Trevor Jackson
(Actor)
.. Youngblood Priest
Born:
August 30, 1996
Birthplace: Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Trivia:
Has been tap dancing since the age of 3. At the age of 8, began performing in a three-year national tour of The Lion King as Young Simba. Won a Young Artist Award for his guest performance on Harry's Law in 2012. Signed to Atlantic Records and released his debut EP #NewThang in 2013. Covered Snoop Dogg's song "No Guns Allowed" in order to support anti-gun violence initiatives. In 2013, hosted Duffy's Hope 11th Annual Teen Youth Empowerment Summit in Dover, Delaware. Has performed as an opening act for Jason Mraz and Ziggy Marley. Has volunteered with various charities, including the Ronald McDonald House and NBA Cares.
Jason Mitchell
(Actor)
.. Eddie
Born:
January 05, 1987
Trivia:
Grew up following his mother around the world as an Army brat. Took a variety of odd jobs including cook, electrician, oyster shucker and drug dealer to help his family recoup their losses after Hurricane Katrina. Started studying acting in 2010, under the tutelage of Jaqueline Fleming at Jaq's Acting Studio in New Orleans. Five weeks after enrolling, he had an agent. Almost didn't get the role of Eazy-E in Straight Outta Compton because he didn't have $1800 for an overnight plane ticket to LA for a second audition. Director F. Gary Gray compromised on a Skype audition that clinched the role.
Michael K. Williams
(Actor)
Born:
November 22, 1966
Died:
September 06, 2021
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia:
A native of Brooklyn, NY, actor Michael Kenneth Williams fell into a typecast with repeated portrayals of hoods, toughs, and career criminals from project to project. Williams entered acting courtesy of professional dancing, which he began at the age of 22; in that arena, his unique and individualistic moves caught the attention of producers and landed him in a string of music videos. Williams subsequently decided to pursue classical training as an actor, which he received via participation in the National Black Theater Company and New York's La' MaMA Theatre Company, though his breakthrough arrived at the hands of the late gangster rapper Tupac Shakur, who discovered Williams and cast him as his own little brother in the Julien Temple-directed urban crime drama Bullet (1995). Work for Martin Scorsese followed, with a minor role in the grueling psychodrama Bringing Out the Dead (1999), though Williams scored much broader acclaim and exposure via participation in HBO's popular crime drama series The Wire, where he played stick-up man Omar Little for multiple seasons. Williams then moved back into features with a supporting turn as Devin in actor-turned-director Ben Affleck's Gone Baby Gone (2007), then starred opposite Viggo Mortensen and Charlize Theron in director John Hillcoat's post-apocalyptic thriller The Road (2008).
Lex Scott Davis
(Actor)
.. Georgia
Jennifer Morrison
(Actor)
.. Detective Mason
Born:
April 12, 1979
Birthplace: Chicago, IL
Trivia:
An actress who first earned her critical laurels (and reeled in a substantial television fanbase) as Dr. Alison Cameron on the blockbuster medical drama House (2004), Jennifer Morrison grew up well outside the realm of Hollywood, in a middle-class family in the Chicago suburb of Arlington Heights, Illinois. As a preteen and teenager, Morrison entered showbusiness via modeling, appearing in innumerable print campaigns and gracing the cover of Sports Illustrated for Kids at one point; after wrapping up high school, she attended Loyola University as a theater major (reportedly graduating in only three years) and subsequently trained with the legendary Steppenwolf theatrical ensemble, onetime home to such stars as John Malkovich, Gary Sinise, and Glenne Headly. From there, Hollywood fame was merely a short leap away; by the time of her Loyola graduation, Morrison had already officially debuted onscreen, with a small part as the daughter of Richard Gere and Sharon Stone in the psychological drama Intersection (1994) and a more significant role as a missing girl who psychically haunts Kevin Bacon in the supernatural thriller Stir of Echoes (1999). Morrison signed for her first lead with a role that many felt unworthy of her talents and intelligence: that of Amy Mayfield, a young film student who gets in way over her head amid a thesis project on urban legends, in John Ottman's slasher outing Urban Legends: The Final Cut (2000). Subsequent projects included Michael Davis's teen-oriented romantic comedy 100 Women (2002), Casey La Scala's teen comedy Grind (2003), and -- as something of a nadir -- the critically despised holiday gross-out fest Surviving Christmas (2004), in which she played Ben Affleck's snotty girlfriend.As indicated, House represented Morrison's breakthrough and the role that finally brought her public attention. The long-running Fox drama told of Dr. Gregory House (Hugh Laurie), a diagnostician with an astounding degree of medical knowledge and an absolute dearth of social skills. As Dr. Cameron (an immunologist with a not-so-secret crush on the physician), Morrison brought a much-needed dose of warmth and vulnerability to the series.Morrison subsequently made headlines in 2007, when she was tapped to appear as Winona Kirk, James T. Kirk's mother, in J.J. Abrams's much-anticipated 11th installment of the Star Trek series. Despite it being a fairly small role, Morrison still managed to make a big impression in Star Trek, and a somewhat meatier role in 2011's Warrior, as the wife of a natural born fighter from a fractured family, preceded her departure from House the following year. Her ties to television remained tight, however, thanks to a recurring role on the hit CBS comedy series How I Met Your Mother starting in 2010, with a turn as Emma Swan -- a mother who doesn't believe in fairy tales -- in ABC's Once Upon a Time revealing that Morrison possessed a flair for fantasy as well.
Andrea Londo
(Actor)
.. Cynthia
Birthplace: Mexico
Trivia:
First credited television role was in the reality TV show Catfish: The TV Show, playing Jacqueline.Has also appeared in the MTV comedy drama series Faking It and the CBS police procedural Criminal Minds: Beyond Borders.Appeared on FHM's list of 100 Sexiest Women in the World in 2017.Was cast as Cynthia in Sony's remake of the Blaxploitation crime drama Superfly.
Jacob Ming-trent
(Actor)
.. Fat Freddy
Allen Maldonado
(Actor)
.. Lity
Born:
May 20, 1983
Birthplace: Bellflower, California, United States
Trivia:
Of Puerto Rican and African American heritage.Was raised by his mother as his father died when he was very young.In 2017, launched the short film mobile app Everybody Digital.CEO at Get It Done Records.Founder of the non-profit program Demo Nerds, which helps kids through performing arts.
Terayle Hill
(Actor)
.. Dee
Omar Chaparro
(Actor)
.. Adalberto
Esai Morales
(Actor)
.. Adalberto Gonzalez
Born:
October 01, 1962
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia:
A New York-born actor of Puerto Rican descent whose performances in such efforts as La Bamba and Rapa Nui offered a lingering, devastating sense of depth, Esai Morales found success on screens both large and small. Frequently challenging stereotypes and always imbuing his characters with individuality, he was first inspired at the age of 12 by Al Pacino's searing performance in Dog Day Afternoon in 1975. Speaking only Spanish until the age of five, Morales showed talent in a series of stage roles in and around New York City. He graduated from New York's prestigious High School of the Performing Arts before appearing in productions at the Ensemble Theater Studio (El Hermano) and New York's Shakespeare Festival in the Park (The Tempest). In 1982, the actor made his screen debut in the Paul Morrissey film Forty Deuce. His role as Sean Penn's imposing nemesis in the following year's Bad Boys offered a horrific glimpse of the violence of juvenile detention facilities, and, in 1987, Morales cemented his reputation as a talent to watch when he played ill-fated rock & roll singer Ritchie Valens' brother in La Bamba. Equally adept at playing menacing tough guys or more sensitive characters, Morales eschewed stereotypes with roles as an Irish bootlegger in Bloodhounds of Broadway (1989) and an Argentine gangster in Naked Tango (1991). A memorable role as an Easter Island native involved in a painful civil war in 1994's Rapa Nui earned him rave reviews, despite going largely unseen, and the handsome actor was again impressive as a Mexican-American youth in My Family the following year. Morales also drew praise in 1997 for his top-billed role in The Disappearance of Garcia Lorca, and after portraying the father of Cuban refugee Elian Gonzales in the made-for-TV feature A Family in Crisis: The Elian Gonzales Story, Morales stood out with an ALMA-nominated role as Lt. Tony Rodriguez in the enduring police drama NYPD Blue. He also appeared in such features as Paid in Full (2002) and Isla Bella (2004), and had a recurring role in PBS's eagerly anticipated Mexican-American-themed series American Family. In addition to his TV and film work, the self-described activist volunteers time to such organizations as the Earth Communications Office, the Wildlife Preservation Fund in Costa Rica, and the Health Education AIDS Liaison.
Adriyan Rae
(Actor)
.. Candice Simmons - College Girl
Aundrea Smith
(Actor)
.. Amelia
Dawntavia Bullard
(Actor)
.. Monique
Big Boi
(Actor)
.. Mayor Atkins
Born:
February 01, 1975
Birthplace: Savannah, Georgia, United States
Trivia:
One half of the successful hip-hop act OutKast (along with partner Andre 3000), Big Boi (born Antwan Andre Patton) took the duo's act to the big screen with the idiosyncratic musical Idlewild. In addition to an appearance in the drama ATL as a drug dealer, Big Boi portrayed the lead in the golf comedy Who's Your Caddy? He has appeared in numerous documentaries about the hip-hop scene in Atlanta.
Maria Z. Wilson
(Actor)
.. Patrons
Stephanie Garner
(Actor)
.. Street Market Shopper
Al-jaleel Knox
(Actor)
.. Shooter
L. Warren Young
(Actor)
.. Funeral Director
David Dunston
(Actor)
.. Security Guard
Brian F. Durkin
(Actor)
.. Officer Turk Franklin
Michael Beasley
(Actor)
.. Security Guard
Atkins Estimond
(Actor)
.. Barber
Aparnaa Singh
(Actor)
.. Casino Patron
Ruben Vidal
(Actor)
.. Drug Dealer
Kaalan "KR" Walker
(Actor)
.. Juju
Dominique Madison
(Actor)
.. Rochelle
Ryan Lewis
(Actor)
.. Crackhead
Brian Kayode
(Actor)
.. Patrick Johnson-Fat Freddy Brother
Jared Losano
(Actor)
.. Adalberto's Bodyguard
Mehmet Korhan
(Actor)
.. Handsome Business Man
Ahmed Lucan
(Actor)
.. Diplomatic Official
Rick Perez
(Actor)
.. Lead Cartel Bodyguard
Amy Stormant
(Actor)
.. Market Patron/Driver
Ivan Leung
(Actor)
.. The Miner
Big Bank Black
(Actor)
.. Q Monroe
Kevin Young
(Actor)
.. Chinese Supervisor
Chel Brickhouse
(Actor)
.. Funeral Goer
Jameel Khan
(Actor)
.. Saudi
David Huegin
(Actor)
.. Gangster
Orlando Avila
(Actor)
.. Drug Dealer Truck Driver
Krystle Darosa
(Actor)
.. Masked Dancer
Trinity Moriah Jones
(Actor)
.. Kid in Yard
Khyeer Hughes
(Actor)
.. Kid in Yard
Kia Shine
(Actor)
.. Big Man
Al Nuke
(Actor)
.. Litty's Muscle
Lisa Rayam
(Actor)
.. TV Reporter
Kurt Yue
(Actor)
.. Developer
Renée Victor
(Actor)
.. Esmeralda Gonzalez
Trivia:
A talented choreographer and actress, Renee Victor helped create the dance sequences in the film The Neon Bible. Her feature-film career included small roles in The Doctor and Steal Big, Steal Little. She made a number of one-off appearances in shows like Men Behaving Badly, The Tony Danza Show, and That's Life. In 2004, she landed a recurring role on the hit medical drama ER. The next year, she took on the role of Lupita the maid on Showtime's satirical comedy drama Weeds.