The Bourne Legacy


07:01 am - 09:20 am, Wednesday, December 17 on STARZ HD (East) ()

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About this Broadcast
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An agent engineered to be the ultimate CIA weapon goes on the run when the program that created him is compromised, and everyone involved is ordered eliminated. Along the way, he is joined by the brilliant research scientist who helped to create him.

2012 English Stereo
Action/adventure Romance Mystery Espionage Adaptation Sequel Suspense/thriller

Cast & Crew
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Jeremy Renner (Actor) .. Aaron Cross
Rachel Weisz (Actor) .. Dr. Marta Shearing
Joan Allen (Actor) .. Pam Landy
Albert Finney (Actor) .. Dr. Albert Hirsch
Stacy Keach (Actor) .. Retired Adm. Mark Turso, USN
Scott Glenn (Actor) .. Ezra Kramer
Oscar Isaac (Actor) .. Outcome #3
David Strathairn (Actor) .. Noah Vosen
Donna Murphy (Actor) .. Dita Mandy
Michael Chernus (Actor) .. Arthur Ingram
Corey Stoll (Actor) .. Zev Vendel
Alice Gainer (Actor) .. Lean Forward MSNBC Anchor
Prue Lewarne (Actor) .. CNN Reporter
Howard Leader (Actor) .. MSNBC Man Analyst
James Joseph O'Neil (Actor) .. Sterisyn-Morlanta Gateman
Tony Guida (Actor) .. Dr. Benezara
Sonnie Brown (Actor) .. Dr. Lieberburg
Neil Brooks Cunningham (Actor) .. Dr. Dan Hillcott
Željko Ivanek (Actor) .. Dr. Donald Foite
Rob Riley (Actor) .. Outcome #6
Noel Wilson (Actor) .. Neuro Luncheon MC
Dennis Boutsikaris (Actor) .. Terrence Ward
Corey Johnson (Actor) .. Ray Wills
Jennifer Kim (Actor) .. Outcome #4
Page Leong (Actor) .. Mrs. Yun
John Douglas Thompson (Actor) .. Lt. Gen. Paulsen
Adi Hanash (Actor) .. Outcome #1
Robert Prescott (Actor) .. Air Force Officer
David Wilson Barnes (Actor) .. Drone Spec.
Don Guillory (Actor) .. Drone Pilot
Patrick Vincent Marro (Actor) .. Drone Command Guard
Gita Reddy (Actor) .. Dr. Chandra
Tom Riis Farrell (Actor) .. Blue Lab Doctor
Steve Routman (Actor) .. Blue Lab Doctor
Peter Lewis (Actor) .. Blue Lab Doctor
Anitha Gandhi (Actor) .. Blue Lab Doctor
Heather Lupton Rasche (Actor) .. Blue Lab Doctor
Natalie Bird (Actor) .. Blue Lab Doctor
Nilaja Sun (Actor) .. Blue Lab Doctor
Christopher Mann (Actor) .. Lab Guard
Billy Smith (Actor) .. Lab Guard
Murray Knudsen (Actor) .. Alaska Airport Guard
Susan Egbert (Actor) .. DIA Attorney
Tim Devitt (Actor) .. FBI Honcho
Brian Poteat (Actor) .. State Investigator
Clayton Barber (Actor) .. Gene
Elizabeth Marvel (Actor) .. Dr. Connie Dowd
Michael Papajohn (Actor) .. Larry
David Leitch (Actor) .. The Driver
Michael Berresse (Actor) .. Leonard
Deidre Goodwin (Actor) .. Candent Spokesperson
Laura Spaeth (Actor) .. Walking Woman
Sam Gilroy (Actor) .. C-Team
Sharon Washington (Actor) .. C-Team
Rachel Black (Actor) .. C-Team
Frank Deal (Actor) .. C-Team
Rob Yang (Actor) .. C-Team
Catherine Curtin (Actor) .. C-Team
Matt Oberg (Actor) .. C-Team
Gary Lee Mahmoud (Actor) .. C-Team
Faye Yvette Mcqueen (Actor) .. TSA Guard
Pat Battle (Actor) .. MSNBC Anchor
Nico Bernuth (Actor) .. Flight Attendant
Jane Jameston (Actor) .. Flight Attendant
Roland Manansala (Actor) .. Steri-M Guard
John Arcilla (Actor) .. Joseph
Josh Banks (Actor) .. Mackie's Assistant
Shane Jacobson (Actor) .. Mackie
Allen Jo (Actor) .. Guard
Jonathan Eusebio (Actor) .. Guard
Jon Valera (Actor) .. Guard
Carl Villa Roman (Actor) .. Sterival Catwalk Guard
Louis Ozawa Changchien (Actor) .. LARX #3
Madeleine Nicolas (Actor) .. Landlady
Ruby Ruiz (Actor) .. Philippine Pharmacist
Cherry Devera (Actor) .. Crisis Translator
Julienne Orindain (Actor) .. TV Girl
Antonette R. Garcia (Actor) .. TV Mom
Sonny Tuazon (Actor) .. Manila Cop
Normandy Bacaltos (Actor) .. Manila Cop
Edgar Letran (Actor) .. Manila Cop
Alvin Zalamea (Actor) .. Manila Cop
Spencer Sano (Actor) .. Manila Cop
Julie R. Ysla (Actor) .. Woman with the Bag
Joel Torre (Actor) .. Citrus Samaritan
Hermie Concepcion (Actor) .. Pissed-Off Guy
Arthur Acuña (Actor) .. Manila Driver
Adrian Talinga (Actor) .. Captain's Son
Lou Veloso (Actor) .. Captain
Ian Blackman (Actor) .. Landy's Attorney
Jodi Applegate Kay (Actor) .. Landy Reporter
Tony Carlin (Actor) .. Landy Reporter
Karen Pittman (Actor) .. Landy Reporter
Ana Berry (Actor) .. Landy Reporter
Matthew Walters (Actor) .. Landy Reporter
Brian O'Neill (Actor) .. Landy Reporter
Ali Reza (Actor)
Edward Norton (Actor) .. Retired Col. Eric Byer, USAF

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Jeremy Renner (Actor) .. Aaron Cross
Born: January 07, 1971
Birthplace: Modesto, California, United States
Trivia: A former die-hard theater actor who made a comfortable transition to screens both big and small in the late '90s, Jeremy Renner drew praise and courted controversy with his portrayal of serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer. A California native, Renner discovered his love for acting while drifting through various majors at college. He dabbled in computer science and criminology before taking an acting class, and soon decided to double major in theater and psychology, the stage offering the struggling student a healthy outlet for his sometimes bottled emotions. After graduation, the aspiring actor moved to Los Angeles in hopes of finding work. A starring role in the play Search and Destroy (which he also co-directed) earned Renner positive notice from critics, and, in 1995, he made his feature debut in the critically panned gross-out comedy National Lampoon's Senior Trip. Numerous film and television supporting roles followed, including a 1999 guest-starring appearance as a former puritan turned menacing vampire on the popular WB series Angel. Three years later, and despite bearing almost no physical resemblance to the titular character, Renner's chillingly low-key performance as a true-life murderer and cannibal in the biopic Dahmer earned him an Independent Spirit Award Best Actor nomination. In 2003, he received more exposure in a role opposite Colin Farrell in the big-budget action thriller S.W.A.T. After taking the lead as an institutionalized member of the Aryan Nation in Neo Ned, he then stepped before the camera for Italian actress/director Asia Argento in J.T. LeRoy's 2004 screen adaptation of his story collection The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things.Renner scored big roles in the drama North Country and the zombie sequel 28 Weeks Later before heading up the quirky TV cop show The Unusuals, which lasted only one season on ABC. However, his work in Kathryn Bigelow's The Hurt Locker, as a soldier who specializes in disarming IED's in Iraq, brought him stellar reviews and a number of industry accolades including Best Actor nominations from The Screen Actors Guild, the Independent Spirit Awards, and the Academy. He aslo won that very same award from numerous critics groups.Two years later he returned to the Oscar race for his supporting turn as Ben Affleck's best frined in The Town. He would follow that up with a pair of giant box office hits, co-starring opposite Tom Cruise in the fourth Mission: Impossible movie, and then taking the part of Hawkeye in The Avengers in 2012. That same year he would take over the part of Jason Bourne in The Bourne Legacy, and he lent his voice to the animated film Ice Age: Continental Drift. He appeared in the Academy Award-nominated American Hustle in 2013 and then filled his plate with sequels like The Avengers: Age of Ultron and Mission: Impossible 5.
Rachel Weisz (Actor) .. Dr. Marta Shearing
Born: March 07, 1971
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia: A British actress whose name and dark looks effortlessly conjure up associations with Eastern European exoticism, Rachel Weisz first earned the attention of an international audience with her role as the spoiled daughter of a sculptor in Bernardo Bertolucci's Stealing Beauty (1996). The daughter of a Jewish-Hungarian inventor and an Austrian psychoanalyst (both sides of the family fled Fascist Europe during the '30s), Weisz was born in London on March 3, 1971. Much of her adolescence was spent modeling, and after attending Cambridge to study English, she broke into acting with a role in Sean Mathias' West End revival of Noel Coward's Design for Living.Weisz's performance in the play won her the Critics' Circle Best Newcomer award, and she subsequently took advantage of this recognition with a starring role in the BBC's TV adaptation of Scarlet & Black (1993), and then in 1996 with her aforementioned part in Bertolucci's Stealing Beauty. Although most attention was paid to Liv Tyler in her role as the film's protagonist, Weisz managed to garner notice of her own, and this recognition was furthered by her top billing opposite Keanu Reeves in Chain Reaction that same year. Unfortunately, the big-budget thriller was an unmitigated turkey; Weisz followed it with leads in smaller films such as The Land Girls (1997), a WWII drama that cast her as a young socialite sent to work on a farm; and Going All the Way (1997), a post-war coming-of-age drama starring Ben Affleck and Jeremy Davies that saw Weisz play Wasp, Affleck's Jewish girlfriend.After returning to Britain to star as a hairdresser in the noirish drama I Want You (1998), Weisz reappeared on the Hollywood radar as Brendan Fraser's damsel in distress in the 1999 summer blockbuster The Mummy. That same year, she played yet another love interest, that of a womanizing Ralph Fiennes in Sunshine, István Szabó's epic drama about three generations of a family of Hungarian Jews. Weisz' subsequent turn in the period drama Enemy at the Gates (2000) saw her play the inamorata of yet another Fiennes brother, Joseph. As a Russian-American sniper caught between the affections of a Russian party official (Fiennes) and a legendary sniper (Jude Law), the actress again returned to the early part of the 20th century (this time the Battle of Stalingrad) and to the deep end of the Fiennes family gene pool.Dutifully returning for The Mummy Returns a few short months later, that same year found the starlet gaining positive notice for her role in director Neil LaBute's biting stage drama The Shape of Things. Cast as a young art student whose latest "piece" is a strikingly original form of sculpture, Weisz's character would attempt to transform her boyfriend from schlub to stud to surprising effect. When the play was adapted to film in 2001, the team stuck together with Weisz and co-star Paul Rudd stepping before LaBute's all-seeing lens. For her role in the 2003 crime drama Confidence, Weisz would join a band of talented con artists in a daring bid to take a banker with ties to organized crime for all he's worth. Though the film may not have struck box-office gold, it did prove something of a sleeper and drew generally favorable reviews from critics. Confidence would be one of two films that found Weisz cast alongside screen legend Dustin Hoffman in 2003, the other being the courtroom thriller Runaway Jury. If her last few years had been slightly weighed down in drama, audiences could be assured that things would lighten up considerably when Weisz joined the cast of the Barry Levinson comedy Envy (2004).In 2005 she starred alongside Keanu Reeves again in the comic book adaptation Constantine. The dark film about a man trying to avoid his fate in hell by battling demons on Earth helped keep Weisz's name in circulation, but her next project would create the biggest buzz of her career thus far. Her role in Fernando Meirelles' The Constant Gardener garnered praise from critics and audiences alike, winning her an Oscar and a Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Supporting Role. Weisz played a British activist working in Kenya whose investigations into government corruption cause her to turn up dead, prompting her husband, Ralph Fiennes, to embark on an epic search to reveal the truth behind her murder. On the heels of this tremendous success, she joined the cast of Darren Aronofsky's psychological science-fiction film The Fountain-a story spanning a thousand years and exploring issues of love, death, and spirituality. Weisz joined Adrien Brody and Mark Ruffalo for The Brothers Bloom (2008), and worked with celebrated director Alejandro Amenabar in Agora (2009), a historical drama featuring Weisz in the lead role. In 2010, Weisz played a major role in The Whistleblower, which was inspired by a true story of a corporation involved in human trafficking, and later worked opposite Daniel Craig in director Terrence Malick's thriller Dream House (2011).
Joan Allen (Actor) .. Pam Landy
Born: August 20, 1956
Birthplace: Rochelle, Illinois, United States
Trivia: Largely underappreciated for years in Hollywood before her Oscar-nominated turn as the First Lady in Nixon (1995), Joan Allen has had a distinguished career encompassing the stage, screen, and television. A native of Rochelle, Illinois, where she was born August 20, 1956, the blond, swanlike actress developed an interest in acting while in high school. Voted Most Likely to Succeed by her senior class, Allen went on to study theatre at Eastern Illinois University. She then moved to Chicago, where she became one of the founding members of the vaunted Steppenwolf Theatre Company, along with such respected talents as Gary Sinise and John Malkovich.Allen made her screen debut with a small role in the 1985 film Compromising Positions and a year later played two wildly different characters in Manhunter and Peggy Sue Got Married. Her portrayals of a tragically confused young woman who attempts to seduce a serial killer in the former film and a brainy high school student in the latter impressed a number of critics, but it was on the stage that Allen was most appreciated. In 1988, she won a Tony award for her Broadway debut performance in Burn This, and a year later she earned her second Tony nomination for her role in Wendy Wasserstein's highly acclaimed The Heidi Chronicles.Following increasingly substantial roles in such films as In Country (1989), Ethan Frome (1992), and Searching for Bobby Fischer (1993), Allen won a Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination for her stunning portrayal of First Lady Pat Nixon in Oliver Stone's Nixon. The acclaim surrounding her performance in the 1995 film finally gave Allen the Hollywood recognition she deserved; the following year this recognition was further enhanced with her Oscar-nominated turn as the long-suffering Elizabeth Proctor in Nicholas Hytner's adaptation of The Crucible.More praise came Allen's way in 1997, when she headlined a stellar ensemble cast in Ang Lee's lauded adaptation of Rick Moody's The Ice Storm. Starring as a troubled upper middle-class Connecticut housewife alongside the likes of Kevin Kline, Sigourney Weaver, Christina Ricci, and Tobey Maguire, Allen gave repression a stirring, beautifully nuanced name. That same year she went in a completely different direction, starring as the wife of an FBI agent (John Travolta) in John Woo's popular action thriller Face/Off. Allen returned to the realm of the repressed housewife in 1998, starring (and reuniting with Maguire) in the acclaimed 1950s-set comedy drama Pleasantville. The turn of the century found Allen taking leads in a trio of issue-oriented dramas: In the multi-character handgun treatise All the Rage (released on video in 2000), she played the wife of a short-fused lawyer (reuniting with Pleasantville's Jeff Daniels in the process); in the Irish production When the Sky Falls, she teamed with The Long Good Friday (1980) director John Mackenzie to tell the true, tragic story of a Dublin crime reporter; and in Rod Lurie's The Contender, Allen nabbed her biggest role to date -- and her first Best Actress Oscar nomination -- as a would-be U.S. vice president who finds herself at the center of a sex scandal.After all the attention for The Contender, the savvy Allen continued to oscillate between big roles in low-profile independent films and small roles in big-budget popcorn fare, to even greater success. She featured prominently in two of the biggest box-office hits of 2004: the sentimental romance The Notebook and the wildly successful second installment of the Jason Bourne franchise, The Bourne Supremacy. In the latter, she dug into a meaty, sympathetic supporting role as an all-business CIA agent who pursues the framed title character. Spring 2005 saw the near-concurrent release of two of her indie films, both of which premiered at Sundance Festivals from years prior: Campbell Scott's lapsed-hippie family drama Off the Map and Mike Binder's Terms of Endearment-ish saga The Upside of Anger. The former cast Allen against type as a let-it-all-hang-out New Mexico naturalist who finds her family coming apart at the seams in the mid-1970s. More widely acclaimed was her Anger appearance: As a drunk, headstrong, suburban Detroit housewife who lashes out at her four daughters -- and everyone else -- after her husband leaves the family, Allen turned in a performance that was both caustic and relatable, and garnered some of the best notices of her film career.In 2008 she played the bad guy in the action film Death Race, and the year after that she starred as Georgia O'Keefe in the biopic about her directed by Bob Balaban. She returned to the role of Pamela Landy for The Bourne Legacy, the Tony Gilroy directed reboot of the popular franchise that featured Jeremy Renner taking over the title role.
Albert Finney (Actor) .. Dr. Albert Hirsch
Born: May 09, 1936
Died: February 07, 2019
Birthplace: Salford, Lancashire, England
Trivia: Throughout his acting career, Albert Finney has impressed critics with his protean ability to step into a role and wear a character's persona no matter the age, nationality, or métier. In stage, film, and television productions over more than 40 years, Finney has portrayed a Polish pope, a Belgian detective, an Irish gangster, a British miser, a gruff American lawyer, a Scottish King, a German religious reformer, and an Roman warrior -- all with convincing authenticity. Finney was born on May 9, 1936, in the working-class town of Salford, Lancashire, England. After graduating from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in 1955, he performed Shakespeare and quickly earned a coveted spot as understudy for the great Laurence Olivier in Shakespeare productions at Stratford-upon-Avon. On one occasion, he stepped into Olivier's shoes to play the lead role in Coriolanus, a play about the downfall of a proud Roman soldier, and won recognition that led to film roles.Finney's upbringing in Lancashire, a region of mills and smokestacks, exposed him to the kind of social injustice and economic hardship that helped prepare him for his role as a nonconformist factory worker in the 1960 film Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, a milestone in the development of British realist cinema. Critics -- who hardly noticed him in the bit-part role he played in his first film, The Entertainer -- universally praised his vibrant performance in Saturday Night. This success earned him the lead role in director Tony Richardson's 1963 film Tom Jones, adapted by screenwriter John Osborne from the Henry Fielding novel of the same name. As the wenching country boy Jones, Finney was a bawdy, rollicking, uproarious success, helping the film win four Academy awards.Rather than abandon live stage drama, Finney continued to pursue it with the National Theatre Company at the Old Vic in London, performing in Shakespeare productions and plays by other authors. He won Tony nominations for Luther and A Day in the Death of Joe Egg, as well as a best actor Oliver for Orphans. When he made his next film in 1967, he starred opposite Audrey Hepburn in Stanley Donen's Two for the Road, a comedy-drama about marital mayhem, and again won high critical praise.If there was a pattern to the types of roles he selected, it was that there was no pattern. For example, after playing a 20th century art enthusiast in 1969's Picasso Summer, he took on the role of a 19th century Dickens character in Scrooge (1970), then played a bickering husband in Alpha Beta (1973), Belgian sleuth Hercule Poirot in Murder on the Orient Express (1974), a Napoleon-era Frenchman in The Duellists (1978), a werewolf hunter in Wolfen (1981), and a plastic surgeon/murder suspect in the ludicrous Looker (1981).After winning an Academy award nomination for his performance in 1982's Shoot the Moon, Finney delivered another outstanding performance in Peter Yates' 1983 film The Dresser, which earned five Oscar nominations, including a nomination for Finney as best actor. In the film, Finney plays a boozing Shakespearean actor whose life strangely parallels the tragic life of one of the characters he portrays, King Lear. In 1984, Finney won still another Oscar nomination, as well as a Golden Globe nomination, for his role as a self-defeating alcoholic in director John Huston's Under the Volcano. In the same year, critics praised him highly for his dynamic portrayal of Pope John Paul II in an American TV production.Finney continued to take on diverse and challenging roles in the late 1980s and during the 1990s, primarily in small, independent productions. Among the films that earned him more accolades were the Coen brothers' gangster epic Miller's Crossing (1990) -- for which Finney replaced actor Trey Wilson after his untimely death -- as well as A Man of No Importance (1994), The Browning Version (1995), and Simpatico (1999). Also in 1999, he won the BAFTA TV award for best actor for his role in A Rather English Marriage. 2000's Erin Brockovich exposed Finney to the widest audience he'd seen in years: playing the hangdog attorney Ed Masry, Finney proved to be the perfect comic foil to Julia Roberts' brassy heroine, and in the process secured himself Golden Globe and Academy award nominations for best supporting actor. Though a Golden Globe Award eluded him that year, he returned in two years and won for his portrayal of Winston Churchill in the made-for-television film The Gathering Storm.2003 saw Finney in his biggest role since Erin Brockovich. In Tim Burton's Big Fish, he played Edward Bloom in present-day scenes, while Ewan McGregor assumed the role of the eccentric storyteller in flashbacks. The actor once again proved to be a favorite of the Hollywood Foreign Press when he received yet another Golden Globe nomination for his work.2006 found the now veteran actor appearing in the Ridley Scott dramedy A Good Year, in which he played the uncle to a younger version of Russell Crowe through flashbacks. He also signed on to appear in Before the Devil Knows You're Dead, a thriller staring Philip Seymour Hoffman and Marisa Tomei. In 2007 he was cast as the mastermind behind the program that created Jason Bourne in The Bourne Ultimatum, a roll he reprised five years later in The Bourne Legacy.Over the years, Finney saw the end of two major performances in his personal life: his first marriage to Jane Wenham (1957-61) and his second marriage to Anouk Aimée (1970-1978). He has one son, Simon, from his first marriage.
Stacy Keach (Actor) .. Retired Adm. Mark Turso, USN
Born: June 02, 1941
Birthplace: Savannah, Georgia, United States
Trivia: The son of a drama teacher and dialogue director, American actor Stacy Keach began performing in college productions, then studied at the Yale Drama School. He spent a year at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art on a Fulbright scholarship, then acted in Shakespeare in the Park productions, where he first established his reputation; he soon worked both off and on Broadway, winning a Tony for his work in Indians. Keach debuted onscreen as a drunken drifter in The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter (1968), then went on to play leads and supporting roles in a number of films; his screen appearances after 1982, however, have been infrequent. He wrote and directed the short film The Repeater (1972); he also directed a TV version of Pirandello's classic Six Characters in Search of an Author. In 1975 he starred in the short-lived TV series Caribe, and after starring in several TV movies, Keach assumed the title role of the TV series Mike Hammer in 1983. His career came to an abrupt halt in the mid-'80s when he was arrested and imprisoned in England for cocaine possession; after serving nine months and participating in drug rehabilitation, he returned to Mike Hammer. He is the brother of actor James Keach, with whom he co-starred in The Long Riders (1980), a film he also co-wrote and co-produced. He is married to Polish actress Malgosia Tomassi.
Scott Glenn (Actor) .. Ezra Kramer
Born: January 26, 1941
Birthplace: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Trivia: Ex-marine and ex-newspaper reporter Scott Glenn was ideally suited to the action-oriented films that would become his lot in the 1980s and 1990s. After learning the rudiments of his craft at the Actors Studio and appearing off-Broadway, Glenn made his film bow in 1970's The Baby Maker. He was rescued from low-budget cycle flicks by director Robert Altman, who cast Glenn as Pfc. Glenn Kelly in Nashville (1975). As rangy and rugged off-camera as on, Glenn was one of the few film actors of recent years to flourish in western roles: among his more impressive credits within this genre are Cattle Annie and Little Britches (1981), Silverado (1985), My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys (1993), and, stretching a point a bit, Urban Cowboy (1980). Glenn has been equally laudable in such suit-and-tie roles as Jodie Foster's FBI chief in The Silence of the Lambs (1991), in "military" assignments like astronaut Alan Shepard in The Right Stuff (1981) and the U.S. sub commander in Hunt for Red October (1990). As a tribute to Robert Altman, the director who elevated him to "A" pictures back in 1975, Scott Glenn accepted a drastic cut in salary to portray "Himself" in Altman's The Player (1992). Over the next several years, Glenn remained active on screen, appearing in films like Training Day, The Virgin Suicides, The Bourne Ultimatum, W., and The Paperboy.
Oscar Isaac (Actor) .. Outcome #3
Born: January 05, 1980
Birthplace: Guatemala
Trivia: After his portrayal of Joseph, the father of Jesus, in New Line Cinema's holiday release The Nativity Story (2006), Guatemalan actor Oscar Isaac also appeared in Scott Z. Burns' made-for-HBO crime thriller The Half Life of Timofey Berezin (2007). His career would kick into high gear after taking a small role as an interpreter in Guerilla (2008), a biopic of Che Guevara. In 2009, Isaac's role as José Ramos-Horta in the drama Balibo earned in an award for Best Supporting Actor from the Australian Film Institute. He co-starred with Rachel Weisz in award-winning director Alejandro Amenábar's Agora (2009), a historical drama in which the actor played the student of a female mathematician in the late 4th century. Isaac portrayed King John in director Ridley Scott's 2010 retelling of Robin Hood, and went on to co-star with Albert Brooks and Ryan Gosling in the thriller Drive (2011).
David Strathairn (Actor) .. Noah Vosen
Born: January 26, 1949
Birthplace: San Fernando, California, United States
Trivia: One of the more underrated actors in Hollywood, tall, soft-spoken David Straithairn has earned almost consistent critical appreciation for his work in a number of films, most notably his many collaborations with director John Sayles. Born in San Francisco on January 26, 1949, Straithairn gained an entrance into acting via his days at Williams College. It was there that he met fellow student Sayles, and the two had their first collaboration with Return of the Seacaucus Seven. The 1980 film, which told the story of a group of friends reuniting after college, inspired a number of similar efforts, including The Big Chill. Following his debut, the actor -- whose additional performing experience came from his training at the Ringling Brothers Clown College -- appeared in supporting roles in a number of films, including Silkwood (1983) and Dominick and Eugene (1988). He continued to collaborate with Sayles, acting in The Brother From Another Planet (1984), Matewan, (1987), and Eight Men Out (1988). Straithairn was also introduced to television audiences with his role as bookstore owner Moss Goodman on the popular dramedy series Days and Nights of Molly Dodd.In the 1990s, Straithairn had prominent roles in a number of critically acclaimed films and television miniseries. In addition to his continuing work with Sayles, in 1991's City of Hope and Passion Fish (1992), the actor lent his talents to such films as Bob Roberts (1992), Sneakers (also 1992), The River Wild (a 1994 film which reunited him with Silkwood co-star Meryl Streep), and Losing Isaiah (1995). He also appeared in miniseries such as the 1991 O Pioneers! and In the Gloaming (1997), in which he played the father of an AIDS-stricken Robert Sean Leonard. In 1997, Straithairn had a memorable turn as a high-class pimp with a dodgy mustache in the wildly lauded L.A. Confidential and after a supporting role in Simon Birch (1998), once again collaborated with Sayles, this time playing a fisherman with a past in the 1999 Limbo. He remained one of the most respected character actors of his generation appearing as the father in the remake of The Miracle Worker, and starring in the drama Blue Car as a manipulative teacher. In 2005 he garnered an Oscar nomination and the biggest high-profile success of his career playing Edward R. Murrow in George Clooney's Good Night, and Good Luck. He followed up that success with appearances in such films as We Are Marshall, The Bourne Ultimatum, Howl, and Temple Grandin. In 2012 he was cast in Steven Spielberg's long-planned biopic Lincoln as William Seward.
Donna Murphy (Actor) .. Dita Mandy
Born: March 07, 1959
Birthplace: Corona, New York, United States
Trivia: One of Broadway's most celebrated actresses, Donna Murphy is a commanding, versatile performer whose credits also encompass film and television. A native of New York, Murphy was born in Queens on March 3, 1958, and grew up on Long Island as the oldest of seven children. She attended New York University briefly, dropping out at the age of 20 to try her luck on the New York stage. Work on and off Broadway followed, until in 1993 Murphy landed the greatest role of her career thus far. Picked by Stephen Sondheim to star in his musical Passion as Fosca, a bitter, consumptive woman caught up in unrequited longing for a handsome soldier, she earned stellar reviews and, ultimately, the 1994 Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical. Now one of Broadway's most in-demand actresses, she went on to win yet another Tony in the same category, this one for her performance in the 1995 revival of The King and I. In addition to her work on the stage, Murphy has also made a number of appearances on screens big and small, doing supporting work in such films as Star Trek: Insurrection (1998) and Nicholas Hytner's Center Stage (2000), the latter of which cast her as a demanding but ultimately warmhearted ballet teacher. The actress has also lent her talents to a host of TV shows, including Law & Order and The Practice.
Michael Chernus (Actor) .. Arthur Ingram
Born: August 08, 1977
Birthplace: Rocky River, Ohio, United States
Trivia: Of Hungarian and German descent.Played basketball in his school team.Started attending drama classes while in middle school.In 2011, won an OBIE Award and was nominated for a Lucille Lortel Award for his work in Lisa Kron's In the Wake.A member of Juilliard School's Drama Division, Group 28.In 2019, was inducted in Rocky River City School District's Hall of Fame as Distinguished Alumni.
Corey Stoll (Actor) .. Zev Vendel
Born: March 14, 1976
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Received a Drama Desk nomination in 2004 for Intimate Apparel. Has been a guest star in episodes of numerous crime dramas, including CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, NYPD Blue, CSI: Miami and the original Law & Order series. Cast in productions where numbers are titular, with roles in Numb3rs, The Nine and The Number 23. Worked for director Paul McGuigan in Lucky Number Slevin and Push. Appeared in a Broadway production of Arthur Miller's A View from the Bridge with Scarlett Johansson and Liev Schreiber. Landed a leading role on Law & Order: Los Angeles as Det. T.J. Jaruszalski in 2010.
Alice Gainer (Actor) .. Lean Forward MSNBC Anchor
Born: July 03, 1982
Prue Lewarne (Actor) .. CNN Reporter
Howard Leader (Actor) .. MSNBC Man Analyst
James Joseph O'Neil (Actor) .. Sterisyn-Morlanta Gateman
Tony Guida (Actor) .. Dr. Benezara
Sonnie Brown (Actor) .. Dr. Lieberburg
Neil Brooks Cunningham (Actor) .. Dr. Dan Hillcott
Željko Ivanek (Actor) .. Dr. Donald Foite
Born: August 15, 1957
Birthplace: Ljubljana, Yugoslavia
Trivia: Possessing a near-perfect balance of everyman looks and tremendous talent on both stage and screen, actor Zeljko Ivanek has been a key supporting player in feature films since the early '80s. A native of Ljubljana, Yugoslavia (now Slovenia), Ivanek's family moved to the United States in 1960 in order for his father to complete his doctoral research in electronic engineering at Stanford University. Briefly returning to Yugoslavia before settling in Palo Alto, CA, in 1967, it was only a few short years before young Ivanek was pursuing his higher education at Yale. Subsequently accepted at The London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, he continued to refine his passion for acting and the summers of 1978-1980 found him honing his stage skills in the Williamstown Theater Festival in such efforts as Hay Fever and The Front Page. In 1983, Ivanek was nominated for a Tony award for his role in Brighton Beach Memories and it was around this time that he made his first film and television appearances. An early role as a telepathic killer in the 1982 thriller The Sender found Ivanek making a chilling impression, and strong performances in Mass Appeal (1984) and the AIDS drama Our Sons (1991) kept expectations high for the rising star. As his feature credits continued to build, Ivanek began appearing in such popular television series as L.A. Law, Law & Order, The X-Files, and Murder, She Wrote. Though the adjustment from stage to screen was initially daunting for the classically trained actor, once he got accustomed to the change of pace, he adjusted remarkably well. As the '90s rolled on, Ivanek's film credits included such A-list releases as Courage Under Fire (1996), Donnie Brasco (1997), and the John Travolta thriller A Civil Action (1998). It was also around this time that Ivanek embarked on a six-year stint as Governor James Devlin on HBO's acclaimed series Oz. As the millennium turned, so did Ivanek's onscreen career, and his resume seemed to be exclusively built of nothing but high-profile efforts in both film and television. In addition to appearing in Dancer in the Dark (2000), Hannibal (2001), Black Hawk Down (2001), Unfaithful (2002), and Dogville (2003), memorable roles on The Practice and The West Wing kept television audiences glued to their sets. He reteamed with Lars Von Trier for the director's drama Maderlay, and continued his film career in projects such as The Hoax, In Bruges, and Tower Heist, while maintaining a presence on the small-screen with appearances on Damages, Heroes, and Big Love.
Rob Riley (Actor) .. Outcome #6
Noel Wilson (Actor) .. Neuro Luncheon MC
Dennis Boutsikaris (Actor) .. Terrence Ward
Born: December 21, 1952
Trivia: Character actor Dennis Boutsikaris is a frequent television guest star and leading man in made-for-TV movies. After a few fairly small roles in the feature films Crocodile Dundee II and The Dream Team, Boutsikaris was launched into star status on many sentimental Lifetime original movies, including And Then There Was One and Chasing the Dragon. Although he has had regular roles on Stat, The Jackie Thomas Show, and Misery Loves Company, he may be more recognizable for his recurring guest appearances on Law & Order and ER. He's also appeared in straight-to-video releases (The Three Lives of Karen) and TV miniseries (The Last Don). In addition, he seems to have made a lucrative living on the side as a voice actor recording books on tape. Boutsikaris has been known to specialize in ripped-from-the-headlines style of TV docudramas such as Victim of Love: The Shannon Mohr Story, Love and Betrayal: The Mia Farrow Story (in the role of Woody Allen, no less), and Perfect Murder, Perfect Town, a dramatization about the JonBenet Ramsey murder investigation.
Corey Johnson (Actor) .. Ray Wills
Born: May 17, 1961
Jennifer Kim (Actor) .. Outcome #4
Page Leong (Actor) .. Mrs. Yun
John Douglas Thompson (Actor) .. Lt. Gen. Paulsen
Adi Hanash (Actor) .. Outcome #1
Robert Prescott (Actor) .. Air Force Officer
David Wilson Barnes (Actor) .. Drone Spec.
Don Guillory (Actor) .. Drone Pilot
Patrick Vincent Marro (Actor) .. Drone Command Guard
Ali Reza Farahnakian (Actor)
Born: October 26, 1969
Gita Reddy (Actor) .. Dr. Chandra
Born: January 14, 1968
Tom Riis Farrell (Actor) .. Blue Lab Doctor
Steve Routman (Actor) .. Blue Lab Doctor
Peter Lewis (Actor) .. Blue Lab Doctor
Anitha Gandhi (Actor) .. Blue Lab Doctor
Heather Lupton Rasche (Actor) .. Blue Lab Doctor
Natalie Bird (Actor) .. Blue Lab Doctor
Nilaja Sun (Actor) .. Blue Lab Doctor
Christopher Mann (Actor) .. Lab Guard
Born: June 17, 1964
Billy Smith (Actor) .. Lab Guard
Born: December 12, 1950
Murray Knudsen (Actor) .. Alaska Airport Guard
Susan Egbert (Actor) .. DIA Attorney
Tim Devitt (Actor) .. FBI Honcho
Brian Poteat (Actor) .. State Investigator
Clayton Barber (Actor) .. Gene
Elizabeth Marvel (Actor) .. Dr. Connie Dowd
Born: November 27, 1969
Birthplace: Shillington, Pennsylvania, United States
Trivia: Is a practicing Quaker. Her first professional role was as Isabella in Measure for Measure at the Stratford Festival in Ontario. Made her Broadway debut as an understudy in The SeagulI in 1992. Performed as Katherine in the New York Shakespeare Festival stage production of Henry V. Played Brooke Wyeth in the off-Broadway premiere of Other Desert Cities in 2011; when the show transfered to Broadway, she was replaced by Rachel Griffith, but later joined the show as a replacement.
Michael Papajohn (Actor) .. Larry
Born: November 07, 1964
Birthplace: Birmingham, Alabama
Trivia: Actor, stuntman, and college baseball player Michael Papajohn got his start in show business while he was attending Louisiana State University, where he played for the LSU Tigers. After having the opportunity to perform some stunts in the sports movie Everybody's All American in 1988, Papajohn began pursuing stunt and acting roles, appearing in movies like The Last Boy Scout and Mr. Baseball. He would find consistent acting work over the coming years, frequently making small appearances. He played an unnamed thug in 2000's Charlie's Angels and a security guard in the 2002 comedy The Hot Chick, and continued to take on several roles per year throughout the 2000s, notably appearing in I Know Who Killed Me, Spider-Man 3, and Terminator Salvation.
David Leitch (Actor) .. The Driver
Michael Berresse (Actor) .. Leonard
Born: August 15, 1964
Deidre Goodwin (Actor) .. Candent Spokesperson
Born: September 15, 1969
Birthplace: Oklahoma City - Oklahoma - United States
Laura Spaeth (Actor) .. Walking Woman
Sam Gilroy (Actor) .. C-Team
Born: February 18, 1987
Sharon Washington (Actor) .. C-Team
Rachel Black (Actor) .. C-Team
Frank Deal (Actor) .. C-Team
Born: October 07, 1958
Rob Yang (Actor) .. C-Team
Catherine Curtin (Actor) .. C-Team
Matt Oberg (Actor) .. C-Team
Born: August 22, 1976
Gary Lee Mahmoud (Actor) .. C-Team
Faye Yvette Mcqueen (Actor) .. TSA Guard
Born: December 19, 1961
Pat Battle (Actor) .. MSNBC Anchor
Born: December 09, 1959
Nico Bernuth (Actor) .. Flight Attendant
Jane Jameston (Actor) .. Flight Attendant
Roland Manansala (Actor) .. Steri-M Guard
John Arcilla (Actor) .. Joseph
Born: June 24, 1966
Josh Banks (Actor) .. Mackie's Assistant
Shane Jacobson (Actor) .. Mackie
Born: March 18, 1970
Birthplace: Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Trivia: Began his career at age 10 acting in theatre productions. In 1999, began hosting the segment "The 60 Minute Challenge" on Melbourne's Gold FM radio station. Gained fame starring in the 2006 mockumentary Kenny, winning the 2006 AACTA Award for Best Actor. In 2008, starred in the Australian production of Guys and Dolls, winning the 2008 Helpmann Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Musical. Was the co-host of the short-lived Top Gear Australia in 2010. Co-hosted the first season of The Great Australian Bake Off in 2013.
Allen Jo (Actor) .. Guard
Born: March 08, 1977
Jonathan Eusebio (Actor) .. Guard
Jon Valera (Actor) .. Guard
Born: October 02, 1975
Carl Villa Roman (Actor) .. Sterival Catwalk Guard
Louis Ozawa Changchien (Actor) .. LARX #3
Born: October 11, 1975
Birthplace: Queens, New York, United Sates
Trivia: Is of Vietnamese and Japanese descent.Was raised in New York City, United States.Native language is English, but is also fluent in Japanese.Started his career in television doing commercials at 8-years-old.Practices Kendo, a martial art.
Madeleine Nicolas (Actor) .. Landlady
Ruby Ruiz (Actor) .. Philippine Pharmacist
Cherry Devera (Actor) .. Crisis Translator
Julienne Orindain (Actor) .. TV Girl
Antonette R. Garcia (Actor) .. TV Mom
Sonny Tuazon (Actor) .. Manila Cop
Normandy Bacaltos (Actor) .. Manila Cop
Edgar Letran (Actor) .. Manila Cop
Alvin Zalamea (Actor) .. Manila Cop
Spencer Sano (Actor) .. Manila Cop
Julie R. Ysla (Actor) .. Woman with the Bag
Born: November 01, 1955
Joel Torre (Actor) .. Citrus Samaritan
Born: June 19, 1961
Birthplace: Philippines
Trivia: First acted in a play at the age of 7 during summer vacation. That was also the time he joined the Genesius Guild and started theater acting. Gumising Ka, Maruja (1979) is his first movie as a child actor. The first job he took up after graduation was that of a production assistant for the movie Champoy (1981). This was a part of his college internship. Made his debut as the male lead in the classic Oro, Plata, Mata (1981). Won a Gawad Urian Best Actor Award for his performance in On The Job (2013). Also bagged the Best Actor Trophy at the 17th Puchon International Fantastic Film Fest for the same movie. The death of his character Samuel Hidalgo in the popular series Ikaw Lamang, in 2014, garnered worldwide recognition for him when it became a global trending topic on Twitter.
Hermie Concepcion (Actor) .. Pissed-Off Guy
Arthur Acuña (Actor) .. Manila Driver
Adrian Talinga (Actor) .. Captain's Son
Lou Veloso (Actor) .. Captain
Born: January 11, 1965
Ian Blackman (Actor) .. Landy's Attorney
Born: September 02, 1959
Jodi Applegate Kay (Actor) .. Landy Reporter
Tony Carlin (Actor) .. Landy Reporter
Karen Pittman (Actor) .. Landy Reporter
Ana Berry (Actor) .. Landy Reporter
Matthew Walters (Actor) .. Landy Reporter
Brian O'Neill (Actor) .. Landy Reporter
Robert Christopher Riley (Actor)
Born: October 11, 1980
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Ali Reza (Actor)
Edward Norton (Actor) .. Retired Col. Eric Byer, USAF
Born: August 18, 1969
Birthplace: Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Trivia: An actor of unusual talent, Edward Norton attained almost instant stardom with his film debut in 1996's Primal Fear. For his thoroughly chilling breakthrough performance as a Kentucky altar boy accused of murder, Norton was credited with saving an otherwise mediocre film and further rewarded with Golden Globe and Oscar nominations. Remarkably disconnected from all of the hype that is usually associated with fresh talent, Norton has gone on to further prove his worth in such films as American History X, The People vs. Larry Flynt, and Fight Club.The son of a former Carter Administration federal prosecutor and an English teacher, as well as the grandson of famed developer James Rouse, Norton was born in Boston on August 18, 1969. He was raised in the planned community of Columbia, MD, and from an early age was known as an extremely bright and somewhat serious person. His interest in acting began at the age of five when his babysitter, Betsy True (who went on to become an actress on stage and screen), took him to a musical adaptation of Cinderella. Shortly after that, Norton enrolled at Orenstein's Columbia School for Theatrical Arts, making his stage debut at the age of eight in a local production of Annie Get Your Gun. Although young, Norton already exhibited an unusual amount of professionalism and took his subsequent roles seriously. After high school, he studied astronomy, history, and Japanese at Yale, and was also active in the university's theatrical productions. After earning a history degree, Norton spent a few months in Japan and then moved to New York, where he worked for the Enterprise Foundation, a group devoted to stopping urban decay. Again, Norton continued acting at every opportunity and eventually decided to become a full-time actor. In 1994, he appeared in Edward Albee's Fragments after deeply impressing the distinguished playwright during an audition. Norton then joined the New York Signature Theater Company, which frequently premieres Albee's plays. With a number of off-Broadway credits to his name, Norton won his role in Primal Fear after being chosen out of 2,100 hopefuls. He nabbed the part after telling casting directors in a flawless drawl that he was a native of eastern Kentucky, the same area where the character came from; legend has it that the actor watched Coal Miner's Daughter to learn the accent. The intensity of Norton's screen test readings stunned almost all who saw them, and the actor became something of a hot property even before the film was released. The same year, Norton was cast as Drew Barrymore's affable fiancé in Woody Allen's tribute to Hollywood musicals, Everyone Says I Love You. Like all of the other actors in the film (excepting Barrymore), Norton did his own singing, further impressing audiences and critics alike with his versatility. Then, as if two completely different films in one year weren't enough, Norton again wowed audiences that same year with his portrayal of a determined defense attorney in Milos Forman's widely acclaimed The People vs. Larry Flynt. In 1998, Norton turned in two more stellar performances. The first was as Matt Damon's low-life buddy, the appropriately named Worm, in Rounders. The fact that Norton's work was more or less overshadowed by the film's lackluster reviews was almost negligible when compared to the controversy surrounding his other major project that year, American History X. Norton's stunningly powerful portrayal of a reformed white supremacist won him an Oscar nomination, but the film itself was both a box-office disappointment and the subject of vituperative disassociation on the part of its director Tony Kaye, who insisted that Norton and the studio had edited his film beyond recognition. Despite such embittered controversy, Norton managed to emerge from the mess relatively unscathed. After serving as one of the narrators for the acclaimed documentary Out of the Past the same year, he went on to star opposite Brad Pitt and Helena Bonham Carter in Fight Club in 1999. Though that film garnered a mixed reaction at the box office, a stellar DVD release helped the film to form a solid fan base and Norton next moved on to the slightly more successful crime drama The Score (2001). After dropping a full-fledged bomb with his appearance as a naive children's show host in Danny DeVito's black comedy Death to Smoochy, Norton assisted love interest Salma Hayek by offering an uncredited re-write of the script. Norton would also make a brief appearance as Nelson Rockefeller in the film. Drawn to the mystique of screen villain Hannibal Lecter, Norton's next major film was that of FBI agent Will Graham in the well-recieved 2002 thriller Red Dragon. Though a virtual remake of Michael Mann's 1986 effort Manhunter, Red Dragon stood tall enough on its own terms to gain the respect of both fans of the previous version as well as fans of the book. His appearance as a drug dealer celebrating one last night on the town before serving a prison term in Spike Lee's 25th Hour drew decent enought reviews, though its ultimate take at the box office proved fairly disappointing. An appearance in the high profile 2003 remake The Italian Job caused something of a rift in industry headlines when Norton made it publicly known that his participation in the film was strictly a result of contractual obligation, and in 2005 the actor would return to quieter, more challenging territory with his portrayal of a delusional cowboy wannabe in Dahmer director David Jacobson's Down in the Valley. A headlining performance as a turn-of-the-century Vienna magician who uses his powers to win the love of the woman he longs for in the romantic fantasy The Illusionist found Norton making a particularly powerful impression opposite Paul Giamatti and Jessical Biel, and later that same year he would return to the screen in director John Curran's screen adaptation of W. Somerset Maugham's novel The Painted Veil. Meanwhile, the sneaking suspicion that Norton wasn't quite living up to early career expectations was growing difficult to ignore; though his turn as Bruce Banner in 2008's The Incredible Hulk drew generally favorable reviews (it didn't hurt that the film itself was markedly more exciting than Ang Lee's misguided 2003 take on the material), Norton's next film Pride and Glory proved somewhat forgettable, and his quirky duel role in Tim Blake Nelson's Leaves of Grass only received a limited theatrical release before getting lost in the shuffle. Poor reviews for Norton's 2010 film Stone didn't help much to reinvigorate his career, and when it was announced that Mark Ruffalo would be taking over the role of Banner in Joss Whedon's all-star comic book romp The Avengers, some feared that the actor's previous rift with Marvel Studios had come back to haunt him.In 2012, when he took high-profile roles in two eagerly anticipated films -- Wes Anderson's Moonrise Kingdom and Tony Gilroy's The Bourne Legacy, and two years later he earned rave reviews for his supporting turn as a monstrously egotistical and hugely talented actor in Alejandro Inarritu's Birdman, a part that earned him an Oscar nomination and a slew of other industry accolades.

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Maleficent
09:20 am