Haley Joel Osment

About Haley Joel Osment

Haley Joel Osment began his career at age five with a featured appearance in a TV commercial for Pizza Hut. With his blond hair, expressive blue eyes and moon face, this juvenile player soon landed his first screen role as Forest Junior in the Oscar-winning "Forest Gump" (1994). Osment segued to TV series, playing the adorable grandson of a gruff Edward Asner in the short-lived ABC sitcom "Thunder Alley" (1994-95) followed by a two-year stint as Jeff Foxworthy's son in "The Jeff Foxworthy Show" (ABC, 1995-96; NBC, 1996-97). The busy young actor continued to land guest roles including a recurring stint as Candice Bergen's son Avery Brown on the CBS sitcom "Murphy Brown" in it final season and memorable turns as a boy genius on "The Pretender" in 1998 and a cancer-stricken boy determined to sue God on a moving episode of "Ally McBeal" in 1999. Additionally, Osment appeared in TV-movies more than holding his own acting alongside such veterans as Tom Selleck ("Last Stand at Saber River", TNT 1997), Christopher Lloyd ("The Ransom of Red Chief", ABC, 1998) and Maureen O'Hara ("Cab to Canada", CBS 1998).

Osment proved he was more than a cute sitcom actor in "Bogus" (1996), playing a newly orphaned boy who communicates with the titular imaginary character (Gerard Depardieu). In a role that could have devolved into cloying cuteness, he kept it real and believable, proving an effective scene partner for both Depardieu and Whoopi Goldberg (as his new guardian). Osment went on to deliver a sterling turn as a troubled youngster who seemingly possesses psychic abilities in the thriller "The Sixth Sense" (1999). Even those critics who had problems with the film praised the youngster's performance and he was rewarded with an Oscar nomination as Best Supporting Actor.

Osment's young career blew up after his stellar perfromance in "Sixth Sense" and he immediately took leading roles in the 2000's "Pay it Forward" and 2001's "Artificial Intelligence: AI." Both lofty projects fell way short of expectations, but Osment continued to receive positive reviews for his acting ability. He also made a departure from the blockbuster scene with the dramatic WWII film "Edges of the Lord" (2001), playing a young Jewish boy who hides from the Nazis with a group of priests. While the film has not yet been released in the U.S., it has been well received by international audiences and hailed as a triumph for the young actor.

Education

Flintridge Preparatory School, La Cañada , California

New York University, New York , New York

Career Milestones

1983

First professional job in a Pizza Hut TV commercial

1994

Made feature film debut as the title character's (Tom Hanks) son in "Forrest Gump"

1994

Played Edward Asner's grandson on the ABC sitcom "Thunder Alley"

1995

Was regular on the short-lived series "The Jeff Foxworthy Show"; first aired on ABC and then NBC for one season

1996

Co-starred with Whoopi Goldberg and Gerard Depardieu in "Bogus"

1997

Played Murphy's son Avery on the final season of the CBS sitcom "Murphy Brown"

1997

Voiced Chip in the direct-to-video release "Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas"

1999

Breakthrough role, playing a child who is able to see dead people in the blockbuster, "The Sixth Sense"; directed by M. Night Shyamalan and co-starred Bruce Willis; received a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award nomination

2000

Cast alongside Oscar-winners Kevin Spacey and Helen Hunt in "Pay It Forward"

2001

Co-starred with Jude Law in Steven Spielberg's "A.I. Artificial Intelligence"

2001

Starred with Willem Dafoe in the WWII drama "Edges of the Lord"

2002

Lent his voice to Disney's live-action film, "The Country Bears"

2002

Lent his voice to the Disney animated sequel "Jungle Book 2"

2003

Co-starred with Robert Duvall and Michael Caine in the film, "Secondhand Lions"

2008

Made Broadway theatre debut in a revival of David Mamet's "American Buffalo"