Jon Bernthal is going to be a father of three kids!
The 38-year-old actor, who appeared as Shane Walsh on the first two seasons of the hit AMC zombie drama "The Walking Dead," confirmed to Us Weekly at the Washington, D.C., premiere of his new film "Fury" Wednesday, Oct. 15, that he and his wife Erin Angle are expecting their third child.
The couple, who tied the knot in Potomac, Md, in 2010, are already proud parents of two sons, who were born in August 2011 and in February 2013.
Bernthal has been part of a number of films, since his character was killed off on "The Walking Dead" back in 2012. One of those flicks is the upcoming World War II movie titled "Fury," which is headlined by Brad Pitt and also stars Shia LaBeouf, Logan Lerman, Michael Peña, Jason Isaacs and Scott Eastwood.
The David Ayer-directed movie is set during the last month of the European Theater of war during World War II in April 1945. It follows the story of a U.S. Army sergeant in the 2nd Armored Division named Wardaddy (Pitt) who commands an M4A3E8 Sherman tank called "Fury" and its five-man crew on a deadly mission behind enemy lines. Outnumbered and outgunned, Wardaddy and his group face overwhelming odds in their attempts to strike at the heart of Nazi Germany, according to Deadline.
In a recent phone interview with Toronto Sun, Bernthal has nothing but good words about Pitt.
"I was blown away by his attitude," by Washington, D.C.-born actor of the Oscar winner. "I felt that the colder it got on this shoot, the wetter it got, the harder it got, the more exhausting it got, the more pain that was there, the happier he was."
He continued: "He dove into this whole heartedly and so did the rest of us and this is something that we really all believed in. At no time did he differentiate himself from the rest of us. There was no time that he was 'Brad' and we all weren't, you know. We were a unit and he was definitely our tank commander but he didn't seem like a movie star. And now I'm just super-proud to call him a friend."
"Fury" opens in theaters Friday, Oct. 17.