Dexter Fletcher
(Actor)
.. Lee McCall
Born:
January 31, 1966
Birthplace: Enfield, London, England
Trivia:
Lead actor Dexter Fletcher first appeared onscreen in the '80s.
David Patrick O'Hara
(Actor)
.. Allan Heyl
Born:
July 09, 1965
Birthplace: Glasgow
Deborah Kara Unger
(Actor)
.. Bekkie Stander
Born:
January 01, 1966
Birthplace: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Trivia:
Bearing talent and cool, sophisticated beauty in equal measure, Deborah Kara Unger is one of Canada's most visible actresses. A native of Vancouver, British Columbia, where she was born in 1966, Unger first distinguished herself as the first Canadian-born actress to be accepted to the prestigious Australian National Institute of Dramatic Art. While in Australia, she made her professional debut on the television miniseries Bangkok Hilton (1989), in which she co-starred with Nicole Kidman and Denholm Elliott. On the screen, Unger, who had been appearing in films since 1990, first made an impression on audiences with her role as a hyper-sexual patient who reveals more than just her neuroses to her psychiatrist (Annabella Sciorra) in Whispers in the Dark (1992). She earned an additional dose of notoriety when she again revealed all in David Cronenberg's controversial Crash (1996), which cast her as the wife of car crash survivor and fetishist James Spader. Roles in such films as David Fincher's psychological thriller The Game (1997) and the made-for-TV The Rat Pack (1998) -- which featured Unger as Ava Gardner -- followed, and in 1999 the actress could be seen in no less than three major motion pictures. In Payback, Unger played Mel Gibson's double-crossing girlfriend; IstvĂ¡n SzabĂ³'s historical epic Sunshine cast her as the wife of a Communist party official, while in Norman Jewison's The Hurricane, Unger starred as a Canadian activist working to free a wrongfully imprisoned championship boxer (Denzel Washington). She continued to work steadily as the 21st century began in a variety of projects including Signs & Wonders, The Salton Sea, A Love Song for Bobby Long, Silent Hill, Shake Hands with the Devil, 88 Minutes, and the Emilio Estevez drama The Way.
Marius Weyers
(Actor)
.. Gen. Stander
Born:
February 03, 1945
Trivia:
Supporting actor, onscreen from the '80s.
Ashley Taylor
(Actor)
.. Cor Van Deventer
At Botha
(Actor)
.. Gen. Viljoen
Lionel Newton
(Actor)
.. Desk Sgt. Smit
Melanie Merle
(Actor)
.. Sharmaine
Hannes Muller
(Actor)
.. Jan Wortmann
Shaeleen Tobin
(Actor)
.. Grace Wortmann
Sean Else
(Actor)
.. Assistant Detective Ed Janis
Peter Gardner
(Actor)
.. Allums
Patrick Mynhardt
(Actor)
.. Judge
Born:
June 12, 1932
Died:
October 25, 2007
Wikus du Toit
(Actor)
.. Lawyer
Drummond Marais
(Actor)
.. Prosecutor
Nicole Abel
(Actor)
.. Young Lady in Bar
Waldemar Schultz
(Actor)
.. Cop at Accident
Emgee Pretorius
(Actor)
.. Wedding Judge
James Borthwick
(Actor)
.. Vorster/Detective Groot
Graham Clarke
(Actor)
.. Riot General
André Stolz
(Actor)
.. Armourer
Robin Smith
(Actor)
.. Loudspeaker Colonel
Born:
February 28, 1955
Trivia:
Actor Robin Smith specialized in roles in rough-shod action films during the 1980s and '90s. His assignments included parts in Death Force (1988), American Ninja 4: The Annihilation (1991), and Dangerous Ground (1997). In 2006, Smith essayed a double role as Luigi and a one-legged actor in Tarsem Singh's hallucinatory fantasy opus The Fall, which toured the festival circuit for a couple years until its official release in 2008.
Allan Bevolo
(Actor)
.. Riot Cop No. 1
Jacques Gombault
(Actor)
.. Riot Cop No. 2
Anton Dekker
(Actor)
.. Colonel
Drik Stoltz
(Actor)
.. Cop at Slum Apartment
Neels Coetzee
(Actor)
.. Drunk
Lynn Hooker
(Actor)
.. Elderly Woman
Iain Paton
(Actor)
.. Macho Teller
Ben Kruger
(Actor)
.. Bank Guard
Thomas Ramabu
(Actor)
.. Sunglasses Hawker
Diaan Lawrenson
(Actor)
.. Female Bank Teller
Duncan Lawson
(Actor)
.. Techie
Paul Luckhoff
(Actor)
.. Suspect
Cassidy Coombs
(Actor)
.. Kidnapped Child
Anel Olsson
(Actor)
.. Bank Teller
Steven Raymond
(Actor)
.. Prisoner No. 1
Chris Steyn
(Actor)
.. Prisoner No. 2
George Moolman
(Actor)
.. Male Nurse
Andrew Thompson
(Actor)
.. Farmboy
Val Donald-Bell
(Actor)
.. Nurse
Moshoeshoe Chabeli
(Actor)
.. Harold
Ron Smerczak
(Actor)
.. Wild Coast Cop
Clive Scott
(Actor)
.. Bank Officer
John Lesley
(Actor)
.. Old Man
Shafa'ath-Ahmad Khan
(Actor)
.. Indian Tailor
Graham Hopkins
(Actor)
.. Porsche Salesman
Paul Ditchfield
(Actor)
.. Bank Manager
Chris Buchanan
(Actor)
.. Lane
Ben Horowitz
(Actor)
.. Mark Jennings
Charlotte Butler
(Actor)
.. Marlene Henn
Matt Stern
(Actor)
.. Celebrity Spotter
Kerry Hiles
(Actor)
.. Tweaked Customer
Duncan Harling
(Actor)
.. Airport Cop
Mawongo Tyawa
(Actor)
.. Zulu
Fats Bookholane
(Actor)
.. Itano
Paul Slabolepszy
(Actor)
.. Politico
Justin Strydom
(Actor)
.. House Dick
Fredinand Rabie
(Actor)
.. Barrier Cop
Dan Robbertse
(Actor)
.. Onlooker No. 1
Errol Ballentine
(Actor)
.. Onlooker No. 2
Shane Howarth
(Actor)
.. Airport Cop
Tess Jubber
(Actor)
.. Florida Girl
Gert White
(Actor)
.. Frat Boy 1
Denton Douglas
(Actor)
.. Frat Boy 2
Neil Coppen
(Actor)
.. Blond God
Tyrone Akal
(Actor)
.. Mustang Kid
Zaa Nkweta
(Actor)
.. Black Officer
David Dukas
(Actor)
.. White Officer
Thomas Jane
(Actor)
.. Andre Stander
Born:
February 22, 1969
Birthplace: Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Trivia:
An actor with handsome, everyman good looks and undeniable screen presence, Thomas Jane has turned up in everything from low-budget indies to sprawling, big-budget Hollywood action spectacles. Born January 29th, 1969, the Baltimore native's unusual entry into show business found him cast in a Romeo and Juliet-inspired Bollywood musical while still in high school. At just 17 years old, Jane was spotted by a pair of Indian producers looking to cast a young, fair-haired American to act as Romeo to a young Indian actress' Juliet. Alas, the lure of Bollywood weighed heavier than the prospect of another year in high school, so Jane soon dropped out to film Padamati Sandhya Ragam in Madras, India. When filming wrapped, he quickly returned stateside despite some tempting offers in India, and a year later, the struggling actor was making the move to Los Angeles. Finding work in L.A. didn't prove easy, but thanks to persistence and hard work, Jane eventually made his way into the local theater scene. A small role in the gay-themed drama I'll Love You Forever...Tonight was followed by a small part in the 1992 film Buffy the Vampire Slayer.Two short years later, Jane stepped into the lead for the quirky crime comedy At Ground Zero, and a role in the ill-fated Crow sequel The Crow: City of Angels followed in 1996. The next year, Jane was cast in the major starring role of real-life beatnik Neal Cassady for the independent film The Last Time I Committed Suicide with Keanu Reeves. By late 1997, Jane's star was steadily rising thanks to supporting parts in Face/Off and Boogie Nights. In 1998, he went indie once again with a role as a former heroin dealer looking to go straight in Thursday and then took a small part in the all-star ensemble cast of the war drama The Thin Red Line.With his role as a shark wrangler in the open-water thriller Deep Blue Sea in 1999, Jane graduated to full-on Hollywood action hero. After returning to Paul Thomas Anderson's fold for Magnolia later that year, he portrayed baseball legend Mickey Mantle in the acclaimed, made-for-HBO feature 61* (2001). His role as a quick-tempered detective working alongside Morgan Freeman's character in Under Suspicion (2000) found Jane at the top of his game, and though performances in The Sweetest Thing (2002) and Dreamcatcher (2003) went largely unseen due to poor box-office performances, audiences could rest assured that they would see plenty of the newly buff actor when he donned the famous skull T-shirt and loaded up to rid the streets of crime in the eagerly anticipated comic book adaptation The Punisher (2004). Two years later Jane would continue his onscreen love-affair with firearms as a Federal Witness Protection program particpant whose cover is dangerously blown in the Elemore Leonard adaptation Killshot. While Jane's performance as an infamous gangster was solid in the action thriller Give 'Em Hell Malone, he wouldn't find true success with mainstream audiences until he took on the leading role in HBO's Hung (2009-2012), a dark comedy following a history teacher (Jane) who moonlights as a prostitute.