

In 2003, he co-starred with Anthony Hopkins and Nicole Kidman in "The Human Stain" and played Dr. From 1999 to 2000, he guest-starred on three episodes of the "Party of Five" spin-off "Time of Your Life," and in 2000, he appeared on The WB series "Popular" and the NBC medical drama "ER." Wentworth then appeared in the 2001 short film "Room 302" and the miniseries "Dinotopia," which aired as part of "The Wonderful World of Disney" on ABC. Miller made his television debut on a 1998 episode of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," and appeared in his first film, a direct-to-video version of "Romeo and Juliet," two years later. Wentworth has two younger sisters, Leigh and Gillian. in English in 1995, then moved to Los Angeles and began working for a company that made television films.

After graduation, he enrolled at Princeton University, where he served as the school newspaper's cartoonist and sang with The Princeton Tigertones a cappella group. During high school, Wentworth made straight A's and joined the school newspaper staff and the AV club. The family relocated to Park Slope, Brooklyn, when Miller was very young, and he attended Brooklyn's Midwood High School and Leetsdale, Pennsylvania's Quaker Valley High School, graduating in 1990. Wentworth's father is of African-American, German, Jamaican, and English heritage, and his mother's ancestry is Rusyn, French, Lebanese, Swedish, Syrian, and Dutch.

His American parents, Roxann (a special education teacher) and Wentworth (a teacher and lawyer), were living in England when Miller was born because his father was a Rhodes Scholar at the University of Oxford. Wentworth Miller was born Wentworth Earl Miller III on June 2nd, 1972, in Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, England.
