Nikolaj Lie Kaas
Nikolaj Lie Kaas (born 22 May 1973) is a Danish actor and director recognized for his versatile roles in film and television, spanning the Dogme 95 movement and international productions, with notable performances in films like Riders of Justice (2020) and the Department Q series (2013–2018).[1] Born in Rødovre, Denmark, Kaas is the son of actors Preben Kaas and Anne Mari Lie, which influenced his early interest in performing arts.[2] He began his acting career as a teenager with a role in the 1991 film Drengene fra Sankt Petri, a drama about Nazi resistance.[3] Kaas trained at the Danish National School of Performing Arts from 1994 to 1998, graduating with a focus on stage and screen work.[4] Kaas gained prominence in the late 1990s through his involvement in the Dogme 95 aesthetic, starring in Lars von Trier's The Idiots (1998), for which he received the Bodil Award for Best Supporting Actor.[5] His career continued to flourish with lead roles in Danish cinema, including Open Hearts (2002), The Green Butchers (2003), and Brothers (2004), earning him Bodil Awards and establishing him as one of Denmark's leading actors before age 30.[6] Internationally, he appeared as the Assassin in Angels & Demons (2009) alongside Tom Hanks.[7] On television, Kaas has been acclaimed for his portrayal of CEO Alexander Søndergren in the financial thriller Follow the Money (2016).) Throughout his career, Kaas has received multiple accolades, including two Robert Awards for Best Actor (2002 and 2012) and the Lauritzen Prize in 2012 for his contributions to Danish film.[6] He has also directed projects such as the short film Agent (2023) and maintains an active presence in theater, with performances in productions like Peer Gynt (2001). Married to Anne Langkilde since 2008, Kaas resides in Denmark and speaks Danish and English fluently.[4] As of 2025, recent roles include Way Home (2024) and The Last Viking (2025).[8]Early life and education
Family background
Nikolaj Lie Kaas was born on 22 May 1973 in Rødovre, Denmark.[8] He is the only child of prominent figures in the Danish entertainment industry.[9] His father, Preben Kaas (1930–1981), was a well-known Danish comedian, actor, and revue performer who appeared in over 50 films and stage productions, contributing significantly to Denmark's post-war entertainment scene.[10] Preben Kaas died on 27 March 1981 at the age of 50, leaving Nikolaj, then eight years old, without his father.[11] His mother, Anne Mari Lie (1945–1989), was an actress and writer active in Danish theater and film during the 1960s and 1970s, with roles in productions such as The Reluctant Sadist (1967).[12] She passed away on 1 May 1989 at age 43, orphaning the 15-year-old Nikolaj.[12] Raised in a household deeply embedded in Denmark's performing arts community, Kaas experienced early immersion in the world of acting and storytelling through his parents' professional lives and discussions on creative themes, fostering his initial interest in the field.[13]Schooling and debut
Nikolaj Lie Kaas grew up in Rødovre, a suburb of Copenhagen, Denmark, where he attended local schools during his early years. Although his parents, actors Preben Kaas and Anne Mari Lie, provided a familial connection to the performing arts, Kaas has described his childhood aspirations as initially leaning toward music rather than acting, reflecting an independent path uninfluenced by direct parental guidance in his professional start.[14][15] Kaas made his professional acting debut at age 17 in the 1991 Danish drama film The Boys from St. Petri (Drengene fra Sankt Petri), directed by Søren Kragh-Jacobsen. In the film, set during the Nazi occupation of Denmark, he portrayed Otto Hvidmann, the rebellious teenage son of a family suspected of collaboration with the Germans, contributing to the story's exploration of resistance and moral dilemmas among youth. This role marked his transition from school life to on-set work in the early 1990s, showcasing his natural talent without prior formal training.[16][17] To build on his early experiences, Kaas enrolled at the Danish National School of Performing Arts (Statens Teaterskole) in Copenhagen in 1994 at age 21, completing his acting education there in 1998. This period of structured training honed his skills in theater and film, bridging his independent debut to a sustained professional career while drawing on the conceptual foundations of Danish performing arts.[4][15]Acting career
Early roles (1990s)
Kaas began his professional acting career in the early 1990s with supporting roles that highlighted his range in Danish cinema and television. After his debut, he portrayed Otto Hvidmann, the rebellious son of a collaborator, in Søren Kragh-Jacobsen's historical drama The Boys from St. Petri (1991), a film depicting teenage resistance fighters during World War II occupation.[18] This role allowed him to explore themes of family betrayal and youthful defiance in a period piece that contributed to the revival of Danish historical filmmaking.[19] In 1994, Kaas appeared in the television miniseries The Kingdom (original title: Riget), directed by Lars von Trier and Morten Arnfred, playing the young doctor Filip Naver amid the surreal horrors and institutional satire of Copenhagen's Rigshospitalet.[20] This ensemble role in the pre-Dogme 95 production marked an early collaboration with von Trier, an emerging director pushing boundaries in Danish television with supernatural elements and dark humor, helping Kaas build experience in high-profile, genre-blending projects. He also took on a minor part as Carl III in the coming-of-age film Carl - My Childhood Symphony that same year, further demonstrating his adaptability in intimate, character-driven narratives within the burgeoning Danish film scene.[18] Throughout the mid-1990s, Kaas continued with smaller television appearances, including a German soldier in the series Mørklægning (1992) and Dan in the popular taxi drama Taxa (1997–1999), where he navigated everyday urban stories and interpersonal tensions as a supporting player.[18] These roles reflected the challenges of establishing himself in Denmark's competitive acting landscape, often as secondary characters that required nuanced emotional depth to stand out amid established ensembles. By the late 1990s, following his graduation from the Danish National School of Performing Arts in 1998, Kaas transitioned to theater, securing parts at the Royal Danish Theatre, such as Giovanni in a production of Pity She's a Whore (1998), which allowed him to refine his stage presence in classical and contemporary works.[4] This period of growth solidified his reputation as a promising talent collaborating with innovative Danish filmmakers and theater ensembles before achieving wider acclaim.Breakthrough and Dogme 95 films
Kaas's breakthrough came with his role as Jeppe in Lars von Trier's The Idiots (1998), the second official Dogme 95 film, where he portrayed a sensitive and tragic member of a bourgeois group feigning intellectual disabilities to challenge social norms.[21] His performance, marked by vulnerability and emotional intensity amid the film's provocative, handheld aesthetic, earned widespread critical acclaim and highlighted his ability to convey profound inner turmoil in minimalist settings.[22] This role signified a pivotal shift in his career, elevating him from earlier supporting parts to a prominent lead actor in experimental Danish cinema.[21] Building on this success, Kaas starred in additional Dogme 95 productions that further demonstrated his range within the movement's constraints of natural locations, ambient sound, and no artificial effects. In Truly Human (2001, Dogme #18), he led as P, an imaginary friend who materializes in a young girl's life, bringing whimsy and pathos to a story of misunderstood kindness.[23] He followed this with the role of Joachim in Susanne Bier's Open Hearts (2002, Dogme #28), depicting a devoted husband whose world unravels after a car accident leads to paralysis and infidelity, showcasing his skill in raw explorations of guilt and relational fracture.[24] These performances underscored Kaas's adaptability to Dogme's unpolished style, allowing for authentic, improvisational depth in character-driven narratives.[25] Kaas's Dogme 95 work not only transitioned him to lead roles but also brought multiple awards, cementing his status as one of Denmark's most versatile actors and launching a new generation of talent in the industry.[25] His alignment with the movement's principles amplified his reputation for tackling complex, unflinching portrayals that resonated internationally.[21] The Dogme 95 manifesto, co-authored by von Trier and Thomas Vinterberg in 1995, profoundly influenced Danish cinema by prioritizing austerity and realism over Hollywood excess, fostering a renaissance in national filmmaking through its "vows of chastity" that banned props, sets, and genre tropes.[26] Kaas's repeated collaborations within this framework exemplified its power to reveal actors' raw talents, contributing to Dogme's legacy of revitalizing European arthouse cinema with intimate, socially probing stories.[27]Major film and television roles (2000s–present)
In the early 2000s, Nikolaj Lie Kaas solidified his leading man status with a series of versatile roles in Danish cinema, often collaborating with director Anders Thomas Jensen. In The Green Butchers (2003), he portrayed Svend, a butcher whose life unravels into dark comedy after a tragic accident, earning praise for his portrayal of moral ambiguity and earning a Robert Award nomination.[1] This was followed by Brothers (2004), where Kaas played Jannik, the wayward younger brother who supports the family after his soldier brother Michael's disappearance, highlighting his dramatic range in a story of guilt and resilience.[28] By 2007, in Just Another Love Story, he embodied Sebastian, a man grappling with amnesia and mistaken identity in a romantic thriller that explored themes of fate and deception.[5] Kaas gained international exposure in 2009 with the role of the Assassin, a Vatican operative, in Ron Howard's Angels & Demons, marking one of his early English-language appearances alongside Tom Hanks and contributing to the film's global box office success of over $485 million.[1] Returning to Danish projects, he led the Department Q series starting with The Keeper of Lost Causes (2013), as the cynical detective Carl Mørck, a role that defined his affinity for Nordic noir anti-heroes investigating cold cases amid personal trauma; the franchise expanded with The Absent One (2014), A Conspiracy of Faith (2016), and The Purity of Vengeance (2018), where Mørck confronts corruption and serial killers.[29][1] On television, Kaas excelled in ensemble crime dramas, including his portrayal of Henrik, Saga Norén's colleague's brother entangled in a murder investigation, in season 4 of The Bridge (2018). He also starred as the charismatic yet ruthless CEO Alexander Søndergren in the financial thriller Follow the Money (2016–2019), a series delving into corporate corruption and moral compromise that aired internationally on BBC Four.[30][31] In 2022, Kaas joined Lars von Trier's The Kingdom Exodus, the sequel miniseries to the cult hospital horror, playing a key role in its supernatural intrigue at Copenhagen's Rigshospitalet.[32] Kaas continued his collaboration with Jensen in Men & Chicken (2015), as the awkward Elias in a grotesque family reunion comedy, and Riders of Justice (2020), where he depicted Otto, a software engineer seeking vengeance and solace after a train crash, blending dark humor with themes of grief and conspiracy; the film was Denmark's entry for the Best International Feature Oscar.[3][33] His recent work includes the lead in Way Home (2024), portraying Christian, a father on a perilous journey to Syria to rescue his son, a role requiring him to learn Arabic for authenticity.[34] In 2025, he appeared as Chief Officer Larsen in Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein. As of November 2025, Kaas remains active in high-profile projects, including The Last Viking alongside Mads Mikkelsen, further demonstrating his shift toward complex, ensemble-driven characters in both film and television.[35][36]Awards and honors
Bodil Awards
Nikolaj Lie Kaas has received four Bodil Awards, Denmark's most prestigious film honors presented annually by the Danish Film Critics Association since 1948, recognizing excellence in Danish cinema. His first win came at the remarkably young age of 18, establishing him as a prodigious talent in the industry. Kaas's early successes underscore his versatility in supporting roles, particularly within the Dogme 95 movement and subsequent dramatic works, contributing to his reputation as one of Denmark's leading actors.[37] In 1992, Kaas won the Bodil for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for his debut performance as Anton in The Boys from St. Petri, a World War II drama directed by Ole Christian Madsen that portrays resistance fighters in occupied Denmark; his portrayal of a determined young collaborator captured the film's themes of moral ambiguity and youthful defiance. Six years later, in 1999, he earned the same award for his role as Jeppe in Lars von Trier's The Idiots, a provocative Dogme 95 film exploring communal pretense and social critique; Kaas's nuanced depiction of a vulnerable participant highlighted the movement's raw, improvisational style. His third win arrived in 2003 for Best Actor in a Supporting Role as Joachim in Susanne Bier's Open Hearts, a Dogme 95-inspired drama about love and tragedy following a car accident; this performance, blending emotional depth with restraint, solidified his command of intimate, character-driven narratives. Notably, these three consecutive supporting wins by age 30 made Kaas the only actor in Bodil history to achieve this milestone, a record that affirmed his rapid ascent and influence in Danish film during the 1990s and early 2000s.[38][39][40] Kaas's fourth Bodil came in 2012 for Best Actor in a Leading Role as Danish comedian Dirch Passer in A Funny Man, directed by Martin Zandvliet; this biographical portrayal of the entertainer's personal struggles and professional triumphs earned widespread acclaim for its empathetic intensity and physical comedy, marking a shift to lead roles while reflecting his enduring impact on Danish cinema. Beyond wins, Kaas has garnered several nominations, including Best Actor in 2002 for Truly Human, a poignant exploration of fatherhood and disability; Best Actor in 2005 for Brothers, a tense family drama about war's aftermath; and Best Actor in a Supporting Role in 2021 for Riders of Justice, a dark comedy on grief and conspiracy. In 2025, he received a nomination for Best Actor for Way Home, though the award went to another performer. These nods span decades, illustrating his consistent critical regard across genres from intimate dramas to ensemble thrillers.[41][42]| Year | Category | Film | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1992 | Best Actor in a Supporting Role | The Boys from St. Petri | Won[37] |
| 1999 | Best Actor in a Supporting Role | The Idiots | Won[38] |
| 2002 | Best Actor | Truly Human | Nominated |
| 2003 | Best Actor in a Supporting Role | Open Hearts | Won[39] |
| 2005 | Best Actor | Brothers | Nominated |
| 2012 | Best Actor | A Funny Man | Won[41] |
| 2021 | Best Actor in a Supporting Role | Riders of Justice | Nominated[43] |
| 2025 | Best Actor | Way Home | Nominated[44] |