Jason Morkel

Jason Peter Morkel (born February 1, 1980) is an American actor. Morkel was born and raised in. He is the son of cartoonist Nicholas H. Morkel and the brother of animator/cartoonist Phelan Morkel and writer/producer/actress Julie Morkel.

Morkel began his career as a voice actor in the 2000s, starring as Jack Boring in the TBS animated sitcom The Boring Life of Jack (2001–2006) and eventually having roles in various Morkel & Associates productions. His first live-action role was Kevin Lauren in the RKO comedy-drama series Small World (2005–2010), and made a return to voice acting when he starred as George Stardust in the animated series Inner Space (2011–2018).

Early life
Jason Peter Morkel was born on February 1, 1980 in. He is the son of Nicholas H. Morkel (born August 16, 1931) and Argentine-born Cassandra Morkel (née Bergamo; May 2, 1930 – February 11, 2014). He has Afrikaner, German, and Irish ancestry on his father's side and Italian and Spanish ancestry on his mother's. His older brother, Phelan Thomas Morkel (born October 25, 1975) is an animator and cartoonist, and Jason has starred in several of his productions. His sister, Julianne Shannon "Julie" Morkel (born August 21, 1978), is a writer, film and television producer, and actress.

Television and animation
Morkel's first role was the voice of Jack Boring in TBS's adult animated sitcom The Boring Life of Jack in 2001. Morkel had originally auditioned for the role of Jack's best friend, Malcolm Neverlandcasting director Jean-Michel Bernard felt his calm, higher-pitched voice was better suited for Jack. (The role of Malcolm was given to English-born actor/musician Kearney Forbes.) He stayed with the show's cast until its 2006 cancellation. He later had minor roles in episodes of Mole Miner and Trisha's Way, and bigger roles in direct-to-video films produced by Morkel & Associates, a studio co-founded by Phelan.

Morkel claims his first "major" television role was Kevin Lauren in the RKO Network comedy-drama series Small World (2005–2010). The show follows the day-to-day lives of three adolescent boys living in in the 1980s. Kevin Lauren, one of the series' protagonists. In 2009, Morkel also appeared as Kevin in the pilot episode of the spin-off series The Boom, which aired for one season from 2009 to 2010.

One of Morkel's most famous roles is George Stardust in the adult animated science fiction series Inner Space, which ran for seven seasons from 2011 to 2018 on. The series was critically acclaimed, and Morkel won several awards for his including two.

From 2012 to 2014, Morkel guest starred as George Bennett in five episodes the  legal drama series Case Open. He also portrayed defense attorney Lorenzo Capaldi in the 2014 crime drama miniseries The Trial of Victor Trent, based on the 2005 novel of the same name by J.J. Quincy.

In 2016, Morkel began voicing Toby Baffier in 's Living on an Edge, which was created by Phelan.

Film career
Morkel's first film role was the title character in the 2007 independent comedy film Jimmy Pope. He would later portray Eduardo Guerrero in the 2008 drama film 24th Avenue. Morkel also made a cameo appearance alongside Phelan Morkel in the 2011 comedy film Cartoonists, directed by his girlfriend (now wife) Mariana Fabiano.

Morkel returned to cinema for the 2014 science fiction comedy film Jeffrey 51, in which he portrayed antagonist Ken Antonelli. He also portrayed Michael Forrest in the television film Son of the Invaders, which aired later that year. He played Eric "Chip" Sherman in Lemongrass II: The Next Generation, a 2015 direct-to-video sequel to the 2002 comedy film Lemongrass. Morkel also appeared in Mariana Fabiano's 2018 animated film Everything in the Universe, and his performance earned him two nominations and the MFTA Award for Best Voice Actor in a Foreign Film.

Personal life
Morkel lives in. He began dating filmmaker Mariana Fabiano in 2007, and the two got married in June 2013.

Morkel is an atheist. He said in a 2016 interview with XYZ News that the Morkels are a "very monotheistic family", but he believes that the concept of is "out of this world", and he refuses to believe in "some big, invisible sky man who toys around with the world at his will". Morkel's statements drew criticism from conservatives for supposedly promoting.