He has a production company, Monkey Kingdom Productions, with his wife, Tara Platt, where they have produced several feature films and a live-action web series called Shelf Life. He co-authored the book Voice-Over Voice Actor.
At The College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, he took classes in theatre but majored in East Asian studies where in his third year, he studied abroad in Osaka, Japan.[12] He also participated in the school's gymnastics program and ROTC.[8] After graduating in 1993, he joined the Japan Exchange and Teaching Programme (JET) where he served as a Coordinator of International Relations, helping out foreign English teachers in Shiga Prefecture. While at JET, he continued to participate in theatre and acting.[8][10][12] After two years there, he still wanted to try acting full-time, and moved to New York City and participated in theatre in shows that were off-off-Broadway.[8] He spent six years in New York doing theatre and indie films.[10][12][13][14]
Voice-over career
Yuri Lowenthal moved to Los Angeles and worked in live-action and theatre roles.[15][16][17] To supplement his on-camera work, he and his wife Tara Platt took a voice-over class that was taught by Rick Zieff.[8][10] Zieff later happened to be directing the English dub for an anime show called SD Gundam Force; he got his first ever anime dub role there and soon tried out for other anime roles as well as other voice-over work in animation, commercials, and video games. Lowenthal recalled that his first voice appearance in a video game might have also been for SD Gundam Force.[18]
Lowenthal's first major role in video game voice-overs was as the Prince in Ubisoft's Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time. In an interview with Critical Gamer, he describes that role as "a very lucky break for me, because it ended up being a super game. We audition all the time for all different kinds of projects, and video games are one part of that, a part that I love." He said that "[he felt] that [he] in a way originated that role". Lowenthal did not return to voice the Prince in Warrior Within, being replaced by Robin Atkin Downes. Lowenthal felt that this was a conscious decision by Ubisoft to fit in with the game's overall tonal shift and thought it was the right decision. For The Two Thrones, he returned to play the role, as fans had stated their preference for his portrayal of the character.[19] The Prince became one of Lowenthal's favorite roles, and he was pleased to return to the role for The Forgotten Sands.[20] According to Lowenthal, his well-received performance put pressure on him in future games from both fans and staff, as he needed to remain true to and improve on his original portrayal. This ultimately gave him little creative freedom with the character after The Sands of Time.[18] For the reboots following the live-action films, the staff wanted a different portrayal of the Prince to Lowenthal's, and so recast the role.[19]
Lowenthal continued voicing in other anime shows, including the lead character Haru Glory in Rave Master, which had a run on Cartoon Network's Toonami line up.[21] He also voiced a character in Zatch Bell! which had a notable run on Cartoon Network. He starred in a number of anime shows such as: Girls Bravo where he played Yukinari,[22]Scrapped Princess where he voiced Leo Skorpus,[23]Kyo Kara Maoh, where he voiced Yuuri Shibuya, and Saiyuki Reload where he voiced Son Goku.[1]
When he auditioned for Naruto, which was being directed by the same person who did Rave Master, he had tried out for multiple roles including Sasuke Uchiha and Iruka, and got a call back for Sasuke. In an interview with Silionera, Lowenthal said that "It certainly allows me to go to some dark places as the series continues. And it makes Sasuke that much more interesting as a character. And that much more fun to play."[23] The Naruto anime became one of the more popular anime shows in the U.S.,[24] and its sequel Naruto Shippuden has also aired on Adult Swim.[25]
In 2007, Lowenthal was cast as Jinnosuke, aka "Kuma", a teddy-bear-headed warrior, in the anime feature Afro Samurai which starred Samuel L. Jackson as the title character. In an interview with Eastern Kicks, Lowenthal said that what he liked about Jinno was that he "starts off as one guy and ends up in a very different, very very dark place. Plus I got to kick Sam Jackson's ass. And they keep bringing him back from the dead for me to play again. And he's a twin-sword-wielding insane cyborg death machine with a giant teddy bear head. What's not to like?"[26] He also said that they recorded the voicing for Afro Samurai separately so he did not get to meet Jackson personally until a release party for the related video game years later.[8][26] Luke Carroll of Anime News Network described Lowenthal's voicing as a "good performance" but "not enough to make it more than an average dub at best".[27] Dennis Amith of J-ENT! thought the voice acting was well done.[28] Lowenthal would reprise the role in the 2009 feature Afro Samurai: Resurrection.[29][30] Steve Fritz of Newsarama wrote "The action sequencing is still top notch, and the vocal performances from Jackson, [Lucy] Liu, Lowenthal and company is on the money."[31]
In 2006, Lowenthal landed the role of Superman in the animated series Legion of Super Heroes. In an interview with The Oklahoman, Lowenthal recalled that he read for Lightning Lad and Brainiac 5 in the original audition, and was called back to do Superman. During the callback, he had begun reading for Superman and Brainiac 5 when the producers stopped him. He was later informed that he got the main role, and they did not need to hear more of him on other parts.[33]
In 2008, Lowenthal provided the voice of 15-year-old Ben Tennyson in Ben 10: Alien Force.[34][35] Set five years after the original series, the premiere of Alien Force set ratings records for Cartoon Network in its key demographics.[36] In portraying Ben, Lowenthal was given guidance by series director Glen Murakami, whom he had worked with on Teen Titans: Trouble in Tokyo. Early on in the show, Murakami told Lowenthal to portray Ben as less of a wisecrack than his 10-year-old persona, and did not want Ben to "veer into the whining, Luke Skywalker". The show was renewed for a second season,[37] and would be followed by Ben 10: Ultimate Alien which ran from 2010 to 2012, and Ben 10: Omniverse[38] which ran from 2012 to 2014. In Ultimate Alien, Ben's age was bumped up to 16 years old.[35] Lowenthal said that he did not realize how popular the show was outside North America until he went to Australia, England and Ireland, and saw kids wearing Ben 10 merchandise. He also said that at comic conventions, he was able to walk the halls unbothered until the Ben 10 panel, after which he was "outed".[35] Lowenthal has also been involved in The Swan Princess direct-to-video series starting in 2012 with The Swan Princess Christmas where he was the voice of Prince Derek, and then in 2014 with The Swan Princess: A Royal Family Tale and in 2016 for The Swan Princess: Princess Tomorrow, Pirate Today where he reprised the main role.[39] Of these videos, he also served as the screenwriter on Christmas and Royal Family Tale.[40][41]
In early 2024, he appeared as the "Default Helldiver Voice 2" voice pack in Helldivers 2.[45]
Acting and production career
Lowenthal has been involved in several live-action projects with his company Monkey Kingdom Productions with wife Tara Platt. In 2008, they produced Con Artists, a mockumentary that chronicles some of their convention visits.[5] They produced a psychological thriller film called Tumbling After which garnered an Award of Merit at the Accolade Film Festival.[46][47] In 2011, Lowenthal and Platt produced Shelf Life, a web series where they act as action figures in a Toy Story-like environment, but with more adult humor.[48][49][50] Lowenthal said in an interview that he wanted to make a show for nerds: "I wanted to make the kind of thing that my friends and I would watch. It's got the four S's: Sex, Social commentary, Slapstick and Superheroes."[51] In 2014, they produced a short steampunk-themed film called Topsy McGee vs. the Sky Pirates which was an official selection at the New York City International Film Festival.[52][53] and was a finalist at the Dragon Con Independent Short Film Festival in the steampunk category.[54][55]
He also plays a key role in the horror podcast Old Gods of Appalachia as the voice of The Railroad Man. He has been featured in an interview with podcast creator Steve Shell where he talks about his voiceover career and his enjoyment of being a part of the fabric of "Old Gods."[56]
In 2010, Lowenthal starred as the title character in Van Von Hunter, a live-action mockumentary co-directed by Tokyopop founder Stuart Levy, based on the comics of the same name. In the film, he plays a sword-swinging barbarian from a fantasy world who is thrown into Earth and is cast in a sword and sorcery movie. The film was featured in several film festivals,[57] and was an official selection at Fantasia Film Festival[58] and a special audience award at MockFest 2010. Lowenthal won an award for best character at MockFest as well.[59]
He co-wrote the screenplay for The Arcadian, a film by Dekker Dreyer that was inspired by underground science fiction comics of the 1970s and 1980s.[60] In 2015, he joined Wil Wheaton's web series Titansgrave as a starring cast member which he role-plays a character named S'Lethkk. The series is broadcast by Geek & Sundry.[61][62] In 2016, he starred as Glenn Lauder in the Keith Arem-produced film The Phoenix Incident, about four guys who were trying to follow the Phoenix lights UFO sighting and end up being attacked by the aliens.[63][64][65] The film received awards and nominations at film festivals.[66][67] He is slated to participate in an independent film called Any Bullet Will Do which stars Mark Ryan and was filmed in Montana.[68]
He and Platt co-authored the book Voice-Over Voice Actor: What It's Like Behind the Mic, released in 2010.[69][70] He also co-authored the comedy-noir novella Tough City with Keith Ikeda-Barry as part of a 72-hour novel writing contest. It was released in 2013.[71] In 2016, he released the novella as a weekly podcast series.[72][73]
Personal life
Lowenthal met actress Tara Platt on an NYU grad film where they played opposite each other in a romantic comedy film called Model Chaser.[10] Six months into their relationship, Lowenthal helped Platt do a cross-country move to Los Angeles so that Platt could participate in auditions there for new TV shows. He had originally planned to fly back after the move, but midway through the trip he proposed to her in Bowling Green, Ohio, and they married in Las Vegas in 2001.[8][37] They founded a company called Monkey Kingdom Productions in 2004. Their son was born in 2016.[74]
Lowenthal has described himself as a "Tennessee Jew".[75][76][77] During the 2023 Israel-Hamas war, Lowenthal expressed support for the people of Palestine and called on the Democratic Party to support a permanent ceasefire in Gaza.[78]
^Niederkorn, William S. (May 31, 1998). "Downtown, a Pizza Man Tells Which Way the Wind Blows". The New York Times. Archived from the original on August 19, 2016. Retrieved July 21, 2016. Yuri Lowenthal, an actor in the Nada company, recalled a night when he and some friends were all falling-down hungry after going to the Mercury Lounge to hear a band.
^Kendt, Rob (December 19, 2003). "Call it 'Cirque du Scrooge'". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on January 24, 2010. Retrieved July 20, 2016. The cast is ideal, both for the circus troupe and for "Carol": The bouncy fat man (E.E. Bell), the fluttering ingenue (Erin Bennett) and her zaftig diva stage mom (Lee Anne Moore), the lean hero (Douglas R. Clayton), the dulcet-voiced leading lady (Sarah Underwood) and a trio of impossibly versatile clowns: Yuri Lowenthal, Matt Gould and the brilliant Madeleine Falk.
^Nichols, F. Kathleen Foley; Daryl H. Miller; David C. (October 3, 2003). "'Paper Son' a deft mix of comedy, gravitas". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on August 19, 2016. Retrieved July 20, 2016. Other standouts include Clark, Kerr Seth Lordygan's cardinal and Yuri Lowenthal's epidermal tailor.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Santos, Carlo (October 12, 2005). "Girls Bravo". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on March 6, 2016. Retrieved March 1, 2016. Sometimes there are English dubs where the supporting characters are more entertaining than the leads. Liam O'Brien is a riot and a half as Fukuyama in this volume, and his character ought to go terrorize more girls just so we can hear that smarmy delivery. Lulu Chiang is similarly high-spirited in her role as Kirie, playing the uptight foil to Fukuyama. Now if only Yuri Lowenthal and Michelle Ruff—Yukinari and Miharu respectively—could match that energy.
^Isler, Ramsey (September 15, 2008). "Code Geass: "Battle for Kyushu" Review". IGN. Archived from the original on August 20, 2016. Retrieved July 24, 2016. Yuri Lowenthal voiced Suzaku with an appropriate mix of guilt and conviction, but it all comes out really fast and with little reaction from Euphemia.
^ICE Film Fest (February 20, 2016). "Thank you to everyone who came out to the..."Archived from the original on November 14, 2020. Retrieved January 29, 2017 – via Facebook. Thank you to everyone who came out to the ICE Film Fest today and to all the filmmakers who submitted their films for consideration. We'd like to congratulate our 2016 winners. The Winner of Best Short is "Hank". The Winner of Best Feature is "The Phoenix Incident". The Winner for Audience Choice is "The Nehemiah Project". And the Winner of Best of Fest is "The Phoenix Project".