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Octavio Pisano
Octavio Pisano is an American actor. He is best known for portraying Detective Joe Velasco, one of the core New York City Police Department (NYPD) detectives investigating sexually-based crimes, on Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.
Pisano was born in the United States to an Italian family, the Pizanos, and was raised in Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico, so he feels himself to be part of all three cultures. He grew up speaking Italian and Mexican Spanish. When he was 17, his parents sent him to Canada to finish his studies and to learn English. He grew interested in acting and moved to Los Angeles.
Pisano's television debut came at the age of 27, in an episode of East Los High, a drama about a tough East Los Angeles inner-city high school. His big break came when, from 2014 to 2017, he starred as Julius Escada Jr. in the Oprah Winfrey Network prime-time soap opera If Loving You Is Wrong.
Perhaps because of his fluency in Spanish and his rugged looks, Pisano has found success in crime-drama Latino tough-guy roles. He worked as a bouncer in the Spanish-language Guatemala-based action film El Quetzal de Jade (2013); as Teo in the Dominican drug cartel movie Oro y Polvo (English: Powder and Gold; 2015); as greaser biker gang member Flaco in Badsville (which premiered at the New York Latino Film Festival in 2017); and took a top role in the Caribbean drug-cartel action film Narco Soldiers (2019). Pisano won the leading role of Hector Estrella in another Dominican drama, 2016's Love Kills (Piedra de Sangre), alongside Laura Harring and Bruce Davison; and appeared in the 2021 Paramount+ crime drama miniseries Coyote, a drama about the United States Border Patrol, playing the role of Sultan, a member of a family cartel. (Even in If Loving You Is Wrong, a soap opera created by Tyler Perry and set in the suburbs of Ohio, Pisano's character Julius was the son of the wealthy crime-lord head of a Medellín cartel, and he murdered his father for the money.)
Pisano took smaller roles in different and occasionally lighter fare films while he focused on television work. 2017's Smartass is a teen comedy; iLove (2019) is a six-part miniseries about the founders of a startup company built around catching cheaters. Go Crazy Go Mad (2018) is a micro-budget, rom-com-drama; the indie film Ms. Purple is a family drama set in Koreatown, Los Angeles. 2020's After the Reign is a mockumentary about the rise and fall of a social media prankster who transforms from a media sensation into a controversial hip-hop provocateur; and Feral State (2021) is a crime thriller in the gonzo "Florida Man" comedy mode. Meanwhile, Presence (2022) is an ambiguously supernatural-or-maybe-just-psychological horror film, in which Pisano's character might or might not have been killed early in the story.
The character of Joe Velasco, an undercover cop with a backstory in Anapra, Ciudad Juárez, in Mexico, was introduced to Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (popularly known as SVU) in its 23rd season premiere ("And the Empire Strikes Back," September 23, 2021). Following three recurring character appearances, Pisano joined the main cast. In 2022 and 2023, he also appeared in three crossover episodes of the Law & Order: Organized Crime spin-off.
Pisano told an interviewer for Numéro Netherlands, "Honestly, when I started, Velasco was a mystery to me and to the audience. All I had was the script, a handful of lines, a little bit of a backstory and pure instinct. ... Mariska [Hargitay] and Ice-T really served as guides, on and off screen, giving me pointers and feedback I wasn't getting yet from the studio. I think at first, Velasco was learning the ropes. He came from undercover work and suddenly he's in SVU, a place that demands a level of emotional intelligence he didn't possess, a certain restraint which was foreign to him, as he relied mostly on impulse. You can see it in the first few episodes, his reactions are raw, as was my acting."
In "Post-Rage," the final episode of Season 26, Velasco is promoted to the rank of Detective Second Grade in the Manhattan NYPD.
Octavio Pisano
Octavio Pisano is an American actor. He is best known for portraying Detective Joe Velasco, one of the core New York City Police Department (NYPD) detectives investigating sexually-based crimes, on Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.
Pisano was born in the United States to an Italian family, the Pizanos, and was raised in Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico, so he feels himself to be part of all three cultures. He grew up speaking Italian and Mexican Spanish. When he was 17, his parents sent him to Canada to finish his studies and to learn English. He grew interested in acting and moved to Los Angeles.
Pisano's television debut came at the age of 27, in an episode of East Los High, a drama about a tough East Los Angeles inner-city high school. His big break came when, from 2014 to 2017, he starred as Julius Escada Jr. in the Oprah Winfrey Network prime-time soap opera If Loving You Is Wrong.
Perhaps because of his fluency in Spanish and his rugged looks, Pisano has found success in crime-drama Latino tough-guy roles. He worked as a bouncer in the Spanish-language Guatemala-based action film El Quetzal de Jade (2013); as Teo in the Dominican drug cartel movie Oro y Polvo (English: Powder and Gold; 2015); as greaser biker gang member Flaco in Badsville (which premiered at the New York Latino Film Festival in 2017); and took a top role in the Caribbean drug-cartel action film Narco Soldiers (2019). Pisano won the leading role of Hector Estrella in another Dominican drama, 2016's Love Kills (Piedra de Sangre), alongside Laura Harring and Bruce Davison; and appeared in the 2021 Paramount+ crime drama miniseries Coyote, a drama about the United States Border Patrol, playing the role of Sultan, a member of a family cartel. (Even in If Loving You Is Wrong, a soap opera created by Tyler Perry and set in the suburbs of Ohio, Pisano's character Julius was the son of the wealthy crime-lord head of a Medellín cartel, and he murdered his father for the money.)
Pisano took smaller roles in different and occasionally lighter fare films while he focused on television work. 2017's Smartass is a teen comedy; iLove (2019) is a six-part miniseries about the founders of a startup company built around catching cheaters. Go Crazy Go Mad (2018) is a micro-budget, rom-com-drama; the indie film Ms. Purple is a family drama set in Koreatown, Los Angeles. 2020's After the Reign is a mockumentary about the rise and fall of a social media prankster who transforms from a media sensation into a controversial hip-hop provocateur; and Feral State (2021) is a crime thriller in the gonzo "Florida Man" comedy mode. Meanwhile, Presence (2022) is an ambiguously supernatural-or-maybe-just-psychological horror film, in which Pisano's character might or might not have been killed early in the story.
The character of Joe Velasco, an undercover cop with a backstory in Anapra, Ciudad Juárez, in Mexico, was introduced to Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (popularly known as SVU) in its 23rd season premiere ("And the Empire Strikes Back," September 23, 2021). Following three recurring character appearances, Pisano joined the main cast. In 2022 and 2023, he also appeared in three crossover episodes of the Law & Order: Organized Crime spin-off.
Pisano told an interviewer for Numéro Netherlands, "Honestly, when I started, Velasco was a mystery to me and to the audience. All I had was the script, a handful of lines, a little bit of a backstory and pure instinct. ... Mariska [Hargitay] and Ice-T really served as guides, on and off screen, giving me pointers and feedback I wasn't getting yet from the studio. I think at first, Velasco was learning the ropes. He came from undercover work and suddenly he's in SVU, a place that demands a level of emotional intelligence he didn't possess, a certain restraint which was foreign to him, as he relied mostly on impulse. You can see it in the first few episodes, his reactions are raw, as was my acting."
In "Post-Rage," the final episode of Season 26, Velasco is promoted to the rank of Detective Second Grade in the Manhattan NYPD.
