Chris: (About visiting and living in London) I believe it (the last time he visited London) was 2000. I was in Italy, studying Italian renaissance art and cinema history for a semester, and I took a five-day trip to London. So until now I’d visited only as a tourist, never living or working here.
Chris: The theater experiences I’m looking for are not so much to build a career as to build my craft as an actor. The better I become as an actor, the less crafty I have to be in putting together a career, and if I’m a really good actor, they can’t take that away from me.
Chris: (Explaining his play, Summer and Smoke) I play John Buchanan Junior, the drunken and dissolute son of the town’s respected doctor, who is rebelling against society and his father and everything he’s supposed to do in life. The play centers on his next door neighbor, Miss Alma [played by Rosamund Pike], the daughter of the local reverend, and their love affair that’s not to be. They are such different people that they can’t come together, but they love each other so much that it breaks both of their hearts.
Chris: Television has been my bread and butter, but I’m hoping to break into film. I starred in one that never came out, and I’ve had small roles in a few others—and I want to do more theater.
Chris: I worked with him (Milton Justice) on a production of Kevin Elyot’s The Day I Stood Still. I did a little bit of theater every year. I was always finding a reason to get on stage. I think the stage is the greatest challenge for an actor, because nobody can save you but you. You’re in the deep end.
Chris: (About modeling, and trying to get out) You’re treated like a coat hanger. If you’re as turned off by it as I was, it was not hard to break out of—I was constantly trying to run away from it. I only did it until I was making enough money as an actor, so I no longer had to do it again.
Chris: (About growing up) I didn’t come from the smallest town in the world, but I didn’t come from the big city, either. I grew up around farms and cows and horses. Magruder High School, which I attended, was in a cornfield.
Chris Carmack finished the shooting of the movie "Suburban Girls" in early 2006 where he played the character Jed Hanson.
As of January 2007, Chris is a client for Shandrew Public Relations, a firm specializing in publicizing up-and-coming actors, as well as other areas of the entertainment industry.
While modeling, he worked for a legendary photographer, Bruce Weber.
Chris starred as Mr. Sloane in the play, Entertaining Mr. Sloane, an off-Broadway production in NYC.
He was born in Washington, D.C.
He starred in a mini TV series called Beach Girls in 2005.
He starred in the 2004 TV movie The Last Ride.
After high school, Chris went to New York University to pursue a degree in Arts in the Tisch School.
He attended Magruder High School in Rockville, Maryland.
Chris is set to star in The Girls' Guide to Hunting & Fishing also starring Buffy the Vampire Slayer star, Sarah Michelle Gellar.
His Related character Alex also attends New York University.