Evan Sabara
Evan Sabara was born in Torrance, California, United States on June 14th, 1992 and is the Family Member. At the age of 32, Evan Sabara biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 32 years old, Evan Sabara has this physical status:
Daryl Christopher Sabara (born June 14, 1992) is an American actor best known for his role as Juni Cortez in the Spy Kids film series, as well as a few television and film appearances, including Generator Rex, Wizards of Waverly Place, Father of the People, The Polar Express, Keep Up with the Steins, World's Most Talented Boys, and America's Most Talented Kids, as well as several others.
Early life
In 2010, he graduated from West Torrance High School. Evan, he has a fraternal twin brother who is also a voice actor, appears in this series. He is of Russian-Jewish descent from his mother and Polish descent from his father, and he attended a Bar Mitzvah service. Sabara began performing with the South Bay Ballet Company, a regional ballet company.
Personal life
In July 2016, Sabara began dating singer-songwriter Meghan Trainor. They became engaged on December 21, 2017, and married on December 22, 2018, marking Trainor's 25th birthday. Trainor and Sabara announced on October 7, 2020 that they were expecting their first child together, a boy. Trainors gave birth to their son in February 2021.
Career
Sabara began acting during the mid-1990s, appearing on episodes of Murphy Brown, Life's Work, Friends and Will and Grace before being cast as Juni Cortez in the Spy Kids series of family films, which became popular among pre-teen audiences.
Sabara provided the voice of Hunter in Father of the Pride. He has appeared in episodes of the television series Weeds, House, Dr. Vegas, and was one of the judges on America's Most Talented Kid. Sabara also voiced the main character, Hero Boy, in the 2004 animated version of The Polar Express. He then played a young Jewish boy trying to have a nice Bar Mitzvah in Keeping Up with the Steins (formerly known as Lucky 13), which received a limited release on May 12, 2006. He also guest starred in the Criminal Minds episode, "P911" where he played a sexually molested child. He also provided the voice for the titular character in Generator Rex.
He next appeared in the films Her Best Movie and the interactive DVD Choose Your Own Adventure, played Ben on The Last Chance Detectives radio dramas by Adventures in Odyssey and Focus on the Family, and also appeared as school bully Wesley Rhoades in Rob Zombie's Halloween. He then played Irwin in the theater play The Catskills Sonata, about a young Jewish busboy in the late 1950s.
In 2003, Sabara made a guest appearance as the character Owen on an episode of Friends, during which Matthew Perry's character Chandler accidentally reveals to Owen that he is adopted. He also gained a recurring role in the Disney Channel sitcom Wizards of Waverly Place as T.J. Taylor, a wizard who ignores the rules and uses magic the way he wants, often getting him into trouble. He was also in The Boondocks as the voice of Butch Magnus Milosevic in the episode "Shinin'". He appeared in two episodes of The Batman: first as Harris, a middle schooler; then as Scorn, the sidekick of the villain Wrath. Both roles were opposite his brother, who played "Robin".
He costarred in the 2009 film April Showers, a movie written and directed by a survivor of the 1999 Columbine High School massacre. He played Kyle, a misanthropic teenager in World's Greatest Dad, with Robin Williams, and Peter Cratchit in the 2009 film adaptation of A Christmas Carol. He appeared in the comedy series Easy To Assemble, where he played a character named George. In 2010, he appeared in the movie Machete, and the MTV movie Worst. Prom. Ever. which premiered May 10. In 2012, he co-starred in John Carter as Edgar Rice Burroughs.
He portrayed the recurring role of Tim Scottson in seven episodes (spanning from 2005 to 2012) of Weeds.
In 2014 he starred alongside Chloë Grace Moretz in the off-Broadway play The Library directed by Steven Soderbergh.