was born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. His father Chip Young, an American born in Missouri, was a well-known CBC broadcaster and children's book author, as well as composer of Canadian classic 'Honky The Christmas Goose',[4][5] while his mother is a nurse from Newcastle, Australia. His family left Toronto for Australia in 1981. Young attended Galston High and Australian Theatre for Young People as a teenager.[6]

Career

Young was cast in his first role, as a young Frenchman in Bruce Beresford's religious epic Black Robe (1991)[7] on his 18th birthday.[8] International acclaim followed and Young was dubbed "the next Marlon Brando" in France and "the next Mel Gibson" in Hollywood but returned to Australia to support the local industry and focus on projects that he was more drawn to.[9][10]

He took the lead role in Australian arthouse noir film Broken Highway (1993), directed by pioneering female filmmaker Laurie McInnes, which screened in competition in Cannes[11] but received polarized reviews.[12]

Paul Cox's Exile was filmed soon after, described in Variety as "an ambitious, sometimes hallucinatory drama that tackles themes difficult to bring off successfully in the cinema". The two clashed dramatically during filming, but formed a lifelong friendship that led to Young becoming part of Cox's film family (Chris Haywood explains "Working with Cox is not dissimilar to being one of the Musketeers or part of a pirate crew") editing, appearing and helping out on many Cox productions.[13] Exile screened in competition at Berlin Film Festival, Montreal World Film Festival, Toronto Film Festival and Warsaw Film Festival[14] but did not receive a theatrical release.

Young was nominated for an Australian Film Institute Best Actor award and won a Film Critics Circle of Australia Best Actor award for his role as the "ratty-looking loser"[15] Psycho Joe opposite Ben Mendelsohn in Metal Skin (1994), Geoffrey Wright's examination of suburban hopelessness and revhead subculture, which screened internationally in competition at Venice Film Festival and Stockholm Film Festival among others. One reviewer wrote that "Young's depiction of this unsettling metamorphosis is central to the film's success."[16] Geoffrey Wright stated "There could be no dispute that he is one of the best actors in the country."[17]

After making Australian films River Street, Cosi, Hotel de Love and Paradise Road in quick succession, Young portrayed a starving Polish sculptor who spurns his lover Jessica Lange in US film Cousin Bette and as slacker desperado Buck in Under Heaven, a modern reworking of Henry James novel The Wings of the Dove.[18]

The early 2000s saw him starring as a traumatized Canadian soldier in War Bride, a German priest in Serenades, and smaller roles in The Crocodile Hunter: Collision Course and a doctor in Cox's Molokai.

In 2004 he signed onto the Sydney Theatre Company production of Hedda Gabler as Cate Blanchett's tortured alcoholic lover Ejlert Lovberg.[19] The production also had a 2006 season at Brooklyn Academy of Music and spawned documentary In the Company of Actors.[20]

Young directed the short film The Rose of Ba Ziz (2007),[21] adapted from a children's book written by his father; the film was made over five days on a shoestring budget of $700[22] and featured Hugo Weaving, Roy Billing, Odessa Young and an appearance by his significant other, Australian singer Loene Carmen, who also co-composed the film's score with Jed Kurzel.[23][24] Additionally, Young directed the AFI award-winning 25-minute film The Order (1999).[25][26]

Film roles followed, in World War I drama Beneath Hill 60 and French film The Tree, as Charlotte Gainsbourg's husband before starring as a besieged father dying from tetanus in the Kriv Stenders period gothic western Dark Frontier aka Lucky Country.[27][28]

Young reunited with Beresford for Mao's Last Dancer (2009), based on the 2003 best-selling autobiography of Chinese ballet dancer Li Cunxin, playing a Texan oil tycoon.[29] Beresford stated that Young's "a very cooperative and thoughtful actor."[30]

Young mimed the hit song "Even Though I'm A Woman",[31] by the Australian female indie supergroup Seeker Lover Keeper, in the 2011 music video directed by Natalie Van Dungen. He played American techno geek Meier in the Jason Statham/Robert De Niro action film Killer Elite and performed a cameo as Dr Victor Frankenstein in I, Frankenstein.[32]

Young edited Paul Cox documentaries Kalaupapa Heaven[33] Tajiri and feature film Salvation.[34][35] He also directed Carmen's music videos for "Everyone You Ever Knew (Is Coming Back To Haunt You" (2015)[36] and "Nashville High" (2007) as well as editing her music video "Mimic the Rain" (2009).[37]

In June 2012, Young was announced as the lead character Daniel Holden in the SundanceTV Southern Gothic series Rectify, which follows Holden's journey when he is released back to his family in a small Southern town after 19 years on Death Row for the murder of his girlfriend, following new evidence.[38] His critically acclaimed performance was hailed as "a haunted wonder"[39] with Variety proclaiming "Aden Young's portrait of Daniel is one of the greatest performances to ever grace any screen, without question. It's a travesty he hasn't been nominated for every single acting award in the TV world. The entertainment industry should make up new awards just to give to him."[40] Rectify was announced as a Peabody Award winner in April 2015[41] and Young has received two Critics Choice Best Actor nominations for Seasons 2 and 3.[39][42][43] Rectify was in the 2018 Guinness Book of Records as "Highest Rated TV Series" for its Metacritic rating of 99.

Young played lawyer Stephen Roche in the well received Don't Tell, the true story of a young Queensland woman who sued the church over sexual abuse she suffered at her Anglican school. The film also starred Jack Thompson and Rachel Griffiths. Young was nominated for Best Supporting Actor in the Film Critics Circle of Australia Awards.[44]

In 2017 Young took the lead in Damnation[45] before departing over creative differences.

He played villain Cyrus Mendenhall in Canadian indie drama Angelique's Isle in 2018,[46] and starred in the 2019 romantic comedy Elsewhere.[47]

In 2023 he appeared in Christian Sparkes's thriller drama The King Tide as Beau, a doctor left essentially irrelevant after a child with mystical healing powers turns up in a village.[48]

Personal life

Young has two sons, Dutch (born 2007) and Chester (born 2011), with his longtime partner, Australian singer-songwriter-musician-actress Loene Carmen. They married in Zebulon, Georgia while filming season 2 of Rectify in 2014.[49]

A portrait of Young by artist James Powditch was a 2008 Archibald Prize finalist. Young also appears in Powditch's 2012 work Berserk Warriors.[50]

Filmography

As actor

Film

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Role Notes
1991Black RobeDaniel
1992Over the HillNick
1993SniperDoug Papich
Love in LimboBarry McJannet
Broken HighwayAngel
Shotgun WeddingJimmy Becker
1994ExilePeter Costello
Metal SkinJoe
1995AudaciousStanley
1996CosiNick
River StreetBen
Hotel de LoveRick Dunne
1997Paradise RoadBill Seary
1998Under HeavenBuck
Cousin BetteCount Wenceslas Steinbach
1999Molokai: The Story of Father DamienDr. Kalewis
2001The War BrideCharlie
SerenadesJohann
2002The Crocodile Hunter: Collision CourseRon Buckwhiler
2004Human TouchGeorge
2005The BetAngus
2007In the Company of ActorsHimself/Eljert Lovburg
The Goat That Ate TimeNarratorShort film; voice only
FlipsicalUnknownShort film
2008SalvationGloria's Acolyte
2009Lucky CountryNat Doole
Shot OpenDodekShort film
Mao's Last DancerDilworth
2010Beneath Hill 60Major North
The TreePeter
Kissing PointMark LoganShort film
2011Killer EliteMeier
2013Final RecipeSean
2014I, FrankensteinDr. Victor Frankenstein
FronteraSheriff Randall Hunt
2016The UnseenBob Longmore
2017Don't TellStephen Roche
2018Angelique's IsleCyrus Mendenhall
2018ElsewhereBruno
2023The King TideBeau
TBAUntitled Mike Thornton biopic film TBAFilming
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Television

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Role Notes
2003After the DelugeYoung CliffTV movie
2006Two TwistedPatrick Dempsey/CloneSeason 1, Episode 7: "Soft Boiled Luck"
2007The Starter WifeJorge Stewart6 episodes
2011East West 101KendrickSeason 3, Episode 6: "Behold a Pale Horse"
Season 3, Episode 7: "Revelation"
2013–2016RectifyDaniel Holden4 seasons, 30 episodes
2014RakeJoshuaSeason 3, Episode 3
The CodeRandall KeatsMain role: Series 1
6 episodes
2015The PrincipalAdam Bilic3 episodes
2017The DisappearanceLuke Sullivan6 episodes
2019ReckoningMike SerratoNetflix mini-series; Main role; (10 episodes)
2023WellmaniaGabriel WolfNetflix mini-series; 1 episode
2024–presentLaw & Order Toronto: Criminal IntentDet. Sgt. Henry GraffMain role
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As director/writer/editor

More information Year, Title ...
YearTitleCreditsNotes
directorscreenWriterFilm Editor
1998The OrderYesYesYesShort film
2007The Rose of Ba ZizYesYesYesShort film
Loene Carmen Nashville HighYesNoYesMusic video
2009Loene Carmen Mimic the RainNoNoYesMusic video
SalvationNoNoYesFeature Film
Kalaupapa HeavenNoNoYesDocumentary film
2011Waste NotNoNoYesDocumentary film
2015Lo Carmen Everyone You Ever Knew (Is Coming Back To Haunt YouYesNoYesMusic video
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Awards and nominations

References

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