Leo Fitzpatrick
Leo Fitzpatrick (born August 10, 1978) is an American actor, artist, DJ, and art gallerist, best known for his debut role as the HIV-positive skateboarder Telly in Larry Clark's controversial 1995 independent film Kids.[1] Discovered at age 14 while skateboarding in Washington Square Park by director Larry Clark, who cast him in Kids without prior acting experience, Fitzpatrick's raw performance captured the gritty realities of New York City's youth culture and propelled him into the spotlight.[2] His acting career expanded to include lead roles in films like Bully (2001), where he portrayed a troubled teen involved in a murder plot, and supporting parts in Storytelling (2001) and City of Ghosts (2002).[1] On television, he gained further recognition as Johnny Weeks, a young drug dealer, in the HBO series The Wire (2002–2004), and appeared in episodes of My Name Is Earl (2005–2009) as Sonny, Sons of Anarchy (2008–2014), Banshee (2013–2016), and Blue Bloods (2010–2024).[1][3] Beyond acting, Fitzpatrick has immersed himself in the New York art scene, co-directing the Marlborough Contemporary gallery from 2015 to 2019 and curating exhibitions featuring artists like Harry Gamboa Jr.[4][5] In 2020, he founded his own gallery, Public Access, in the Lower East Side, emphasizing accessible contemporary art, which operated until 2023.[6] He also maintains a parallel career as a DJ, hosting a weekly radio show on The Lot Radio since 2018, blending music from punk, hip-hop, and electronic genres reflective of his skateboarding roots.[4] Fitzpatrick's multifaceted path underscores a transition from child actor to cultural figure, often reflecting on how Kids shaped his life while pursuing creative outlets in art and music that align with his lifelong involvement in skateboarding and New York subcultures.[7][8]Early life
Childhood and family
Leo Fitzpatrick was born Leonardo Aurellio Randy Fitzpatrick on August 10, 1978, in West Orange, New Jersey.[9][10] He grew up in a working-class Irish-American family, with both parents having immigrated to the United States from Ireland as teenagers.[5] His father worked as a janitor, while his mother served as a maid; she raised Fitzpatrick and his four siblings after separating from his father.[5] Fitzpatrick's early years were spent in suburban New Jersey, where he experienced a modest upbringing shaped by his family's circumstances.[5] He attended local schools but left after the ninth grade, around the time skateboarding began to emerge as a key interest that drew him toward New York City on weekends.[5]Skateboarding and discovery
Born in West Orange, New Jersey, Leo Fitzpatrick began skateboarding as a child in his hometown, where the activity quickly became a central part of his life. By his early teens, around age 13 to 15, Fitzpatrick started making frequent trips from New Jersey to New York City, drawn by the city's burgeoning skateboarding scene in the early 1990s.[7] In NYC, he immersed himself in the vibrant, diverse subculture of East Coast skateboarding, a tight-knit community of young people often from challenging backgrounds who found camaraderie and identity through the sport.[11][7] He frequented iconic spots such as Lafayette Street, Washington Square Park, Astor Place, and Brooklyn Banks, where skaters pushed boundaries in an era before widespread commercialization.[11][7] For Fitzpatrick, skateboarding represented more than a hobby; it was a lifestyle and subculture that defined his teenage years, with no initial ambitions toward acting or other pursuits.[7] In 1993, at age 15, he was discovered by photographer and director Larry Clark while skating in Washington Square Park, leading to his casting in the film based on a screenplay written by Korine.[12]Acting career
Breakthrough in Kids
Leo Fitzpatrick was cast as the lead character Telly—a sexually predatory, HIV-positive teenager—in the 1995 film Kids without prior acting experience.[13] The script, written by 19-year-old Harmony Korine based on his observations of urban youth culture, emphasized raw authenticity, and Fitzpatrick's selection stemmed from Clark's desire for genuine street kids rather than trained performers, with much of the dialogue improvised during production.[14] Filming took place over a single week in the summer of 1994, capturing a day in the lives of New York teens through Clark's verité-style direction and Korine's loose screenplay, which allowed non-actors like Fitzpatrick to draw from personal experiences for natural performances.[7] However, the production sparked immediate controversies due to the cast's underage status—many actors were teenagers—and the inclusion of explicit content, including simulated sex scenes, drug use, and a graphic depiction of date rape, raising concerns about child endangerment and exploitation on set.[14] Upon its premiere at the Sundance Film Festival in January 1995, Kids generated intense buzz as a provocative portrait of aimless youth amid the AIDS crisis, blending cultural critique with shocking realism that divided audiences and critics on its value as art versus sensationalism.[15] The film's July 1995 theatrical release amplified the backlash, earning an NC-17 rating from the MPAA for its unfiltered depictions of teen sexuality and violence, which prompted legal threats of child obscenity charges, heated media debates over ratings and censorship, and widespread accusations of promoting immorality.[14] For Fitzpatrick, who turned 17 around the time of release, the role thrust him into sudden fame, forever associating him with Telly's disturbing persona, though he has reflected that the performance's raw authenticity derived directly from his own skate scene roots, lending credibility to the film's unflinching look at adolescent recklessness.[7]Film and television roles
Following his debut in Kids, Fitzpatrick continued to portray complex, often troubled young characters in independent cinema during the early 2000s, frequently delving into themes of adolescent rebellion, dysfunction, and moral ambiguity. In Larry Clark's Bully (2001), he played the hitman, a reluctant accomplice hired by a group of teens to murder their abusive peer, embodying the film's raw examination of peer pressure and escalating violence among Florida youth.[16] Similarly, in Todd Solondz's Storytelling (2001), Fitzpatrick portrayed Marcus in the "Fiction" segment, a high school student with a pronounced speech impediment who navigates humiliation, academic pressure, and fleeting relationships in suburban America.[17] That same year, he appeared in a supporting role in Serendipity (2001) as a leasing office temp,[18] and as Todd, a crude and antagonistic road trip companion, in the comedy Bubble Boy, where his role highlighted themes of isolation and misguided quests for connection amid youthful antics.[19] Transitioning into the mid-2000s, Fitzpatrick gravitated toward supporting roles in indie dramas that expanded on his early persona while introducing elements of criminality and personal redemption. In Rebecca Miller's Personal Velocity: Three Portraits (2002), he played Mylert, a volatile young man entangled in a story of domestic escape and self-reinvention.[20] He also had an uncredited appearance in Matt Dillon's directorial debut City of Ghosts (2002), set against the backdrop of Southeast Asian cons and expatriate intrigue. These projects reflected his preference for character-driven indies over mainstream fare, allowing him to explore multifaceted youth archetypes without succumbing to early typecasting. Fitzpatrick's television career gained momentum in the mid-2000s with guest and recurring parts that showcased his ability to convey addiction, street smarts, and quiet intensity. He portrayed Johnny Weeks, a desperate heroin addict and petty criminal allied with the Barksdale organization, across 14 episodes of HBO's The Wire from 2002 to 2004, appearing in the first three seasons and contributing to the series' gritty depiction of Baltimore's underbelly.[21] In 2005, he guest-starred as Sonny, a rough-edged accomplice in a heist gone wrong, on NBC's My Name Is Earl.[22] His TV presence continued with the role of Mr. Mouse, a volatile hostage-taker, in the 2007 Spike miniseries The Kill Point, and as Shepard, a loyal but doomed SAMCRO prospect, in multiple episodes of FX's Sons of Anarchy during its 2010 season.[23] In the ensuing years, Fitzpatrick's roles evolved toward more nuanced, adult-oriented characters in both film and television, emphasizing selective indie work and genre versatility over prolific output. Mid-decade appearances included cameos in thrillers like Cold Comes the Night (2013) as a shadowy operative and The Drowning (2016) as a suspect in a psychological drama, signaling a move from raw youth rebellion to layered portrayals of ambiguity and consequence. By the late 2010s and into the 2020s, he embraced voice acting and documentary elements, voicing multiple characters like a bounty hunter in Adult Swim's animated Teenage Euthanasia (2021–2023) and appearing as himself in the punk scene doc Moments Like This Never Last (2020). Recent indie credits include Ronny, a barfly entangled in personal turmoil, in Billboard (2019), and Jason, a reclusive tech worker, in the sci-fi drama Hover (2018), underscoring his ongoing commitment to intimate, character-focused projects amid a balanced career.[24]Art and gallery career
Transition to art
In the early 2010s, Leo Fitzpatrick began shifting his focus from acting toward the visual arts, motivated by a desire to engage more deeply with New York's vibrant downtown creative community and to foster spaces free from commercial pressures.[25] Immersed in the city's Lower East Side and East Village scenes, he drew inspiration from longstanding friendships with fellow creatives, including filmmaker and artist Harmony Korine, whose boundary-pushing work from their shared youth in the 1990s skate culture echoed Fitzpatrick's own evolving interests.[6] This period marked a pivot enabled by the financial stability from his acting roles, allowing him to explore art without immediate economic constraints.[26] Fitzpatrick's initial forays into the art world involved collecting works by emerging and established artists, as well as participating in collaborative projects that blended his skateboarding roots with contemporary expression.[27] He began exhibiting and supporting pieces that captured raw, urban energy, often collaborating with peers to highlight underrepresented voices in non-traditional settings like pop-up spaces or informal gatherings.[28] A pivotal step came in 2012 when Fitzpatrick co-founded the Home Alone gallery in TriBeCa with artists Nate Lowman and Hanna Liden, creating an experimental venue that emphasized artistic freedom over sales.[29][30] The space operated on a strictly non-commercial ethos, prohibiting any transactions to prioritize community and experimentation, much like the DIY ethos of 1990s skateboarding crews where participation trumped profit.[31] Early shows at Home Alone featured diverse artists such as Josh Smith and Sue de Beer, showcasing paintings, installations, and multimedia works in a casual, inclusive atmosphere that encouraged dialogue among creators and viewers.[25] This philosophy positioned art as a communal endeavor, reflecting Fitzpatrick's belief in accessible, unpretentious spaces that mirrored the collaborative spirit of his skateboarding past.[32]Gallery directorships and projects
In 2015, Fitzpatrick expanded the experimental Home Alone gallery concept, co-founded with artists Nate Lowman and Hanna Liden in 2012, into Home Alone 2, a pop-up space that continued the anti-commercial model by refusing to sell any artwork and prioritizing artistic freedom through temporary exhibitions.[25][28][31] Fitzpatrick launched Public Access gallery in October 2020 on St. Mark's Place in New York City's East Village, co-founding it to spotlight emerging artists and youth-oriented works inspired by street and subcultural influences, with its inaugural exhibition featuring painted skateboard decks and mixed-media pieces by pro skateboarder and artist Mark Gonzales.[33][34][35] The gallery emphasized accessibility and a non-elitist vibe, drawing from Fitzpatrick's roots in downtown culture, but closed in May 2023 amid shifting market dynamics.[36] In May 2015, Fitzpatrick was appointed as a director at Marlborough Chelsea, where he curated boundary-pushing exhibitions of blue-chip contemporary artists, including the 2018 group show "BURNT" that explored raw, experimental themes through works by artists like Josh Smith and Rita Ackermann, while also handling sales and representation to bridge underground and established art scenes.[37][38][32][39] From 2024 to 2025, Fitzpatrick continued curating projects that intersect skateboarding aesthetics with fine art, such as the January 2025 exhibition "Larry Clark 92-95" at Ruttkowski;68 gallery, which revisited early 1990s photography and ephemera tied to New York skate culture, and the June-August 2025 group show "Small Format Painting" at 56 Henry, co-curated with Josh Smith, featuring compact 8-by-10-inch works by artists including Nicole Eisenman, Wade Guyton, and Fred Tomaselli to highlight intimate, graphic influences from 1990s skate graphics amid critiques of the increasingly commercialized New York art market.[40][41][42][36] Throughout these directorships, Fitzpatrick's initiatives have fostered originality by shielding artists from commercial pressures, as seen in the no-sales policy of Home Alone projects and the youth-focused programming at Public Access, while his Marlborough and recent curations have elevated skate-art hybrids, protecting creative autonomy in a market he has described as overly focused on sales over experimentation.[25][26][32]Personal life
Residence and privacy
Leo Fitzpatrick has maintained a long-term residence in New York City's East Village since the 1990s, a neighborhood tied to his early skateboarding roots and ongoing art world involvement.[8][32] In recent years, he has continued to live there with his family, including his wife, creative director Chrissie Miller, whom he married in 2018 at the Jane Hotel in Manhattan.[43] Their home setup remains closely connected to the local gallery scene, with Fitzpatrick's projects often situated in nearby areas like the Lower East Side.[32] Public information about Fitzpatrick's family life is sparse, as he has consistently prioritized privacy, avoiding details about his personal relationships and declining to share images of his son, Otis, born in 2016, on social media.[4] No further details on additional children or extended family have been disclosed in interviews or public statements as of 2025.[4] Following the controversies surrounding his breakout role in the 1995 film Kids, which drew scrutiny for its raw depiction of urban youth culture, Fitzpatrick adopted a deliberately low-profile lifestyle to distance himself from tabloid attention and the pressures of early fame.[10] He has spoken about preferring a subdued existence focused on art and community over celebrity, rarely engaging with media on non-professional matters and emphasizing boundaries around his domestic life.[10][4] This approach has allowed him to navigate his public career while safeguarding personal privacy in the intensely scrutinized New York art and entertainment circles.[8]Interests and hobbies
Fitzpatrick maintains a lifelong commitment to skateboarding, viewing it as a foundational element of his personal identity and worldview that extends well beyond his youth. He has described skateboarding as a form of escape and healing during his formative years in New York City's Washington Square Park scene, where it fostered a sense of global community and non-verbal connection among participants. In 2025, reflecting on the 30th anniversary of the film Kids, Fitzpatrick emphasized how the sport's ethos of exploration and resilience continues to influence his life, recounting travels to iconic spots like MACBA in Barcelona and Love Park in Philadelphia as part of an enduring "global tribe" built through skate culture.[44][7][45] A significant personal passion is his work as a DJ under the moniker Lousy Leo, hosting a weekly radio show on The Lot Radio since approximately 2018. The program features eclectic selections spanning punk, hip-hop, and skate-related music, reflecting Fitzpatrick's deep ties to New York's underground scenes and the evolution of skate culture toward hip-hop influences in the 1990s. He streams episodes that capture the raw energy of these genres, often drawing from his experiences in the city's punk shows and skate spots to curate sets that evoke nostalgia and community.[46][47] Beyond these pursuits, Fitzpatrick enjoys collecting vinyl records, a hobby he credits with preserving personal connections to music's past. He has noted his skill in acquiring records that profoundly impacted him, integrating this into his daily routine as a way to revisit influential sounds from punk and hip-hop eras. Additionally, he pursues photography as an informal outlet, having frequently documented friends and scenes from his skate and art circles, such as capturing images of artist Dash Snow during their shared youth. These activities intersect with his routine attendance at art and music events in New York, where he seeks inspiration and rejuvenation amid the city's creative pulse.[46][25][8] Fitzpatrick's interests also extend to community involvement that echoes his anti-commercial roots in skate and art worlds. Through initiatives like his early gallery project Home Alone, he supported non-sales-based exhibitions to prioritize artistic freedom over monetization, fostering spaces for emerging creators akin to informal skate meetups. While not formally tied to specific programs, his ongoing engagement with skate culture includes informal advocacy for its role in youth development, drawing from personal anecdotes of how it provided structure and belonging during his own adolescence.[28][32][45]Filmography
Film
| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 1995 | Kids | Telly[48] |
| 2001 | Serendipity | Leasing Office Temp[49] |
| 2001 | Bully | The Hitman[50] |
| 2001 | Bubble Boy | Todd[51] |
| 2001 | Storytelling | Marcus |
| 2002 | Personal Velocity: Three Portraits | Mylert |
| 2003 | Some Guy Who Kills People | Albert |
| 2005 | Havoc | Hector |
| 2006 | Fay Grim | Agent Fulke |
| 2007 | The Lather Effect | Ryan |
| 2013 | Blue Caprice | Arms Dealer[52] |
| 2013 | American Milkshake | Mr. McCarty |
| 2013 | Doomsdays | Bruho |
| 2013 | Cold Comes the Night | Donnie from Cincinnati |
| 2014 | The Mend | Michael |
| 2015 | Addiction: A 60's Love Story | Black Rich |
| 2016 | Pee-wee's Big Holiday | Abe |
| 2016 | The Drowning | Angus |
| 2016 | Goldbricks in Bloom | Otis[53] |
| 2018 | Hover | Jason[54] |
| 2019 | Billboard | Ronny[55] |
| 2020 | Moments Like This Never Last | Self[56] |
Television
Fitzpatrick's television career includes a mix of guest appearances, recurring roles, and series regular parts in both ongoing series and miniseries, spanning from the early 2000s to the 2020s. In 2002–2004, he portrayed the recurring role of Johnny Weeks, a heroin addict involved in petty crimes, across 10 episodes of the HBO crime drama The Wire.[57] He appeared as Rickie "Chops" Cozza in a single episode of the NBC series Law & Order: Criminal Intent in 2004.[1] In 2005, Fitzpatrick guest-starred as Ern in an episode of the HBO miniseries Carnivàle.[58] From 2005 to 2007, he played Sonny, a friend of the protagonist, in 4 episodes of the NBC sitcom My Name Is Earl, including the pilot and three episodes in season 3.[58] In the 2007 Spike miniseries The Kill Point, Fitzpatrick had a series regular role as Mr. Mouse (also known as Michael), appearing in all 8 episodes as part of a group of bank robbers holding hostages.[59] He recurred as Shepard, a prospect for the Sons of Anarchy motorcycle club, in 2 episodes of the FX series Sons of Anarchy in 2010.[60] In 2012, Fitzpatrick guest-starred as Leo Packer in the episode "Mother's Day" of the CBS procedural Blue Bloods.[61] He appeared as McTeague in the season 1 episode "The Kindred" of the Cinemax action series Banshee in 2013. In 2015, Fitzpatrick played Leo Fitzpatrick (a character sharing his name), a Camp Genoa heist participant, in 3 episodes of season 3 of Banshee.[62] That same year, he portrayed Joe Pike, leader of the arsonist Pike Brothers gang, in 2 episodes of season 2 of the Fox series Gotham.[63] In 2018, Fitzpatrick guest-starred as Lance, an exotic wildlife smuggler, in one episode of the Netflix miniseries Maniac. He appeared as Pudge in 2 episodes of season 2 of the truTV comedy series At Home with Amy Sedaris in 2019.[64] In 2016, Fitzpatrick played Gerald Loomis in the episode "Sheltered Outcasts" of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.[65] From 2021 to 2023, he provided voices for multiple characters, including Normal Guy, Guy in Bunny Costume, and Bounty Hunter, across 2 episodes of the Adult Swim animated series Teenage Euthanasia.[1] No additional television credits for Fitzpatrick have been reported through 2025.Music videos
Leo Fitzpatrick has made notable cameo and acting appearances in music videos, often leveraging his skateboarding and New York cultural connections to contribute to visually dynamic projects. His involvement spans from the mid-1990s to the mid-2010s, reflecting collaborations with diverse artists across rock, indie, and hip-hop genres. The following table lists his credited music video appearances in chronological order:| Year | Title | Artist | Role/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1996 | He Liked to Feel It | Crash Test Dummies | Appearance in the music video directed by Ken Fox, featuring graphic dental imagery. |
| 2011 | Raw Meat | Black Lips | Featured as a corrupt New York City cop in the video directed by Phil Pinto, alongside model Janell Shirtcliff.[66] |
| 2013 | Take It Back | Black Dave | Cameo appearance in the video directed by Jason Ano.[67] |
| 2015 | Palace | Tanlines | Supporting role in the alternate-reality narrative video co-directed by Alex Karpovsky and Teddy Blanks, starring alongside Natasha Lyonne.[68] |
| 2015 | She's Not Me | Jenny Lewis | Portrayed Velda Plendor/Wilderness Girl in the self-directed video by Lewis, featuring a cast including Fred Armisen and Feist.[69] |