
Age: 54
male
Ewen Bremner (born January 23, 1972) is a Scottish character actor. His roles have included Julien in Julien Donkey-Boy and Daniel "Spud" Murphy in Trainspotting and its 2017 sequel T2 Trainspotting. Bremner was born in Edinburgh, the son of two art teachers. He attended Davidson's Mains Primary School and Portobello High School. He originally wanted to be a circus clown, but was offered a chance at screen acting by television director Richard D. Brooks. One of his first notable roles was as a Glasgow schoolboy in Charles Gormley's Heavenly Pursuits (1986). He also played the lead in the BBC Scotland feature-length adaptation of the William McIlvanney short story "Dreaming" (1990). Bremner portrayed Spud in Danny Boyle's film adaptation of Irvine Welsh's 1993 novel Trainspotting, and later Mullet, a street thug in Guy Ritchie's Snatch. In the 1994 stage version of Trainspotting, Bremner played the lead role of Mark Renton, the role played by Ewan McGregor in the 1996 film. He has played supporting roles in blockbusters such as Pearl Harbor and Black Hawk Down. In 2017 he produced the short film No Song to Sing. He has one daughter, with actress Marcia Rose, whom he met during the filming of Skin.

This is a film about a man who lost his family in a concentration camp. Ronald Greenbaum migrated to America and changed his name to Ronald Monahan so that he could start over. But Ronald Monahan could not forget what happened to him and decided to take revenge, now he is a feared Nazi hunter. In a pocket on his heart he carries a paper with 10 names, which belong to the worst surviving Nazis and those responsible for the death of his family. Ronald is determined to travel the world and have a bloody reckoning until all the names are crossed out. The list includes Lothar Gruber, Adalbert Strauss, Adolf Weissmüller, Joseph Höss, Franz Katzmann, Gerhard Von Boehm, Dietmar Schwarz, Wilhelm Naumann, Fritz Buchwald, Ottmar Hoeneß, Hermann Bauer. Ronald tracks them down and executes them one by one in various and sometimes very painful ways.
