Victor Rasuk
Born and raised in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, Victor Rasuk knew early on he wanted to be an actor. While enrolled at the prestigious performing arts high school, Rasuk met the NYU student film director Peter Sollett, who cast him as a feisty Dominican teenager in his 2000 thesis short film, "Five Feet and Rising." The film, which won numerous awards at Sundance, Cannes, and SXSW, led to "Raising Victor Vargas," starring Victor's real-life younger brother Silvestre as on-screen sibling Nino. After a string of TV roles, including appearances on both "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" (NBC, 1999-) and "Law & Order: Trial by Jury" (NBC, 2005-06), in 2005 Rasuk portrayed groundbreaking skateboarder Tony Alva in "Lords of Dogtown." Eager to do many of his own stunts, Rasuk endured a fractured orbital socket and various other skate-related injuries during filming, which took place in many of the original Los Angeles locations. His next role came in the little-seen Iraq War drama "Stop-Loss," in which he portrayed a soldier gravely wounded while saving the life of a friend and fellow soldier (Ryan Phillippe). A recurring role as neurotic New York City doctor Ryan Sanchez on "ER" in 2008 proved another look at the normally lighthearted actor's serious side. Two years later HBO gave him a home on "How to Make It in America," a sort-of East Coast version of "Entourage" (HBO, 2004-2011) centered on Ben (Bryan Greenberg) and Cam (Rasuk), two streetwise best friends trying to break into the NYC fashion world. Though the show captured the vibrancy of downtown NYC and the enormous hustle it required, HBO cancelled the series after two low-rated seasons. Rasuk later portrayed computer architect and early Apple employee Bill Fernandez in the 2013 biopic "Jobs," starring Ashton Kutcher as the titular visionary.