Adam Trese made stage acting debut in minor role in a New York Shakespeare Festival production of "Othello" in Central Park, NYC in 1979.
He made feature film debut in "Laws of Gravity" directed by Nick Gomez in 1992.
He made TV-movie debut in "The Good Fight" in 1992.
He appeared on episode of NBC's "Homicide: Life on the Street" directed by Nick Gomez in 1995.
He played recurring character of Doug Russell on "NYPD Blue" (ABC) from 1995 to 1996.
He appeared Off-Broadway in the revival of "A View From the Bridge" in 1997.
He acted in the stage play "Mercy" in 1998.
He co-starred in the short-lived ABC series "Push" in 1998.
He returned to the Off-Broadway stage in "The Time of the Cuckoo" in 2000.
He appeared as Josh Hartnett's brother in "40 Days and 40 Nights" in 2002.
Adam Trese Detailed Biography -
The forceful, darkly attractive Adam Trese, who was born on 4th January, 1969, made a impressive debut as a volatile, swaggering punk in Nick Gomez's independent feature "Laws of Gravity" in 1992. He portrayed Jon, a short-fused, impulsive petty crook, wanted by the cops, who becomes involved in a fencing scam that turns fatal. After that Trese became a respected player in American independent cinema.
He has been acting since early childhood; he made his professional debut with a bit part in a production of Othello in New York's 1979 Shakespeare Festival. The production starred Raul Julia and Christopher Walken.
Trese graduated from the State University of New York at Purchase, where he first met Gomez and his classmates including actress Parker Posey. He also attended the competitive Actors Training Program.
Trese next acted opposite Christine Lahti in a Lifetime cable network film, "The Good Fight", a fact-based drama about a married couple who take on a tobacco company.
He showed a facility for comedy in Alan Taylor's Palookaville in 1995. He teamed up with Gomez to play a vengeful convict in Illtown in 1996. In addition to his feature film work, Trese has also occasionally appeared on television shows, such as Law & Order, N.Y.P.D. Blue, and on an episode of Homicide: Life on the Street directed by Gomez.