Alexandre Landry graduated from the National Theatre School of Canada in 2009. Before embracing cinema, he worked in the theatre world. He played the title role in Les Aventures de Lagardère, a show performed over a hundred times across the island of Montreal and surrounding regions. He appeared in Chambre(s), a creation by Éric Jean at Théâtre Quat’Sous, Medea by Euripides at Théâtre Denise-Pelletier, performed with Théâtre Extrême in Toronto at the Berkeley Theatre, and portrayed Tom in Tom at the Farm at Théâtre d’Aujourd’hui, a creation by Michel Marc Bouchard directed by Claude Poissant. On television, he plays Theodore in Les pays d’en haut. Cast as Francis, he appears in all three seasons of the series Blue Moon. Alexandre has also acted in the youth series Camping de L’ours and stars as Julien in both seasons of Cheval-Serpent. He is part of the cast of the web series Les bogues de la vie and the series L’échappée (Seasons III and IV). Later, he plays Alexandre in the series La Faille (Seasons I, II, and III). He will also appear in Indéfendable II. For his first film role in 2013, he portrayed Martin, a young intellectually disabled man, in Louise Archambault’s Gabrielle. This film was screened in over twenty countries, and Alexandre won several international acting awards, including the Valois for Best Actor at Angoulême in France and the Best Actor Award at Gijón in Spain. In 2014, in Love in the Time of Civil War, he played Alex, a young drug addict fighting to survive in the world of prostitution. He was also nominated at the Quebec Cinema Awards for this performance and was selected for the Rising Stars program at TIFF, where Rodrigue Jean’s film premiered. He was then offered the role of Vincent in Chloé Robichaud’s film Pays and played Jeff in the Canadian-English film The Saver. He also appeared in De père en flic II, Le Rire, and Les barbares de la Malbaie. Alexandre is also part of the cast of Denys Arcand’s latest film, The Fall of the American Empire. Continuing in cinema, he filmed Phénix (Jonathan Beaulieu-Cyr) in 2023, On sera heureux (Léa Pool) in 2024, and Labrador or the Anatomy of Silence (Rodrigue Jean) scheduled for 2025.