Kelvin Harrison Jr. (born July 23, 1994 ) is an American actor.
He is the recipient of such accolades as a Screen Actors Guild Award and nominations for a British Academy Film Award, Gotham Award, an Independent Spirit Award.
2012
In 2012, Harrison was cast in Ender's Game, based on the 1985 novel.
He was upgraded to day-player and interacted with actors such as Viola Davis, Harrison Ford, and Ben Kingsley.
Harrison credits Davis with making him take acting more seriously.
He then had a small role in 12 Years a Slave.
2013
He began his career with small roles in the 2013 films Ender's Game and 12 Years a Slave.
2016
Harrison would later appear in an episode of WGN America's Underground and the 2016 remake of Roots, both of which were produced in his home state of Louisiana.
That same year, the actor had a small role in Nate Parker's The Birth of a Nation.
Harrison was initially hesitant to participate in Roots, in part because it would be his fourth portrayal of a slave, and he did not have fond memories of watching the original as a child.
In retrospect, Harrison realized just how different the projects were.
In the meantime, Harrison landed a supporting role on Fox miniseries Shots Fired as well as a recurring role as Touie Dacey on Crackle's StartUp
Harrison began the year with a small supporting role in the Netflix acquired Dee Rees' Mudbound, which opened at the Sundance Film Festival to critical acclaim.
2017
His breakthrough performance came as Travis in the 2017 horror film It Comes at Night, and in 2019 he gained wider recognition for his work in Luce and Waves.
Later that year, he played the role of Travis in Trey Edward Shults' 2017 psychological horror film It Comes at Night.
The film focuses on a family hiding in a forest as the Earth is taken over by a highly contagious disease.
The film had its premiere at the Overlook Film Festival at Timberline Lodge in Oregon on April 29, 2017 and was theatrically released on June 9, 2017 in the United States by A24, was received positively by critics and grossed over $19 million worldwide.
Harrison received praise for his performance, getting nominated for Breakthrough Actor at the Gotham Awards that year.
He has credited the role for giving him a reason to continue his acting career.
2018
In 2018, Harrison notably starred in three films that premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, which were Monsters and Men, Assassination Nation & Monster.
In Reinaldo Marcus Green's Monsters and Men, he portrays Zyrick, a gifted teenage baseball player that becomes politically awakened after seeing a video of a man murdered by the police.
In Sam Levinson's Assassination Nation he has a smaller role as Mason, a friend of the female protagonists and in Anthony Mandler's Monster, based on the Walter Dean Myers novel of the same name, Harrison plays Steve Harmon, a seventeen-year-old honour student whose world comes crashing down around him when he is charged with felony murder.
Assassination Nation and Monsters and Men both got releases in the same year while Monster acquired a distribution deal with Netflix in 2021.
He followed these up with supporting roles in the dramas Jinn and JT LeRoy.
2019
2019 saw Harrison starring in two films that premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, social thriller Luce and psychological thriller The Wolf Hour, both starring Naomi Watts.
For his titular role in Julius Onah's Luce alongside Octavia Spencer and Tim Roth, Harrison received critical acclaim as the all-star high school athlete and accomplished public speaker born in war-torn Eritrea adopted in the United States.
Justin Chang of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "Harrison's performance, at once slippery and surgically precise, compounds that ambiguity in ingenious fashion. He exhibits a quality that might have seemed like mere self-consciousness in a different actor's hands. Harrison was nominated for Best Male Lead at the Independent Spirit Awards for his performance in the film.
Harrison later played Jesse in Nabil Elderkin's directorial debut Gully.
The film had its world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival on April 27, 2019 and eventually found a national theatrical release on June 4, 2021.
Harrison's major breakthrough of the year came with Waves, which premiered to critical acclaim at the Telluride Film Festival on August 30, 2019 and found him reuniting with It Comes at Night writer & director Trey Edward Shults.
2020
He then appeared in films such as The High Note (2020), The Trial of the Chicago 7 (2020), Cyrano (2021) and Elvis (2022).
He plays the starring role in the 2023 film Chevalier.
Harrison was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, to musicians Shirlita and Kelvin Harrison.
He grew up in the Garden District and later moved to The Westbank.
He studied studio engineering and marketing, before moving to Los Angeles, California to pursue acting, where he began taking acting classes.
He is also a skilled musician, mainly playing jazz and gospel on the piano, trumpet, as well as singing.
His father was trained by Ellis Marsalis and grew up with Harry Connick Jr. Harrison studied under Jason Marsalis, recorded with Delfeayo Marsalis, and met Wynton Marsalis.
Harrison attended Isidore Newman School, where he was one of the few black students in his class and struggled to fit in.
He originally went to Loyola University New Orleans to major in studio engineering as his father felt he would excel in music.
Harrison ultimately transferred to the University of New Orleans for film, with the goal of writing and directing his own films.