One of Netflix’s biggest hits, the action-thriller series The Night Agent, returned in January 2025 with its much-anticipated second season after a two-year hiatus. In the 10-episode season, Peter Sutherland (Gabriel Basso) becomes a Night Action agent and is quickly thrown into a world of espionage,
SPOILER ALERT: This interview contains spoilers from “Buyer’s Remorse,” the Season 2 finale of “ The Night Agent ,” now streaming on Netflix. In its final moments, Season 2 of “The Night Agent” elegantly set up a Season 3.
Vampire Diaries actor Michael Malarkey has been married to English actress Nadine Lewington since 2009 and they have two sons born in 2014 and 2019.
Gabriel Basso, who plays the lead in the Netflix hit The Night Agent, is all set for the thrilling third season.
Basso stars in the Netflix series as FBI agent Peter Sutherland, who works in the White House as a Night Action telephone operator. He told Fallon, 50, that when the audience watches The Night Agent, he wants them to feel that his performance is believable.
The star, who began his career as a child actor in The Big C, was born in Missouri and was homeschooled along with his two sisters - actresses Alexandria and Annalise Basso. Annalise, 26, is known for playing LJ Folger in Snowpiercer.
Gabriel Basso does the fights both on the "The Night Agent" set and the kickboxing arena no matter what it does to his face. "I have other skills."
Agent returning for its sophomore season, fans can expect plenty more “night action” from its star. Ahead of Season 2 of the conspiracy thriller series, which returns Jan. 23 to Netflix, star Gabriel Basso opened up about taking hits and doing his own stunts as FBI agent Peter Sutherland.
Anyone who’s seriously bummed about Night Agent not being No. 1 at the moment should take heart. It’s very possible that it’ll take back its crown and move to the top of the hill in another day or two.
It is what it is, but in the current era of overly approving critics, it’s rare to find a scenario where critics love a movie or show significantly more than audiences—unless it’s some artsy film or a midnight madness horror flick.