Joe Pascual
- Actor
- Editor
- Editorial Department
People often think Joe Pascual's name is Italian. It's actually
Spanish, with a Filipino flip, but Pascual himself isn't bothered about
it -- he's often taken for Cuban, Venezuelan, Malaysian, Portuguese or
even Irish with a decent tan. Like Law & Order's Benjamin Bratt, he has
a look that translates into dozens of situations, without his persona
being pinned down. And he's got the acting chops to back up that
versatility. Born in Manila to a Spanish father and a Filipino mother,
he grew up hooked on the American TV beamed in because of local U.S.
military bases. "I was the only kid in my neighborhood who didn't have
an accent," he recalls."Or, I guess I should say, the only kid with an
American accent. Anyway, I was totally hooked on Hollywood and all the
movies and shows that came out of it." Joe and his kid sister, Joanne,
used to act out the programs they had seen -- a skill that came in
handy when their mom, Myrna Pascual, became a TV producer and sometimes
needed kids on short notice. Joe was a featured dancer on a show
appropriately called DynaKids, and by the time the was 10, was hosting
a daytime variety show. The siblings later had their own sitcom, and
also appeared in many commercials and live productions. Finding the
Philippines scene too insular, Joe went to school in Switzerland while
still in his teens, then took the leap to New York, and enrolled at the
American Musical & Dramatic Academy. Graduating at the age of 19, he
immediately landed the lead role in a touring version of The Barber of
Seville (the comic play, not the opera), and then joined a tour of West
Side Story. In this revival, initially mounted on Broadway, he had the
key role of Chino. "We did two years of that in Europe," he recalls,
"and it was a sensational experience. The director, Alan Johnson, was a
student of Jerome Robbins -- and he performed in the original
production -- so it was very much true to the vision of Robbins and
Leonard Bernstein." At the end of that run, in 1995, the company wound
up in Toronto, where Pascual played his dream role of Bernardo in West
Side Story. But a casual trip to Vancouver, with its bustling
television scene, inspired a move. "I just liked the place, with its
fresh energy and laid-back climate." After a quick visit to the
Philippines, in which he shot two low-budget films, he settled in B.C.
and began going after TV work. He got it, and had what he calls "The
Year of the Cop". Although only in his mid-20s (which is still true),
Joe started landing work as tough cops, cagey FBI agents, cynical
bureaucrats, and scary drug lords in shows like The Outer Limits,
Stargate, The Sentinel, Strange World, The Net, and of course, The
X-Files. "For some reason," observes the compact, distinctly
rugged-looking performer, "I kept getting all these parts where the
script actually asks for Big White Guys In Their 40s." A rather odd
niche, that, but one Pascual expects to escape soon. More recently, he
shot seven episodes of the UPN's Mercy Point -- a series he describes
as "ER in space, but with a lot more sex" -- in which he played an
"intergalactic paramedic". He also had a featured part in The Falling,
an independent item shot in Vancouver, and worked in a couple of MOWs
while playing a recurring role as Detective Quilio on the TV Series
Nightman. On top of all this, he's taken time to perform in live
musical programs, do multicultural radio work, and hold his own acting
workshop, during Vancouver's first-ever Asian-American Film Festival,
in 1997. He's also in the process of writing some future projects for
himself. "I like the idea of giving ethnic actors more of a voice in
the mainstream; I've got my foot in the door, and I feel like I'm part
of a movement away from stereotyped ideas of who can play what. But
personally, the biggest thrill is getting to work with some of the
actors I grew up watching. It turns out that Manila isn't that far from
Hollywood, after all."