Darkly handsome Nick Mancuso, born Nicodemo Antonio Massimo Mancuso, was born in 1948 in Mammola, Italy but raised as a child in Canada
(from age 8). During his over four decade career, films claimed him as the Antichrist (Franco Macalousso) in the Apocalypse trilogy produced by Cloud Ten Pictures (
Revelation (1999),
Tribulation (2000) and
Judgment (2001)), and TV has him best known for his starring roles in the NBC action series
Stingray (1986), which ran for two seasons, and as the title hitman who becomes a target himself in the one-season
Matrix (1993).
Although he developed an interest in acting in high
school, he chose to study psychology at the University of Toronto. The
acting bug bit again, however, and he was soon drawn to various
Canadian theatre groups in the 1970s. During this time, he became
artistic director for the Vancouver Playhouse Theatre, at the same time
building up his classical resume at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival.
TV and film soon came his way in the late 1970s, and he tackled roles
both in Hollywood, first as TV's
Dr. Scorpion (1978), and back in his homeland, where he won the prestigious Genie award for the movie
Ticket to Heaven (1981) as a man caught up in a religious cult. He impressed moviegoers as well with his moody, sexy presence in the US film
Heartbreakers (1984) co-starring
Peter Coyote and has also provided solid support for other stars, notably for
Steven Seagal in one of that star's best action thrillers
Under Siege (1992).
A sturdy name as an anti-hero or heavy in modestly-budgeted independents, Nick has proven over the years to be a solid, durable player in the "tough guy" crime mold, almost always with a serious edge. More recent, post-millennium gritty films include
Time of Fear (2002) Today You Die (2005), starring his "Under Siege" cohort
Steven Seagal,
Contract Killers (2008),
Violent Blue (2011),
Entity (2013) and
The Big Fat Stone (2014).