Hunter Killer


2:21 pm - 4:57 pm, Tuesday, January 6 on WXTV MovieSphere Gold (41.2)

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About this Broadcast
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Captain Joe Glass discovers a potential Russian coup while responding to a submarine distress signal compelling him to fight for world order. With the Russian President's life in jeopardy, he calls on the help of experienced Navy SEALs in order to prevent the next world war.

2018 English Stereo
Action/adventure Adaptation Suspense/thriller

Cast & Crew
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Gerard Butler (Actor) .. Capt. Joe Glass
Common (Actor)
Adam James (Actor)
Zane Holtz (Actor)
Ilia Volok (Actor)
Matt Rippy (Actor)
Kyle James (Actor)
Jake Mann (Actor)
Michael On (Actor)

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Gerard Butler (Actor) .. Capt. Joe Glass
Born: November 13, 1969
Birthplace: Glasgow, Scotland
Trivia: Scottish actor Gerard Butler spent seven miserable years studying law before trying his hand at acting on the London stage. Half a decade later, a much happier Butler had over a dozen theater, movie, and television credits under his belt, including starring roles in the stage version of Trainspotting (1996) and the award-winning film Mrs. Brown (1997).Born on November 13, 1969, in Glasgow, Butler is the youngest of Margaret and Edward Butler's three children; he has a sister and a brother. When Butler was barely six months old, his family relocated to Montréal, Canada, where his father undertook several failed business ventures. A year and a half later, Butler's parents divorced, and his mother took the children back to Scotland. He saw his father once more when he was four years old, and then not again until he was 16. In the meantime, Butler grew up in his mother's hometown of Paisley, where he frequented a nearby movie theater. Enamored with acting, he convinced his mother to take him to auditions, eventually joining the Scottish Youth Theatre and playing a street urchin in Oliver! at the Kings Theatre in Glasgow. An exceptional student, Butler graduated at the top of his class. Hoping to please his family and his teachers, who felt acting was an unrealistic career choice, Butler enrolled in Glasgow University's law program. He served as the president of the school's law society and earned an honor's degree. After finishing college, Butler took a year and a half off to live in Los Angeles, where he appeared as an extra in the Kevin Costner/Whitney Houston vehicle The Bodyguard (1992). He then traveled to Canada to be at his father's bedside as he succumbed to cancer. Shortly after his father's death, Butler returned to Scotland to begin a two-year law traineeship in Edinburgh at one of the country's top firms. But he was bored and discontented as a lawyer, and still dreamed about performing. He went to see Trainspotting on-stage at the Fringe Festival in Edinburgh and knew he had made the wrong career choice. Soon enough, Butler's unhappiness began to show in his work, and his firm fired him with only a week left in his training. Two days later, at age 25, he moved to London to begin his acting career. Butler took on a series of odd jobs -- from waiting tables to demonstrating clockwork toys at a trade show -- while looking for work as an actor. He was supposed to be serving as a casting assistant for the play Coriolanus at the Mermaid Theatre when he ran into the show's director, actor Steven Berkoff, at a coffee bar and asked to read for a part. Impressed with the ex-barrister's moxie, Berkoff agreed and Butler secured his first professional acting role. While rehearsing for Coriolanus, he accompanied one of the other actors to an audition for the same stage adaptation of Trainspotting he had seen in Edinburgh and landed the lead part of Mark Renton. In 1997, with his theater career firmly established, Butler made his big-screen debut opposite Billy Connolly and Judi Dench in Mrs. Brown. Sometime later, he had returned to the film's shooting location, Taymouth Castle, for a picnic when he saw a child drowning in the nearby River Tay. Butler dove into the water and saved the boy. The actor received a Certificate of Bravery from the Royal Humane Society for his selfless act. That same year, he earned a small speaking part as a bad guy in the Bond film Tomorrow Never Dies before spoofing ex-Wet Wet Wet singer Marti Pellow for the 1998 series The Young Person's Guide to Becoming a Rock Star. Butler finished out the '90s by appearing in the television comedy Lucy Sullivan Is Getting Married, as well as returning to the stage to appear opposite Sheila Gish and Rachel Weisz in Suddenly, Last Summer in London's West End. Butler began the new millennium with supporting parts in the gangster film Shooters (2000) and the war drama Harrison's Flowers (2000). He then simultaneously landed the high-profile title roles in Wes Craven's Dracula 2000 (2000) and the USA television movie Attila (2001). Produced by the creators of The Mummy franchise, Attila chronicled the life of the eponymous fifth century barbarian and co-starred veteran actors Tim Curry and Powers Boothe. It also re-teamed Butler with his Coriolanus director, Berkoff, who played his uncle in the film. The hype that surrounded both Dracula 2000 and Attila was fueled by CNN's announcement that Butler was the frontrunner to replace Pierce Brosnan as the next James Bond. The following months, however, were anticlimactic for Butler. Dracula 2000 bombed at the box office and Attila, though one of the year's highest-rated television miniseries, proved to be forgettable. The rumors surrounding his involvement with 007 were quickly quelled when Brosnan announced that he was staying on for at least two more Bond films, and the series' producers never contacted Butler. Determined to get back on his feet, Butler signed on with a new agency. He returned to British television for ITV's miniseries The Jury (2002), which also featured Derek Jacobi and Antony Sher, while simultaneously filming a role as Christian Bale's dragon-slaying best friend in the special-effects spectacle Reign of Fire (2002). He then quickly landed a supporting role in Renny Harlin's Mindhunters with Val Kilmer and LL Cool J, but pulled out of the project to play the lead in Richard Donner's long-awaited adaptation of Michael Crichton's best-selling novel Timeline (2003). Butler also turned heads as Angelina Jolie's hunky love interest in the sequel Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life that same year.Though, to this point in his career, Butler had no doubt displayed immense talent as an actor, the films he had appeared in had almost consistently disappointed in terms of box-office returns. In 2004, that disheartening trend continued as Butler donned the famous mask of the disfigured musical genius made popular on the stage by actor Michael Crawford in the big-screen adaptation of Andrew Lloyd Webber's The Phantom of the Opera, with subsequent roles in The Game of Their Lives and Beowulf & Grendel doing little to increase his international recognizability. By 2006, it seemed that Butler was finally poised to break big, and as he prepared to lead the soldiers of Sparta in battle against the overwhelming forces of the Persian Empire in Dawn of the Dead director Zack Snyder's adaptation of Frank Miller's popular graphic novel 300, it appeared as if he was determined to do so in style.The movie was a huge international box-office hit, and Butler followed it up with the Guy Ritchie film RocknRolla the next year. In 2009 he took the starring role in the thriller Law Abiding Citizen, and appeared in the virtual reality action film Gamer. 2010 saw the release of his romantic comedy The Bounty Hunter opposite Jennifer Aniston, and in 2011 he starred in the drama Machine Gun Preacher. That same year he played the arch enemy of Coriolanus in Ralph Fiennes adaptation of that Shakespearean tragedy.
Gary Oldman (Actor)
Born: March 21, 1958
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia: Whether playing a punk rocker, an assassin, a war vet, or a ghoul, Gary Oldman has consistently amazed viewers with his ability to completely disappear into his roles. Though capable of portraying almost any type of character, Oldman has put his stamp on those of the twisted villain/morally ambiguous weirdo variety, earning renown for his interpretations of the darker side of human nature.Born Leonard Gary Oldman in New Cross, South London, on March 21, 1958, Oldman was raised by his mother and two sisters after his father, an alcoholic welder, left them when Oldman was seven. Nine years later, Oldman left high school to work in a sporting goods store; in his spare time, he studied literature and later acting under the tutelage of Roger Williams. He went on to act with the Greenwich Young People's Theatre and, after attending drama school on a scholarship, worked with the Citizens Theatre in Glasgow. Oldman next worked in London's West End, where, in 1985, he won a Best Actor and a Best Newcomer award for his performance in The Pope's Wedding. By this time, he had made his film debut in Remembrance (1982) and had appeared in two television movies, notably Honest, Decent and True (1985). Oldman got his first big break when he was cast as Sid Vicious in Sid and Nancy (1986), Alex Cox's disturbing docudrama account of the punk rocker's tragic relationship with Nancy Spungen. Oldman's unnervingly accurate portrayal of the doomed rocker won rave reviews and effectively propelled him out of complete obscurity. The following year, he turned in a completely different but equally superb performance as famed playwright Joe Orton in Stephen Frears' Prick Up Your Ears and earned a Best Actor nomination from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts for his work. After moving to the U.S. that same year, Oldman appeared in Nicolas Roeg's Track 29 (1988), and in 1990, he had one of his most memorable -- to say nothing of cultish -- roles as Rosencrantz opposite Tim Roth as Guildenstern in Tom Stoppard's brilliant Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead.Oldman's first American role in a major Hollywood film was that of alleged assassin Lee Harvey Oswald in Oliver Stone's JFK (1991). He then gave a creepy, erotic performance in the title role of Francis Ford Coppola's rendition of Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992), a lavish film that proved to be the most commercially successful (next to JFK) of Oldman's career to date. In addition to playing such eccentrics as Drexl Spivey, a white pimp with dreadlocks who tries to prove himself a black Rastafarian in True Romance (1993), Oldman went on to play more conventional characters, as evidenced by his straightforward portrayal of a crooked cop in Luc Besson's The Professional (1994), his performance as Beethoven in Immortal Beloved (1994), and his role as Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale in the disastrous 1995 adaptation The Scarlet Letter.In 1997, Oldman made his directorial bow with Nil by Mouth, a bleak, semi-autobiographical drama about a dysfunctional blue-collar London family that Oldman dedicated to his late father. The film proved to be a controversial hit at that year's Cannes Festival, and the first-time director won a number of international awards and a new dose of respect for his work. He subsequently returned to acting with Luc Besson's The Fifth Element that same year, made while he took a break from editing Nil by Mouth. He also gave an enduringly cheesy portrayal of the sinister Russian terrorist bent on wresting world domination from American president Harrison Ford in the blockbuster Air Force One (1997) and followed that up by playing yet another villain in the 1998 feature-film version of the classic TV series Lost in Space.Two years later, the veteran actor was earning accolades on screens big and small with both his critically acclaimed performance in Rod Lurie's Oscar-nominated political drama The Contender, and his Emmy-nominated guest appearance in the popular TV sitcom Friends. Meanwhile, after escaping the clutches of the silver screen's most notorious cannibal in Ridley Scott's Hannibal (2001), Oldman joined the casts of not one but two of the most successful film franchises of the 2000s: The Harry Potter Series and Christopher Nolan's brooding Batman saga. As benevolent wizard Sirius Black in the former, he helped Hogwarts' most famous student battle the forces of evil, and as Lt. Jim Gordon in the later, he aided The Dark Knight in defeating some of Gotham's most powerful supervillains. And while he wasn't performing exorcisms in The Unborn or searching unlimited power in The Book of Eli, Oldman was showing his versatility by voicing characters in such popular video games as The Legend of Spyro: A New Beginning and Call of Duty: Black Ops. In 2011, as if to remind audiences that he could still be a compelling lead in addition to a strong supporting player, Oldman tackled the role of veteran MI6 spy George Smiley -- who comes out of retirement to sniff out a Russian mole in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy. A highly stylized take on the classic John le Carre novel, the film not only drew rave reviews from critics, but also an Academy Award-nomination for Oldman. Oldman wrapped up his work in Harry Potter the same year, with a cameo in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 2 and Nolan's Batman trilogy finished the following year with The Dark Knight Rises. In 2014, he appeared in the remake of RoboCop, followed by a major role in Dawn of the Planet of the Apes.
Common (Actor)
Born: March 13, 1972
Birthplace: Chicago, Illinois, United States
Trivia: Best known for his individualistic promulgation of jazz-rap during the 1990s -- a decade when gangsta rap threatened to take over much of the urban music scene -- underground rapper Common attained recognition for the sophisticated lyrics and ever-present political subtexts in his raps. Something of a critics' favorite, Common also achieved commercial success with such albums as Can I Borrow a Dollar? (1992, his debut), Like Water for Chocolate (2000), Electric Circus (2002), and Be (2005). During the first 15 years or so of his career, the Chicago native's filmed activity remained generally confined to music videos, performance films, and also urban and rap-themed documentaries such as the 2003 Soundz of Spirit, the 2004 Letter to the President, and 2005's jubilant Dave Chappelle's Block Party. By 2007, Common began branching out into dramatic roles. That year, the rapper landed supporting parts in such films as Joe Carnahan's darkly comic action thriller Smokin' Aces and Ridley Scott's period crime drama American Gangster.In 2008 he appeared in Wanted, and the next year he landed a role in the high-profile sequel Terminator Salvation. He played the part of an scary bad guy in the comedy Date Night in 2010, the same year he played the lead opposite Queen Latifah in the romantic comedy Just Wright. He was one of the many members of the ensemble cast in 2011's New Year's Eve, and lent his vocal talents to Happy Feet Two that same year. In 2012 he appeared in the family fantasy film The Odd Life of Timothy Green.
Michael Nyqvist (Actor)
Born: November 08, 1960
Died: June 27, 2017
Birthplace: Stockholm, Sweden
Trivia: Swedish-born actor Michael Nyqvist studied at the School of Drama in Malmö before beginning a professional acting career, scoring his first big break with a starring role on the Scandinavian series Beck in the early '90s. He would go on to find success in Swedish films, some of which gained some international fame, like 2009's The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. He played the villains in Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol (2011) and John Wick (2014). Nyqvist died in 2017, at age 56..
Corey Johnson (Actor)
Born: May 17, 1961
Ryan McPartlin (Actor)
Born: July 03, 1975
Birthplace: Illinois, United States
Trivia: Played football in the Big Ten for the Fighting Illini. Is a certified personal trainer. Enjoys scuba diving, tennis, snowboarding and racquetball. Modeled for Abercrombie & Fitch.
Linda Cardellini (Actor)
Born: June 25, 1975
Birthplace: Redwood City, California, United States
Trivia: Though sharp-eyed Game Show Channel fanatics may recall her from her fireplace-winning stint on The Price Is Right or her appearance on Family Feud, pretty actress Linda Cardellini may be most affectionately known among her fans for her memorable early role as conflicted high school student Lindsay Weir on the short-lived television series Freaks and Geeks. Born in June of 1975 in Redwood, CA, Cardellini became fascinated with acting when asked to sing in a school play at the age of ten. Soon dedicating all of her spare time to stage productions and acting classes during her tenure at Saint Francis High School in Mountain View, CA, the young actress received her first television role when she was cast as a student at the ominously named Edgar Allen Poe High School in the creepy kids show Bone Chillers (1996). Feature roles followed shortly thereafter, with Cardellini appearing in such films as Good Burger the following year, and alongside future Freaks and Geeks cast mate (and future love interest) Jason Segel in Dead Man on Campus (1998). Later turning up as a teen tormented by a sadistic Dee Snyder in Strangeland, Cardellini appeared in small roles in a few other small-screen productions before finding herself in the studious but free-thinking shoes of her Freaks and Geeks alter-ego. Examining the flip side of the Beverly Hills 90210 beautiful and privileged teen set, the smart show had a solid cast, insightful writing, and a dedicated following. Unfortunately, it was canceled after less than 20 episodes. Following with supporting roles in The Prince and the Surfer (1999), Legally Blonde, and The Unsaid (both 2001), Cardellini's rising popularity contributed to her largest feature, that of the brainy super sleuth Velma in the live-action adaptation of the beloved animated mainstay Scooby-Doo. She joined the cast of the long-running NBC medical drama E/R in2003, and had one of her most-high-profile successes in 2005 when she appeared in the Oscar-winning Brokeback Mountain. She lent her voice to the short-lived animated series The Goode Family in 2009, and the next year she acted in James Gunn's Super. In 2011 she appeared in Kill the Irishman, and was part of the voice cast of All-Star Superman.
Toby Stephens (Actor)
Born: April 21, 1969
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia: The son of Dame Maggie Smith and the late Sir Robert Stephens, Toby Stephens was to the theatrical manor born. An accomplished actor in his own right, Stephens, who bears a distinct resemblance to his mother, was born in April of 1969. After his parents' divorce when he was four years old, Stephens and his brother (actor Chris Larkin) grew up traveling back and forth across the Atlantic with their mother for her numerous acting engagements. After training at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, Stephens began his professional career as a stagehand at the Chichester Theatre Festival. He had his film debut with a bit part in Sally Potter's 1992 adaptation of Orlando, but it was on the stage that he first made a name for himself. At the age of 25, Stephens won a Sir John Gielgud Best Actor Award and an Ian Charleson Award for his title role in the Royal Shakespeare Company's 1994 production of Coriolanus. He went on to perform in a number of plays with the RSC, including Measure for Measure, A Midsummer Night's Dream, and Antony and Cleopatra. In 1996, Stephens attracted the attention of an international film audience with his role as the melancholy Duke Orsino in Trevor Nunn's lush adaptation of Twelfth Night. That same year, he starred alongside Rupert Graves and Tara Fitzgerald in the acclaimed television adaptation of Anne Bronte's The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, further earning a reputation as a man who could actually make frock coats look sexy. More period attire -- this time early 1900s -- followed in 1997, when Stephens starred as a jaded, grieving photographer who captures a supernatural phenomenon with his camera in Photographing Fairies. That same year, he could again be seen doffing a frock coat for his role in Cousin Bette. The film featured him as Jessica Lange's nephew; coincidentally, he had played Stanley Kowalski to her Blanche DuBois a year earlier in Peter Hall's London production of A Streetcar Named Desire.In 1999, Stephens again stepped back a few eras -- this time to the opulent St. Petersburg of the Empire Period -- to play Vladimir Lensky, hot-blooded best friend of Ralph Fiennes' Evgeny Onegin in Martha Fiennes' adaptation of Onegin. In addition to his screen work, he continued to perform on the stage, winning particular acclaim for his work opposite Diana Rigg in both Phedre and Britannicus in London and New York.
Ethan Baird (Actor)
Jacob Scipio (Actor)
Dempsey Bovell (Actor)
Adam James (Actor)
Born: September 09, 1972
Henry Goodman (Actor)
Born: April 23, 1950
Trivia: British supporting actor Henry Goodman has been involved with everything from classical theater to television mysteries to movie comedies. On stage, he performed with the Royal National Theatre and the Royal Shakespeare Company. Goodman made his feature film debut playing a cabbie in Queen of Hearts (1989).
Colin Stinton (Actor)
Born: March 10, 1947
Birthplace: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Trivia: Emmigrated to the USA when he was 5-years old in 1952. Performed with the Dinglefest Theatre Company when he was at Northern Illinois University. Worked frequently with the playwright-director David Mamet when he was part of the Chicago theatre scene. Played the role of Mr. Robinson in a Broadway production of The Graduate in 2002. Played the role of Benjamin Franklin in a theatre production of Mr Foote's Other Leg at the Hampstead Theatre in 2015. Involved in a charity auction for Art for Cure, raising money for the care and cure of breast cancer in 2016.
Carter MacIntyre (Actor)
Birthplace: Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Trivia: Best known as JD Bruce from the MyNetworkTV serial American Heiress. Had guest-starring roles in Bones, The Mentalist and It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia before winning the role of CIA agent Leo Nash on NBC's spy drama Undercovers.
Shane Taylor (Actor)
Born: March 13, 1974
Kola Bokinni (Actor)
Mikey Collins (Actor)
Will Attenborough (Actor)
Kieron Bimpson (Actor)
David Gyasi (Actor)
Born: January 02, 1980
Birthplace: Hammersmith, London, England
Trivia: Parents emigrated from Ghana to London in 1966. Studied performing arts as part of his curriculum in sixth-form college. Played the role of Eric in Foxes at West Yorkshire Playhouse. In 2006, performed the role of Claudio in Much Ado About Nothing at Library Theatre in Manchester. Performed in a national tour of the UK as Jose in The Wedding Dance in 2007. In 2008, played the role of Captain Stewart in the critically-acclaimed stage production of War Horse at the National Theatre in London. Is an avid supporter of Tearfund, a Christian-based relief and development organisation aimed at fighting poverty in undeveloped countries.
Michael Jibson (Actor)
Born: December 16, 1980
Birthplace: Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Trivia: Trained with the National Youth Music Theatre as a child. Made his West End debut at the age of 14 in Sam Mendes' production of Oliver at the London Palladium. Played Puck in the stage production of A Midsummer Night's Dream at Shakespeare's Globe in 2008. Appeared in Roots at the Donmar Warehouse in 2013; the following year, he reprised his performance for BBC Radio 3 production of the show.
Christopher Goh (Actor)
Brian Kinney (Actor)
Sarah Middleton (Actor)
Taylor John Smith (Actor)
Gabriel Chavarria (Actor)
Born: April 29, 1989
Trivia: Is of Honduran descent.Played professional soccer when he was young.Was selected in the United States Olympic Development Program.Was encouraged by his older brother to audition for his first movie.Is skilled at basketball.Is the co-founder of the West Coast Elite FC soccer club.Founded his own music label, G & B Music Group.
Cosmo Jarvis (Actor)
Michael Trucco (Actor)
Born: June 27, 1970
Birthplace: San Mateo, California, United States
Trivia: Born in San Mateo, CA, barrel-chested American supporting actor Michael Trucco opted for the most unlikely and circuitous route into show business: he began his studies as a criminal justice major at the University of Santa Clara -- with plans to model his own career after that of his law officer father -- and discovered theater by accident, first via a drama course for non-majors, then by switching his major to dramatic arts at the behest of a drama teacher and his own parents. Numerous minor roles in theatrical productions followed; Trucco's turn in a Los Angeles-area production of the Aaron Sorkin play A Few Good Men solicited the attentions of an agent, who signed the aspiring actor and secured bit parts for him in many films and television programs. These included single-episode contributions to CSI, Arli$$, and Charmed; a supporting role in the sex comedy What Boys Like; and recurring roles on One Tree Hill, as Cooper Lee, and on the popular sci-fi series Battlestar Galactica, as Sam Anders. Trucco could then be seen in the Nicolas Cage vehicle Next in summer 2007.
Zane Holtz (Actor)
Born: January 18, 1987
Birthplace: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Trivia: Began modeling at the age of 5. Born in Vancouver but moved to Southern California as a child. Studied acting at the Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute. Began training in jiu-jitsu in 2004 and has since continued to compete in tournaments. Provided the voice for a character named George Murphy in the 2011 video game L.A. Noire. Appeared in Demi Lovato's music video for her 2015 single "Confident," which was directed by Robert Rodriguez.
Alexander Diachenko (Actor)
Yuri Kolokolnikov (Actor)
Michael Gor (Actor)
Igor Jijikine (Actor)
Born: October 08, 1965
Ilia Volok (Actor)
Born: November 01, 1965
Hristo Mitzkov (Actor)
Stefan Nikolaev Ivanov (Actor)
Caroline Goodall (Actor)
Born: November 13, 1959
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia: Born to Australian parents. Debuted on American TV in Charles & Diana: A Love Story (1982). Performed on stage in starring roles with the prestigious Royal Shakespeare Company, Royal National Theater and Royal Court. Emerged in the U.S. in two Steven Spielberg films: as the wife of Peter Banning in Hook; and the wife of Oskar Schindler in Schindler's List. Met cinematographer husband Nicola Pecorini on the set of Cliffhanger. He is the co-founder of the Steadicam Operators Association. Played a Queen of England (Mists of Avalon), British Prime Minister (Me & Mrs. Jones) and First Lady (Chasing Liberty) in a three-year span from 2001-2004.
David Yelland (Actor)
Trivia: Performed as part of the Glasgow Citizens' Theatre for three years in the early 1970s. Between 1974 and 1976, performed in the National Theatre Repertoire Season. Starred as the Prince of Wales in 1981 drama film Chariots of Fire. In 2000, won the Clarence Derwent Award for Best Supporting Male (UK), for his role in Richard III. Between 2006 and 2013, appeared as George in ITV Drama Agatha Christie's Poirot.
Stuart Milligan (Actor)
Born: September 10, 1953
Theo Barklem-Biggs (Actor)
Atanas Srebrev (Actor)
Born: April 19, 1971
Bernardo Santos (Actor)
Matt Rippy (Actor)
Charlotte Dunnico (Actor)
Halima Nagori (Actor)
Kyle James (Actor)
Died: January 01, 1969
Nathan Cooper (Actor)
Debra Tammer (Actor)
Michael Hoad (Actor)
Jason Matthewson (Actor)
Jake Mann (Actor)
John Whitby (Actor)
Dino Fazzani (Actor)
Nadia Townsend (Actor)
Solomon Taiwo Justified (Actor)
Paul A Munday (Actor)
Lee Asquith-Coe (Actor)
Stephen McDade (Actor)
Jason Newell (Actor)
Stephanie Pezolano (Actor)
Bradley Crees (Actor)
Vitas LeBas (Actor)
Niall D. O'Loughlin (Actor)
Richard Hills Jr. (Actor)
Charlie Oginni (Actor)
Michael On (Actor)
Dor Yerushalmi (Actor)
Robert-Anthony Artlett (Actor)
Joseph Allen (Actor)
Fleur Rochelle Hawken (Actor)

Before / After
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Killshot
12:28 pm