Caspar Phillipson

About Caspar Phillipson

Who is it?: Actor
Birth Day: January 13, 1977
Birth Sign: Aquarius
Occupation: Actor
Years active: 1995–present
Website: www.casparphillipson.com

Caspar Phillipson Net Worth

Caspar Phillipson was born on January 13, 1977, is Actor. Handsome young actor Caspar Phillipson was born in Denmark in 1971. He applied to the Aarhus Teater in 1991 and finished his education in 1995. He made connections to Aarhus Teater in 6 years. Caspar had never taken part in a movie; he is more focused on theater plays, and had taken part in many musicals such as "Rocky Horror Show", "Les Miserables", "Carmen Negra" and "Kameliadamen". Many discovered his lovely voice, and in 1999 he started making Danish record tapes of well-known book writer Agatha Christie's famous books. Few years later in 2002, he was chosen as the Danish voice of the kind Kungfu fighter Goku in the animated Manga series "Dragon Ball Z" (1996), and now Caspar is famous and loved among children. Two years later he became the Danish voice of the irritating Prince Charming in DreamWorks movie Shrek 2 (2004). He is also the Danish voice of Nergal and Billy's Dad in "Grim & Evil" (2001), and had an Additional Voice in the Danish version of the Twentieth Century Fox Film Garfield (2004). Present he's most known for his role as Mortimer in the Danish theater play Arsenik og gamle kniplinger (2002) (TV), recorded live in "Det Danske Teater". Caspar is also a professional singer. And are one of the singers in the Danish CD "Fiigs og Ballade", recorded along with Frits Helmuth and other various actors and singers.
Caspar Phillipson is a member of Actor

💰Caspar Phillipson Net worth: $900,000

Some Caspar Phillipson images

Biography/Timeline

1963

After the release of Jackie, Phillipson appeared in live performances as Kennedy alongside Anders Agner Pedersen, a Danish biographer of Kennedy; Pedersen would provide historical context for a Kennedy speech before Phillipsen delivered it. Phillipson delivered notable speeches by Kennedy such as his inaugural address, his 1963 American University speech, and his 1963 West Berlin speech. Phillipson reprised the role of Kennedy again in a short film, performing a "lost" speech written for the President to deliver on 22 November 1963—the date of his assassination. Phillipson's delivery of the speech was filmed at the 2017 COLCOA Film Festival and released as The Speech JFK Never Gave.

2005

Phillipson has worked as a stage actor, screen actor, and voice actor. As a voice actor, Phillipson has dubbed roles from English-language films into Danish, including revoicing Johnny Depp as Willy Wonka in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005). Phillipson has appeared in Scandinavian productions for the screen, including the television series The Bridge and Borgen.

2014

Although Phillipson appeared for less than ten minutes in Jackie, the press noted his striking, even uncanny resemblance to Kennedy. The Washington Post commented on the resemblance after photos from the film's set were released: "That thatch of hair, those white teeth, the smile lines around the eyes — all very Kennedyesque. He might not be familiar to U.S. audiences, but he's far more visually similar to the former prez than other actors who’ve played JFK in recent memory, including James Marsden in The Butler (2013), Greg Kinnear in the 2011 TV miniseries The Kennedys and Rob Lowe in 2013's Killing Kennedy." Prior to auditioning for the part, Phillipson said his resemblance to Kennedy had only been noticed when he spent time in the United States: "I did a workshop years ago with Frank Corsaro, this iconic American Teacher — he was the leader of Actors Studio — and suddenly, in the middle of a different scene, he said in this gruff voice, 'You have to do Kennedy one day. You just have to.'" Following Corsaro's advice, Phillipson practiced speeches by Kennedy and his brother Robert F. Kennedy, who he believed he more closely resembled.

2016

Phillipson portrayed John F. Kennedy in Jackie (2016), his first role in an English-language film. He first auditioned for the part by video from Istanbul, where he was appearing in a stage production of Hamlet. To audition in-person for Jackie in Paris, Phillipson claimed sick leave from a Danish stage production called Don't Touch Nefertiti, missing five sold-out performances in a role that had been specially written for him. The Danish theater company took Phillipson to court and, in January 2017, the company was awarded kr. 116,000 for the inconvenience he had caused the theater.