As Lestat de Lioncourt in Anne Rice's Queen of the Damned (2002) .
Studied drama at the Gaiety School of Acting, Dublin, Ireland.
Was originally cast as Aragorn in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, but was replaced by Viggo Mortensen after four days of shooting because they realized he was too young for the role.
Son of Peter and Lorna Townsend
Due to his parents' professions, Stuart had to wait 13 years for the birth of his younger brother Dylan, and 15 years for the birth of little sister Chloe
Before fame, Stuart and his friends formed a theatre group in Dublin, Ireland where they re-acted scenes from the kids' show "Man?ge enchant?, Le" (1964) (The Magic Roundabout). Stuart played Ermintrude the Cow.
He has a younger half-brother called Hugo (b. 2000)
Charlize Theron thanked him in her Oscar acceptance speech (2004).
He has a younger half-sister called Ella (b. 2005)
Irish citizen.
Shares birthday with Geoff Stults and Don Johnson.
Made two movies with his fianc?e Charlize Theron: Trapped (2002) and Head in the Clouds (2004). They met on the set of Trapped (2002).
A native of Dublin, Stuart Townsend was born to pro golfer Peter Townsend and Lorna Townsend, a well-known former model who died in 1994. Stuart Townsend first became interested in performing through his then-girlfriend, who was studying at the Gaiety School of Acting. Stuart Townsend also enrolled at the school and made his stage debut in the school's production of Tear Up the Black Sail. With the kind of dark, coolly seductive looks that lend themselves to playing either ladies' men or raving psychos, Stuart Townsend is one of the more compelling actors to have emerged from Ireland during the 1990s.
Stuart Townsend made his professional stage debut in John Crowley's True Lines. In 1996, Townsend broke onto the screen with his role in Gillies MacKinnon's Trojan Eddie. Portraying a seductive young man who steals away a bride from her groom on their wedding day, Stuart Townsend was afforded the opportunity to work with the legendary Richard Harris. Stuart Townsend's exposure in the film led to his first starring role, in Shooting Fish (1997), a successful comedy which cast him as a sweet-natured con man. That same year, Stuart Townsend had a supporting role in Carine Adler's acclaimed drama Under the Skin, engaging in emotional dysfunction and phone sex with the film's heroine. Stuart Townsend also made a terrifying impression in the Irish crime thriller Resurrection Man, playing a psychotic killer.
Stuart Townsend subsequently extended his talents to period drama, portraying an impoverished Jew in 19th century Silesia in Simon Magus (1998) and essaying a dual role in the 16th- and 20th century-set The Venice Project (1999). In 1999, Stuart Townsend was also visible in Michael Winterbottom's Wonderland, an ensemble drama that screened at that year's Cannes Film Festival. The turnover to the new millennium found Stuart Townsend with some big shoes to fill as he stepped into the role of Anne Rice's staple bloodsucker Lestat (originally portrayed by Tom Cruise in Neil Jordan's Interview With the Vampire (1994)) in 2002. Baring his fangs alongside co-star and title character {$Aaliyah (who perished in an airplane crash shortly before the film opened in theaters) Stuart Townsend recieved a fair amount of praise for his role in the film, which was previously rumored to have been heading for a straight to video release.