Daniel Webber (Daniel Webber III) is an Australian actor. He is best known for playing the roles of Darius Pike in the British-Australian science fiction series K-9. His first acting experience was in the 2009 film The Combination. He worked as a rope access technician on wind turbines. From 2009 to 2010, he played Darius Pike in the TV series K-9.
He also had roles in All Saints and the Devil’s Dust miniseries. He played Ryan Kelly, a stalker, on the Australian soap opera Home and Away in 2015. Webber co-starred with Lena Headey and fellow Australian Eliza Taylor in the 2016 crime drama Thumper. He played a distraught United States Army veteran suffering from PTSD on the Netflix television series The Punisher. He played Mötley Crüe lead singer Vince Neil in the 2019 film The Dirt.
DANIEL WEBBER AGE
Daniel Webber was born in Gosford, New South Wales, Australia on June 28, 1988. He is 30 years old in 2018.
DANIEL WEBBER HEIGHT
Daniel Webber stands 5 feet 8½ inches (1.74 m) tall.
DANIEL WEBBER FAMILY
Webber is the son of Peter Webber and Vick Webber. He has two sisters; Sarah Webber and Kylie Webber.
DANIEL WEBBER DATING
Some celebrities prefer to keep their lives low. Webber is in that category. While everyone might think the handsome actor probably has a wife, you may be far from the truth. He is not married. Many novels were circulated about her dating life but she never confirmed them.
However Daniel Webber may be dating his co-actress Lucy Fry. It is not the first time that Hollywood stars have fallen in love with each other. For Webber, while he hasn’t officially announced it, it might be the case. The signals we read on Instagram may soon turn out to be what we are definitely thinking about.
DANIEL WEBBER MOVIES AND TV SHOWS | DANIEL WEBBER PUNISHER
Television
Year | Title |
Role |
---|---|---|
2017 | The Punisher | Lewis Wilson |
2016 | 11.22.63 | Lee Harvey Oswald |
2016 | Home and family | Himself |
2015 | At home and away from home | Ryan Kelly |
2012 | Devil’s dust | Young boy |
2009 | K-9 | Darius Pike |
2008 | All Saints | Kieran Foster |
Film
Year | Title | Role |
---|---|---|
2019 | The dirt | Vince Neil |
2019 | Danger closed | PTE Paul Large |
2017 | Tamburino | Beaver |
2017 | Australia Day | Jason Patterson |
2016 | Teenage kicks | Dan O’Connel |
2016 | All game night | Will |
2015 | Skin | Luca |
2015 | Summer nights | Indy |
2014 | Eric | Eric |
2013 | Galore | Shane |
2013 | Hoax | Xavier Thornton |
2013 | Break | Liam |
2012 | The girl who survived | Gaspar |
2012 | Vertebral column | Wayne |
2012 | Reason to smile | Jake |
2011 | Sleeping Beauty | Spy shop assistant |
2009 | The combination | Jason |
2009 | Multiple choice | Andy |
TBA | escape from the Pretoria | Stephen Lee |
INTERVIEW WITH DANIEL WEBBER
Daniel Webber: There has been a lot of attention. Coming from Australia and living in America, you really don’t have a chance to fail. When we come here, whether Australian or British or anyone else, you have to go all-in and give it your all.
Interviewer: Sounds like a lot of pressure.
Daniel Webber: You work on it. My goal, because it’s such a competitive market here, gives you a little more fire in the gut. You have to make it work. I think anyone in this profession has to do it. It is another challenge coming from Australia.
Interviewer: What was it like playing Lee Harvey Oswald?
Daniel Webber: This role was everything I could have wished for. I love the opportunity to be challenged. I’m a bit of a perfectionist and I’m afraid I’m not doing a good job. When you get a role, it’s up to you to find in yourself to be that character, to go out of your way to reach the deepest parts of yourself to understand it and there is something … scary in a way, but there is. it’s also something very powerful and exciting about that.
Interviewer: There were incredibly powerful moments for your character on the show. Is it difficult to turn it off when the cameras stop rolling?
Daniel Webber: Once you’ve finished filming and worked on a role and character for so long, there’s a process where you have to break away from it, because the characters have such different emotional weight and baggage. There was a little bit of Lee in every audition room I went to the next month after I finished the show. I still hadn’t fully returned to Daniel and my energy. There was still something aggressive, closed and defensive.
Interviewer: Do you think it was Oswald?
Daniel Webber: He was a very capable man of having done that. Whether it was helped or not or whether other people were involved, I honestly don’t know. My research was more specific about him, so I didn’t go into conspiracy theories. He has the lifelong skills and emotional patterns that indicate that he is someone who could easily find the reason and reason for this.
Interviewer: What’s it like to be written and reviewed and to have so much attention on you now?
Daniel Webber: It’s great to get attention from the show because I’m really proud of what I’ve done. It’s nice for me personally to have played a man like him, and to know that I can, and therefore I can have a little more confidence and confidence in my abilities. I’m always afraid I’m not doing a good enough job. With Lee where there was only a mountain of research to overcome and a mountain of different things to understand in order to do it.
Interviewer: Has Hollywood always been the dream?
Daniel Webber: No, not at all (laughs). I didn’t realize acting was a job until I was sixteen. I wanted to be what my father was: a lopper. I spent some time working as a lopper. I think I quickly realized that as a worker you have to work like this, so hard and it’s so physically demanding. I’ve done a lot in my life – landscaping, tree pruning – so I know what it’s like to work very hard and work with my hands for a living. It was something I didn’t want to have as a career. Acting has been with me the whole time.