Like Tom Hanks and Jim Carrey, actor Eric Bana began his career as a light TV comedian in his native Australia, before breaking into dramatic features with a singularly powerful performance in the film, Chopper (2000), about a notorious and charismatic Aussie criminal. That film gave him the cache to break into Hollywood features, where he enjoyed critical acclaim, if not always box office rewards, in major motion pictures like The Hulk (2003), Troy (2004), and Steven Spielbergs Munich (2005).
Born Eric Banadinovich to Croatian and German parents in Melbourne, Australia, on Aug. 9, 1968, Bana began showing a knack for mimicry and comedy at a very early age by imitating friends and family members. He fell in love with the idea of becoming an actor after viewing fellow Aussie Mel Gibson in his star-making role of Mad Max (1979), yet did not make his performing debut until years later, while working as a bartender at a hotel. A successful debut as a stand-up comic gave him confidence, but the financial returns were too limited to allow him to give up his day job.
Banas big break came with a guest appearance on the late night talk show Tonight Live (7 Network, 1990-93). His turn impressed the producers of the sketch comedy series Full Frontal (7 Network, 1993-97), who asked him to join as a cast member and writer. Bana quickly became an audience favorite, based on the strength of his material, which incorporated parodies of popular Hollywood actors, as well as sketches based on his own family. By 1996, Bana had his own television special, Eric, before earning his own sketch comedy series, The Eric Bana Show in 1997. Despite his appeal, the show lasted just eight episodes. A second series, Eric, ran for only nine shows that same year. Bana filled out the year by marrying his girlfriend, Rebecca Gleason, a publicist for Seven Network. The two got engaged while on a trip to the United States which he won, ironically, by being named Bachelor of the Year by an Aussie magazine. The couple eventually had two children, a son in 1999, and a daughter in 2002.
In 1997, Bana made his film debut in the comedy The Castle, about a Melbourne family facing displacement after the government forces them to move. Banas role was a supporting one, but his turn as an accountant who fancies kickboxing pleased his fans. In 2000, Bana made the leap to leading man in Chopper, a biopic about Australian career criminal Chopper Read, whose warts-and-all biography was a best-seller in his native country. Bana gained 30 pounds for the role and underwent extensive daily make-up sessions to replicate Reads elaborate body tattoos. The film was a huge success in Australia, earning Bana his first international raves, as well as a Best Actor award from the Australian Film Institute.
That same year, Bana joined the cast of the Australian drama series Something in the Air (ABC, 2000-02), but departed a year later to accept Ridley Scotts invite to star in Black Hawk Down (2001), a grim and violent action film about American Special Forces soldiers who are ambushed by Somalian fighters while attempting to remove a pair of warlords. As with Chopper, Bana underwent major physical changes to play the part, including training with real Special Forces units. The film was met with mixed reviews, but enjoyed a successful box office run, including a brief stint in the top spot.
Bana was next offered the lead in Rob Cohens XXX (2002), but turned it down to play a road worker who stumbles upon a giant gold nugget in The Nugget (2002), a low-budget comedy made in Australia. Upon returning to stateside moviemaking, he found himself at the center of much buzz over his next role that of Bruce Banner, the human alter ego to Marvel Comics legendary Hulk. The expensive feature film, directed by arthouse veteran Ang Lee, was released in 2003 to almost universal disinterest by overeager fans, which viewed Banas performance as notable, but disliked the stiff and unemotive CGI Hulk and the script, which added unnecessary psychological layers to the character.
That same year, Bana joined fellow Australian comic actors Barry Humphries (better known as Dame Edna Everage) and Bruce Spence to provide the voices of three ravenous Great Barrier Reef sharks in the Disney/Pixar hit, Finding Nemo. The following year, he returned to Hollywood for Wolfgang Petersens unintentionally campy historical epic Troy (2004). As Prince Hector, Bana offered the sole note of believability amidst a cast populated by Brad Pitt, Orlando Bloom, and Diane Kruger. In interviews, Bana shrugged off the back-to-back failures of The Hulk and Troy, citing his own satisfaction with the end results. Despite the heavy promotional schedule for Troy, Bana also found time to contribute to several promotional spots for the Mental Illness Foundation, a non-profit organization in Australia which worked to promote awareness for people with mental illnesses.
Bana next teamed with Geoffrey Rush and Daniel Craig to star in Steven Spielbergs Munich (2005), a film which traced the Israeli governments retaliation against the Palestinian terrorists that murdered Israeli athletes during the 1972 Winter Olympics. Bana received excellent reviews for his role as the conflicted family man who is pressed into service by Israels Prime Minister, Golda Meir, finding his task of assassinating his targets an almost insurmountable moral quandary. Though the film failed to score significantly at the box office, it received widespread critical acclaim and a considerable amount of negative press as well from Jewish leaders as well as five Academy Award nominations. That same year, Bana provided the narration for an Australian documentary, Terrors of Tasmania, which examined the endangered Tasmanian devil.
After the birth of his children, Bana limited his film output to a single production a year so that he could spend more time at home in Melbourne. Strangely, the decision had almost no impact on his career. He continued to remain in demand stateside. 2007 saw the release of Lucky You, a romantic comedy about a troubled professional poker player who finds love at the same time he is slated to challenge his own father (Robert Duvall) in a high-stakes tournament. The film, directed by L.A. Confidential (1997) helmer Curtis Hanson, actually began production prior to Banas work in Munich, but was pushed back several times by the studio.
Copyright © Baseline 2007.