Biography
Erik Palladino
decided to become an actor after the indelible impression made on him
as a youth by the Oscar-winning 'Raging Bull' and NBC's 'Saturday
Night Live,' which put him on a path veering away from the dead-end
taken by many of his hardened running mates in Yonkers, New York.
'My life could have
gone a different way if I didn't find acting,' admits Palladino. 'I
was involved with a crowd as a teen that was pretty tough. I woke up
years later and saw that a lot of those guys are in jail.'
Palladino, who was
born and raised in Yonkers, now co-stars as a gregarious and upfront
second-year resident on 'ER.' 'Last year, I was on the lowest-rated
series ('DiResta') in the history of prime-time network TV,' he says.
'Now, I'm on the highest-rated. It's almost surreal.'
Palladino is the
youngest . . . of three brothers. His mother is a schoolteacher and
his father owns a heating contractor business in the Bronx that
involves most of the rest of the family. At 14, he began performing
with the Children's Repertory Company from nearby New Rochelle, and
even appeared with the troupe off-Broadway. He attended the same
all-boys high school as Alan Alda (a recurring guest star on 'ER'
early this season) but remained aloof from acting, ever mindful of
his wisecracking friends' disdain for it. However, he became a
full-on theater arts student when he auditioned for and was accepted
at Marymount Manhattan College - an all-women's campus except for its
theater program -- where he later received his bachelor of arts
degree.
While Palladino
credits acting for 'turning my life around in college,' he later
opted to play in No Happy Faces, an alternative rock band, for four
years. Eventually, he worked his way back to his studied craft when
he became a series regular in Comedy Central's 'Short-Attention Span
Theatre.' In 1996, he even became a veejay on MTV while still
performing in his band
Perhaps Palladino's
big career break came when he simply decided to cut his long hair.
The next week, he was cast as a series regular in the comedy 'Love
and Marriage,' followed quickly by gigs as a recurring regular on
'Murphy Brown' and last year's comedy 'DiResta' (as the title
character's cousin who lived in the basement). His request to exit
the series was honored, and he was cast on the last day of his series
commitment in the upcoming feature film 'U-571' as an American sailor
in World War II opposite Matthew McConaughey, Bill Paxton and Harvey
Keitel. His other features include 'Can't Hardly Wait' and the
independents 'This Space Between Us,' 'The Week That Girl Died' and
'Roadkill.' He also guest-starred on 'Party of Five.'
Palladino enjoys
his offbeat character who's not above bending the rules to save a
patient. 'He's really an adrenaline junkie,' he says. 'He enjoys
people's quirks and likes to mess with them to get a reaction. He's
tough, strong-willed and a straight-shooter.'
In his leisure time,
Palladino prefers to box (while also participating in other sports),
write and hang out with his mixed-breed mutt. In addition, he remains
a loyal New York Yankee fan. His birthday is May 10.
This bio was taken
from NBC's ER
page.