Hitch: Especialista en seducción


09:54 am - 12:04 pm, Today on Golden (Latin America) ()

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About this Broadcast
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Un asesor de emparejamiento ayuda a los hombres inseguros, pero no puede hacer nada por sí mismo cuando se enamora de una columnista.

2005 Spanish, Castilian
Comedia Romance Drama Entretenimiento Citas Tragicomedia

Cast & Crew
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Will Smith (Actor) .. Alex 'Hitch' Hitchens
Eva Mendes (Actor) .. Sara Melas
Amber Valletta (Actor) .. Allegra Cole
Julie Ann Emery (Actor) .. Casey Sedgewick
Adam Arkin (Actor) .. Max
Robinne Lee (Actor) .. Cressida Baylor
Nathan Lee Graham (Actor) .. Geoff
Michael Rapaport (Actor) .. Ben
Jeffrey Donovan (Actor) .. Vance Munson
Paula Patton (Actor) .. Mandy
Philip Bosco (Actor) .. Mr. O'Brian
Kevin Sussman (Actor) .. Neil
Navia Nguyen (Actor) .. Mika
Matt Malloy (Actor) .. Pete
Maria Thayer (Actor) .. Lisa
Ato Essandoh (Actor) .. Tanis
Marlyne Barrett (Actor) .. Stephanie
Jack Hartnett (Actor) .. Tom Reda
David Wike (Actor) .. Chip
Frederick B. Owens (Actor) .. Larry
Jenna Stern (Actor) .. Louise
Austin Lysy (Actor) .. Magnus “Maggie” Forester
Adam LeFevre (Actor) .. Speed Dating Guy
Joe Lo Truglio (Actor) .. Music Lover Guy
Ryan Cross (Actor) .. Charles Wellington
Beau Sia (Actor) .. Drugstore Clerk
Fran Kranz (Actor) .. Coca Cola Guy
Amy Hohn (Actor) .. Marla
Mimi Weddell (Actor) .. Grandma Wellington
Caprice Benedetti (Actor) .. Gorgeous Wife
Rain Phoenix (Actor) .. Kate
Anya Avaeva (Actor) .. Hot Date
Brielle Barbusca (Actor) .. Student on Class Trip
Michelle DiBenedetti (Actor) .. First Date Woman
Alexa Lane (Actor) .. Yoga Student
Rebecca Mader (Actor) .. Kim
Olivia Weston (Actor) .. Beautiful Yatch Owner
Mercedes Renard (Actor) .. Maria
Tony Travis (Actor) .. Tony
Ptolemy Slocum (Actor) .. Ron

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Will Smith (Actor) .. Alex 'Hitch' Hitchens
Born: September 25, 1968
Birthplace: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Trivia: Given his formidable success in numerous arenas of the entertainment industry, the multi-talented Will Smith qualifies as an original "Renaissance man." Although Smith initially gained fame as the rap star Fresh Prince prior to the age of 20, (with constant MTV airplay and blockbuster record sales), he cut his chops as an A-list Hollywood actor on the small and big screens in successive years, unequivocally demonstrating his own commercial viability and sturdy appeal to a broad cross section of viewers. A Philadelphia native, Smith entered the world on September 25, 1968. The son of middle-class parents (his father owned a refrigeration company and his mother worked for the school board) and the second of four children, Smith started rapping from the age of 12, and earned the nickname "Prince" thanks to his ability to slickly talk his way out of trouble. Smith engendered this moniker as a household phrase when he officially formed the duo DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince, with fellow performer Jeff Townes in 1986. That team netted two Grammys (one for the seminal 1988 youth anthem "Parents Just Don't Understand" and one for the 1991 single "Summertime") and scored commercially with a series of albums up through their disbandment in 1993 that did much to dramatically broaden the age range of rap listeners (unlike artists in the gangsta rap subgenre, Smith and Townes never ventured into R- or X-rated subject matter or language). However, by the time he was 21, Smith had frittered away much of his fortune and had fallen into debt with the IRS. Help arrived in the form of Warner Bros. executive Benny Medina, who wanted to create a family-friendly sitcom based on his own experiences as a poor kid living with a rich Beverly Hills family, starring the genial Smith. The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air debuted on NBC on September 10, 1990, and became a runaway hit, lasting six seasons. The program imparted to Smith -- who had turned down an MIT scholarship to pursue his career -- even wider audience exposure as the show's protagonist, introducing him to legions of viewers who fell outside of the rap market. During Prince's lengthy run, Smith began to branch out into film work. Following roles in Where the Day Takes You (1992) and Made in America (1993), he drew substantial critical praise on the arthouse circuit, as a young gay con man feigning an identity as Sidney Poitier's son, in Six Degrees of Separation (1993), directed by Fred Schepisi and adapted by John Guare from his own play. Smith also elicited minor controversy around this time for remarks he made in an interview that some perceived as homophobic. In 1994, Smith and Martin Lawrence signed on with powerhouse producers Don Simpson and Jerry Bruckheimer to co-star in the action-comedy Bad Boys, in which the two play a hotshot pair of Miami cops; it eventually raked in over 141 million dollars worldwide. The following year, Smith topped his Bad Boys success (and then some) with a turn in the sci-fi smash Independence Day, the effects-laden tale of an alien invasion. Co-written, executive-produced, and directed by Roland Emmerich for 20th Century Fox, this picture eventually pulled in over 816 million dollars globally, making it not only the top grosser of 1996, but one of the most lucrative motion pictures in history. Smith then tackled the same thematic ground (albeit in a completely different genre), as a government-appointed alien hunter partnered up with Tommy Lee Jones in Barry Sonnenfeld's zany comedy Men in Black (1997), another smash success. Not long after this, Smith achieved success on a personal front as well, as he married actress Jada Pinkett on New Year's Eve 1998. The following autumn, Smith returned to cinemas with Enemy of the State, a conspiracy thriller with Gene Hackman that had him on the run from government agents. That film scored a commercial bull's-eye, but its triumph preceded a minor disappointment. The following summer, Smith starred opposite Kevin Kline in Wild Wild West, Sonnenfeld's lackluster follow-up to Men in Black, an overwrought and ham-handed cinematic rendering of the late-'60s TV hit.The late fall of 2000 found Smith back in cinemas, playing a mysterious golf caddy who tutors down-on-his-luck putter Matt Damon in the syrupy The Legend of Bagger Vance (2000). Smith then trained rigorously for his most demanding role up to that point: that of legendary boxer Muhammad Ali in director Michael Mann's biopic Ali (2001). The film struggled to find an audience, and critics were mixed, even if Smith's well-studied performance earned praise as well as his first Oscar nomination. While Smith executive produced the Robert De Niro/Eddie Murphy comedy Showtime (2002), he doubled it up with work in front of the camera, on the sci-fi comedy sequel Men in Black II, also helmed by Barry Sonnenfeld. As expected, the film made an unholy amount of money; he followed it up with yet another sequel, the Bruckheimer-produced Bad Boys II. It topped the box office, as expected. The next year saw Smith pull the one-two punch of I, Robot -- a futuristic, effects-laden fantasy -- and the CG-animated Shark Tale, in which he voiced Oscar, a little fish with a big attitude who scrubs whales for a living. While Smith had proven himself as an action star time and again and had received high marks for his dramatic work, it remained to be seen if he could carry a romantic comedy. All speculation ceased in early 2005 with the release of Hitch: Starring Smith as a fabled "date doctor," the film had the biggest opening weekend for a rom-com to date, leading many to wonder if there was anything Smith couldn't do.The following year, Smith starred in the period drama The Pursuit of Happyness. Set in early-'80s San Francisco, and directed by Gabriele Muccino (a director specifically summoned for the task by Smith), the film recounted the true story of Charles Gardner (Smith), a single dad struggling in an unpaid position as an intern at Dean Witter, all in an effort to be able provide for his son. The film tapped new reserves of compassion and desparation in Smith's persona, as he managed to fully embody another real-life character while maintaining all of the qualities that endeared him to audiences in the first place: His humor, his hustle and his ingenuity. Upon its release, Happyness provided Smith with perhaps his first cinematic hat trick: critical praise, a second Academy Award nomination for Best Actor, and staggering box-office success (the film would become one of his largest hits). Meanwhile, he began work as the lead in I Am Legend (2007), the third screen incarnation of sci-fi giant Richard Matheson's seminal novel of the same title (following a 1964's The Last Man on Earth, and 1971's The Omega Man).The actor continued to keep busy in 2008 with films including Seven Pounds (despite an unintentionally comical suicide by sea life, the film was a critical failure) and superhero comedy Hancock, featuring Smith in the lead role as a hard-drinking ne'er-do-well who is reluctantly thrust into the world of crime-fighting. After producing a remake of The Karate Kid (starring his son, Jaden Smith) and spy comedy This Means War, Smith reprised his role as Agent J for Men in Black III in 2012. MIB III was a box office success, in no small part due to the chemistry between Smith and Agent K (Tommy Lee Jones).
Eva Mendes (Actor) .. Sara Melas
Born: March 05, 1974
Birthplace: Miami, Florida, United States
Trivia: A fiercely independent actress who refuses to be pressed into a conventional mode or typecast, Eva Mendes was studying marketing in the late '90s when an agent stumbled across her photo while perusing Mendes's neighbor's portfolio. She soon appeared in an Aerosmith video and made her film debut in Children of the Corn V: Fields of Terror. Mendes next appeared in a few made-for-television productions and hammed it up with Will Ferrell and Chris Kattan in A Night at the Roxbury before being cast in a prominent role in Urban Legends: Final Cut. Working against typecasting despite her teen horror resumé, Mendes next took roles in Exit Wounds, Training Day, and All About the Benjamins. Mendes next began work on a children's book titled Crazy Leggs Beshee in which she wanted to introduce art, history, vocabulary, and values to children in a fun and easily comprehendable medium.In 2003, Mendes' career took off, with the actress taking on large roles in an ecclectic quartet of high-profile films. In 2 Fast 2 Furious she played a customs agent working with Paul Walker to bring down a Miami drug cartel. Out of Time found her reteaming with Training Day costar Denzel Washington. Flexing her comedic chops, Mendes was the love interest of half a pair of conjoined twins in the Farrelly brothers' Stuck on You. And in Once Upon a Time in Mexico she played another government agent, this time opposite Johnny Depp.Mendes would go on to appear in a number of films over the coming years, like The Wendell Baker Story, Hitch, Ghost Rider, The Other Guys, and Girl in Progress. She took several years off in order to focus on her growing family, but in 2015, it was announced she would reprise her role from 2 Fast 2 Furious in a future Fast film.
Amber Valletta (Actor) .. Allegra Cole
Born: February 09, 1974
Birthplace: Phoenix, Arizona, United States
Trivia: Supermodel-cum-Hollywood actress Amber Valletta hit the runway in her late teens, and, though a frequent presence in fashion ads for several years prior, first made national headlines in July 1993. That summer, under representation by Boss Models, the svelte 19-year-old Oklahoman blonde upstaged heavyweight Cindy Crawford as the primary spokeswoman for Capezio handbags -- and turned more than a few heads in the process. Not long after, Valletta also signed on as the chief spokeswoman for Elizabeth Arden. In 1996, Valletta succeeded Crawford again -- this time as the co-host (alongside Shalom Harlow) of MTV's hit documentary series House of Style. The by-now-familiar program found Valletta and Harlow carrying viewers behind the scenes of the fashion world, and (in the process) covered everything from runway preparation to before-the-camera apparel to anorexia nervosa. In 1999, Valletta's modeling intersected with social work when she helped raise over 350,000 dollars for the St. Jude Royal Gala Benefit in Monte Carlo, and later parlayed that effort into a promotional tour for Elizabeth Arden Splendor perfume that had Valletta and other company reps giving terminally ill children heartstring-tugging "moments of splendor."Although hosting duties on House of Style represented Valletta's first broad leap into filmed entertainment, she delayed her cinematic work for another four years. In 2000, the model debuted onscreen as the spirit of a murdered coed in Robert Zemeckis' Hitchcock retread, What Lies Beneath, starring Michelle Pfeiffer and Harrison Ford. Valletta's roles -- given the actress' off-camera motherhood and intermittent magazine work -- accumulated slowly over the next several years (in films such as the Nicolas Cage holiday vehicle The Family Man and the Danny DeVito-directed black comedy Duplex); as a result, Valletta only ascended gradually to top billing. In 2005, however, she attained her highest-profile exposure to date (and gained much-deserved respect as an actress) in the Andy Tennant-directed romantic comedy Hitch. As Allegra Cole, the city's most eligible bachelorette, who falls for the least likely candidate (overweight and self-conscious klutz Kevin James), Valletta played an admirable straight man to both James and "date doctor" Alex "Hitch" Hitchens (Will Smith).After a noticeable onscreen absence in 2006, Valletta returned to cinemas the following year, with two back-to-back roles in supernatural thrillers. She first received second billing as a nubile young bride in the James Wan-directed Saw follow-up Dead Silence -- a slasher picture about a quiet little town plagued by the spirit of an evil ventriloquist. And later that year, Valletta portrayed Claire in the Mennan Yapo-directed Premonition, starring Sandra Bullock. She went on to appear in Gamer, The Spy Next Door, and Girl Walks Into a Bar before landing a part in the television series Revenge in 2011.
Julie Ann Emery (Actor) .. Casey Sedgewick
Born: January 16, 2000
Birthplace: Crossville, Tennessee, United States
Trivia: A native of Crossville, TN, Julie Ann Emery broke into theater at the age of 16 and formally studied the dramatic arts at Webster Conservatory in St. Louis, MO. Over the years, she maintained her strongest and most frequent presence on the stage, in multiple cities, including Manhattan and Chicago. The innumerable New York-based productions in which Emery appeared included Caesar and Cleopatra, Hot'l Baltimore, and Twelfth Night, while in the Windy City she did critically acclaimed work as Gypsy Rose Lee in a revival of the Jule Styne/Stephen Sondheim musical Gypsy; she also toured in productions of Annie and A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. Emery transitioned to film work in the early 2000s, initially on television series including ER (a recurring role, as Niki) and Dexter, though in time she turned up in features as well, such as the Will Smith romantic comedy Hitch, the occult thriller House (2007), and the Rod Lurie-helmed political drama Nothing But the Truth (2008).
Adam Arkin (Actor) .. Max
Born: August 19, 1956
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: The oldest of three sons of Broadway star Alan Arkin, American actor Adam Arkin has had stage and movie work, but is best known for his TV assignments. In 1977 Arkin was starred in his first series, the one-season sitcom Bustin' Loose, wherein the 21-year-old actor played a man finally escaping his overprotective parents. Arkin went on to play an inner-city biology teacher in the brief 1982 TV series Teachers Only; a Chicago bookie in the short-lived 1986 weekly Tough Cookies; and an attorney in 1988's A Year in the Life, which lasted eight months of our lives. In 1990, just when it seemed as though Arkin was going to become the King of Cancellation, he made the first of many guest appearances on the quirky CBS series Northern Exposure as Adam, the sociopathic, in-your-face hermit/gourmet chef. The character reappeared sporadically until 1993, sometimes as a welcome touch of anarchy, other times as merely a loud-mouthed royal pain. In 1994, Adam Arkin was given his most recent crack at regular weekly series work, playing a dedicated but mercurial doctor on the TV drama Chicago Hope, where he was matched insult for insult by the equally obstreperous Mandy Patinkin. Though that well-regarded series came to a close in 2000, Arkin continued to work steadily in both movies and TV appearing in a diverse string of projects including A Slight Case of Murder, the sitcom Baby Bob, and the Will Smith vehicle Hitch. He had a major part on the short-lived TV series Life starting in 2007, and in 2009 appeared in the Coen Brothers Best Picture nominee A Serious Man. He also maintained a steady career as a director of series television helming episodes of Monk, Ally McBeal, and Grey's Anatomy. In 2012 he could be seen in The Sessions, a film that won the audience award at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival.
Robinne Lee (Actor) .. Cressida Baylor
Born: July 16, 1974
Trivia: A graduate of Columbia Law School, Robinne Lee began her acting career as a supporting actress in romantic comedies with Hav Plenty in 1997 and appeared the same year in an episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer. She then made a few made-for-TV movies, including the Hallmark Hall of Fame productions Cupid & Cate and The Runaway, both originally broadcast on CBS. In 2003, Lee appeared in Deliver Us From Eva with LL Cool J and the action comedy National Security with Martin Lawrence.
Nathan Lee Graham (Actor) .. Geoff
Born: September 09, 1968
Michael Rapaport (Actor) .. Ben
Born: March 20, 1970
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Within four years of his film debut in Zebrahead (1993), Michael Rapaport (born March 20th, 1970) became one of Hollywood's hardest-working and most versatile supporting/character actors. He began as a standup comedian, but turned to acting after landing a guest-starring role in a 1990 episode of the ABC television drama China Beach. Rapaport's portrayal in Zebrahead of a Jewish teen struggling to survive in an African-American-dominated Detroit neighborhood while romantically involved with a black girl earned him considerable acclaim and a nomination for an Independent Feature Project Spirit Award. After that, he did a bit more television work and his career remained low-key until the following year, when he suddenly burst back onto the screen in four major films: True Romance, Point of No Return, Money for Nothing, and Poetic Justice. Some of Rapaport's notable subsequent roles include that of a college student who mistakenly attempts to find his niche by becoming a skinhead in John Singleton's Higher Learning (1995) and that of a slightly dim prizefighter set up for a blind date with a goodhearted hooker in Woody Allen's Mighty Aphrodite (1995). In 1998, Rapaport co-starred in the Showtime cable network's black comedy series about the zany world of substance abuse recovery programs Rude Awakening. That year, Rapaport also appeared in the films Palmetto and Some Girls. Rappaport worked in film sporadically throughout the 2000, but found some success in Metro, Deep Blue Sea, and Higher Learning. However, the actor is much more recognized for his work in the television shows Boston Public, Prison Break, and the War at Home.
Jeffrey Donovan (Actor) .. Vance Munson
Born: May 11, 1968
Birthplace: Amesbury, Massachusetts, United States
Trivia: A seasoned Shakespearean stage actor, Massachusetts native Jeffrey Donovan possesses precisely the kind of steely eyed gaze that made him an ideal candidate to portray a former government agent struggling to piece his life back together in the tense USA Network series Burn Notice. Donovan attended the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, continuing his studies in New York University's Acting Graduate program, and after receiving his MFA, it was time to put his skills to the ultimate test. Frequently alternating between the stage and the screen in the 1990s, Donovan appeared in episodes of Law & Order, Homicide: Life on the Street, The Pretender, and Spin City while nurturing a feature career with supporting roles in such films as Sleepers and Catherine's Grove. A part in the eagerly anticipated 2000 sequel Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 gave Donovan increased exposure, though it was his role in the 2004 made-for-television crime thriller Touching Evil that marked the beginning of the actor's fruitful collaboration with the USA Network. Cast as a detective whose close brush with death gave him an uncanny ability to peer into the criminal mind, Donovan was a hit with viewers and critics, and went on to reprise the role in the short-lived series that followed. While network executives may not have given Touching Evil quite enough time to find a solid viewing audience, they did recognize Donovan's onscreen charisma. After a memorable supporting role in the 2005 Will Smith comedy Hitch and numerous television appearances (including a recurring role in the popular NBC series Crossing Jordan), the USA Network gave the actor a second shot by casting him as the lead in Burn Notice. By this point, Donovan was on the verge of bona fide screen stardom, with substantial roles in such dramatic features as the 2006 sports drama Believe in Me pointing toward success for Donovan as well as Burn Notice. Donovan would also appear in several successful films over the years, like Changeling and J.Edgar.
Paula Patton (Actor) .. Mandy
Born: December 05, 1975
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: Even though bright-eyed actress Paula Patton began performing as a little girl, putting plays in her own back yard, the shy young woman didn't realize she wanted a career onscreen for many years to come. In high school, she became involved in a PBS series that took young, aspiring filmmakers on a trip across the country to work on their own documentaries, and when Patton graduated high school, she continued to pursue her interest in working behind the camera by enrolling the film school at the University of Southern California. After graduation, she worked as a production assistant, nurturing her goal of producing her own movie, but something felt missing. Finally, Patton realized that her passion was to be on the other side of the camera, so she enrolled in acting classes and strove toward her new goal in full force.Within a few years, Patton had landed a small role in Will Smith's 2005 comedy Hitch. The next year, she auditioned for a strange and exciting project by music-video director and first time filmmaker Bryan Barber starring Andre 3000 from the hip-hop group OutKast. The movie was called Idlewild, and the super-stylized comedy/crime drama/musical was set in the Prohibition-era American South. Patton's fresh new face was exactly what the unique project needed, and she was cast in the role of Angel Davenport, the female lead. Though the film wasn't geared toward the mainstream, it was a cult success among audiences and critics who appreciated its quirky style. Patton's star continued to rise as later that same year she was cast in another substantial role, this time in a much more high-profile movie. As the damsel Denzel Washington must travel through time to save in the Tony Scott action thriller Déjà Vu, Patton's sweet but solid force onscreen was lauded, even by critics who bashed the movie for being overly serious. For her next project, the actress signed on to star opposite Kiefer Sutherland in the horror movie Mirrors, slated for release in 2007. She appeared in the 2008 political comedy Swing Vote, and the basketball themed romantic comedy Just Wright in 2010. She had her most high-profile success as a member of the team Ethan Hunt puts together in Mission Impossible - Ghost Protocol. She next appeared in the comedies Jumping the Broom (2011), Baggage Claim (2013) and About Last Night (2014).Patton was married to R&B singer/songwriter Robin Thicke in 2005. She appears on the cover of his 2003 album A Beautiful World and in a number of his music videos. The couple officially divorced in 2015.
Philip Bosco (Actor) .. Mr. O'Brian
Born: September 26, 1930
Trivia: Catholic University was the alma mater of American actor Philip Bosco -- or would have been if he hadn't been expelled. Bosco would not collect a college degree until age 27, after a long stint as an Army cryptographer. Most comfortable in classical stage roles, Bosco has found it expedient to don modern garb for most of his movie work. After a one-shot screen appearance in 1968's A Lovely Way to Die, Bosco didn't step before the movie cameras again until 1983, making up for the lost years with supporting appearances in such films as Trading Places (1983), The Pope of Greenwich Village (1984), Three Men and a Baby (1987), Working Girl (1988) and Shadows and Fog (1992). Philip Bosco won a Tony Award for his performance in the popular door-slamming farce Lend Me a Tenor.
Kevin Sussman (Actor) .. Neil
Born: December 04, 1970
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Studied acting with Uta Hagen. Had a recurring role on The Big Bang Theory starting with its second series, and was promoted to series regular in 2012 for the sixth series. Plays the owner of a comic-book shop in The Big Bang Theory, and once worked at a similar establishment in New York City. Both of his parents are schoolteachers. Has appeared in more than 30 US adverts, including Eggos and FedEx.
Navia Nguyen (Actor) .. Mika
Matt Malloy (Actor) .. Pete
Born: January 12, 1963
Trivia: Made his TV debut in Robert Altman's 1988 political satire Tanner '88, co-starring Sex and the City's Cynthia Nixon. First feature-film appearance was a small role in 1989 dramedy The Unbelievable Truth, which also featured The Sopranos' Edie Falco in a bit part. Has appeared on numerous police-themed shows, including Law & Order, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, NCIS, NYPD Blue, Third Watch and Without a Trace. Wife Cas is an assistant director; the two have worked on several films together.
Maria Thayer (Actor) .. Lisa
Trivia: An actress best known for her ongoing series portrayal of Tammi Littlenut, best friend of Jerri Blank on the Comedy Central Afterschool Special send-up Strangers with Candy, actress Maria Thayer specialized in farce. She went on to distinguish herself in offbeat comedies including the teen-oriented Accepted (2006) and the Judd Apatow-produced romantic comedy Forgetting Sarah Marshall (2008).
Ato Essandoh (Actor) .. Tanis
Born: July 29, 1972
Birthplace: Schenectady, NY, United States
Trivia: Is of Ghanaian descent. First tried acting in college, when he auditioned for a production of Paper Moon on a dare. Took acting classes at the Acting Studio in New York. Appeared in an off-Broadway production of Tallboy Walking. Cofounded the writing and performance group the Defiant Ones. Published a stage play, Black Thang, in 2003.
Marlyne Barrett (Actor) .. Stephanie
Born: September 13, 1978
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: Is the daughter of two scientists and the sister of a doctor. Knew she wanted to be an actor from a young age. Was a VJ for the station Musique Plus in Montreal. Performed in a 2001 production of Hamlet with the Hudson Shakespeare Company. Appeared on many of Dick Wolf's crime series, including Law & Order, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit and Law & Order: Trial By Jury, before starring on his medical series Chicago Med. Speaks fluent French.
Jack Hartnett (Actor) .. Tom Reda
David Wike (Actor) .. Chip
Born: April 20, 1969
Frederick B. Owens (Actor) .. Larry
Jenna Stern (Actor) .. Louise
Born: September 23, 1967
Austin Lysy (Actor) .. Magnus “Maggie” Forester
Born: April 19, 1977
Adam LeFevre (Actor) .. Speed Dating Guy
Born: August 11, 1950
Joe Lo Truglio (Actor) .. Music Lover Guy
Born: December 02, 1970
Birthplace: Queens, New York, United States
Trivia: As a fresh-faced college kid, Joe Lo Truglio probably never guessed that joining the sketch comedy troupe The State would eventually lead to a successful career in TV and movies. But when the New York-based group got its own show on MTV in 1993, Lo Truglio and the group's 10 other members gained a foothold in the media that they would all build on for years to come. Drawing on influences like Monty Python and Kids in the Hall, The State's bizarre brand of comedy struck a chord with audiences, and even after the show ended its run in 1995, many members of the group would find new projects together and with up-and-coming names in comedy. Lo Truglio went on to appear in a wide variety of projects, like The Station Agent, Hitch, The Sarah Silverman Program, Pineapple Express, and Superbad. He also collaborated with his castmates from The State for a number of comedic projects, like 2001's summer camp satire Wet Hot American Summer and for the popular Cops spoof Reno 911!
Ryan Cross (Actor) .. Charles Wellington
Born: October 06, 1979
Beau Sia (Actor) .. Drugstore Clerk
Born: February 06, 1976
Fran Kranz (Actor) .. Coca Cola Guy
Born: July 13, 1981
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: Dyed his hair blue for the role of Judas in a high school production of Jesus Christ Superstar. Made his film debut in 2001 cult favorite Donnie Darko. The film's lead, Jake Gyllenhaal, was a high-school classmate of Kranz's. Landed his first regular TV role with CBS sitcom Welcome to the Captain. Frequently works with Joss Whedon, acting in Whedon's Dollhouse, The Cabin in the Woods and Much Ado About Nothing. Played Bernard in Mike Nichols' 2012 Broadway production of Death of a Salesman.
Amy Hohn (Actor) .. Marla
Mimi Weddell (Actor) .. Grandma Wellington
Born: February 15, 1915
Died: September 24, 2009
Caprice Benedetti (Actor) .. Gorgeous Wife
Born: August 01, 1965
Birthplace: Seattle, Washington, United States
Trivia: Was discovered at the Northgate Mall in her native Seattle.Is a former model.Played the matriarch of the Owens clan, Maria Owens, in Practical Magic (1998).Played the Angel of Light Guardian on the television series Charmed.Appeared on commercials, television shows and movies.
Rain Phoenix (Actor) .. Kate
Born: November 21, 1972
Birthplace: Crockett, Texas, United States
Trivia: Part of the acting family that also includes River, Joaquin, Liberty, and Summer, Rain Phoenix has pursued a varied career as both an actor and a musician. Born in Crocket, TX, on March 31, 1973, she began performing at the age of three, when she and her older brother, River, sang and played the guitar for money on the streets.Phoenix got her professional acting start in gigs on such TV shows as Family Ties and Amazing Stories, and in 1987 made her film debut in the Ally Sheedy comedy Maid to Order. Around this time Phoenix and River formed the band Aleka's Attic and continued to perform together until the latter's untimely death in 1993.While she continued to lend her musical talents to such bands as R.E.M. and the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Phoenix popped up in a variety of films, with one of her most prominent roles in Gus Van Sant's amazingly ill-fated Even Cowgirls Get the Blues (1993), which cast her as the lusty cowgirl Bonanza Jellybean opposite Uma Thurman's equally lusty hitchhiker Sissy Hankshaw. Phoenix again collaborated with Van Sant in To Die For (1995). Phoenix continued to work onscreen intermittently throughout the 1990s, and in 2001 had one of her more prominent roles to date as Julia Stiles' best friend in O, Tim Blake Nelson's prep school adaptation of Shakespeare's Othello. That same year, the actor shared the screen with Jacqueline Bisset, Martha Plimpton, and Amy Madigan in The Sleepy Time Gal, a drama about family secrets and identity.
Anya Avaeva (Actor) .. Hot Date
Brielle Barbusca (Actor) .. Student on Class Trip
Michelle Deighton (Actor)
Michelle DiBenedetti (Actor) .. First Date Woman
Alexa Lane (Actor) .. Yoga Student
Rebecca Mader (Actor) .. Kim
Born: April 24, 1977
Birthplace: Cambridge, England
Trivia: With a striking visage and an even more distinctive presence, blue-eyed British actress Rebecca Mader launched her career in the early 2000s. She evinced a flair for tackling supporting roles in genre features, such as the lurid thriller 21 Eyes (2003) and the blockbuster drama The Devil Wears Prada (2006), but maintained a higher profile on television, with a memorable role as no-nonsense attorney Alden Tuller in Jerry Bruckheimer's short-lived legal drama Justice (2006). That same year, Mader signed for a supporting part in the tragicomedy Great World of Sound (2007). In early 2008, Mader took on a recurring role on the hit drama Lost.
Olivia Weston (Actor) .. Beautiful Yatch Owner
Mercedes Renard (Actor) .. Maria
Tony Travis (Actor) .. Tony
Born: January 07, 1959
Ptolemy Slocum (Actor) .. Ron
Born: November 20, 1975

Before / After
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