The Tuxedo


7:00 pm - 9:00 pm, Today on WFUT HDTV UniMás 68 (68.1)

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About this Broadcast
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Cuando reclutan a un chofer para que reemplace a su jefe, un agente secreto americano, él se mete en un esmoquin extraordinario que lo convierte en un héroe y se enfrenta a un villano megalómano.

2002 Spanish, Castilian Stereo
Acción/aventura Artes Marciales Ciencia Ficción Comedia

Cast & Crew
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Jackie Chan (Actor) .. Jimmy Tong
Jennifer Love Hewitt (Actor) .. Del Blaine
Jason Isaacs (Actor) .. Clark Devlin
Debi Mazar (Actor) .. Steena
Ritchie Coster (Actor) .. Dietrich Banning
Peter Stormare (Actor) .. Dr. Simms
Mia Cottet (Actor) .. Cheryl
Romany Malco (Actor) .. Mitch
Daniel Kash (Actor) .. Rogers
Jody Racicot (Actor) .. Kells
Scott Wickware (Actor) .. CSA Agent Wallace
Christian Potenza (Actor) .. CSA Agent Joel
Karen Glave (Actor) .. CSA Agent Randa
Scott Yaphe (Actor) .. CSA Agent Gabe
Boyd Banks (Actor) .. Vic
Colin Mochrie (Actor) .. Gallery Owner
James Brown (Actor) .. James Brown
Paul Bates (Actor) .. Lundeen
Noah Danby (Actor) .. Bike Messenger
Cecile Cristobal (Actor) .. Girl in Gallery
Kim Roberts (Actor) .. ER Nurse
Fred Rutherford (Actor) .. Banning Party Bouncer
Jordan Madley (Actor) .. Fast Food Girl
Phoenix Gonzales (Actor) .. De L'Air Saleswoman
Craig Eldridge (Actor) .. Doran
Stacey DePass (Actor) .. Woman in Park
Ron Gabriel (Actor) .. Frank Rollins
Marcia Bennett (Actor) .. Water Executive
Michael Ayoub (Actor) .. Water Executive
Brian Rhodes (Actor) .. Water Executive
Frank Nakashima (Actor) .. Water Executive
Rudy Webb (Actor) .. Water Executive
Reg Dreger (Actor) .. Water Executive
Diana C. Weng (Actor) .. Flower Shop CSA Op
Mike "Nug" Nahrgang (Actor) .. Homeless CSA Op
Paul Braunstein (Actor) .. Sewer CSA Op
John Catucci (Actor) .. Firing Range CSA Op
Robert Tinkler (Actor) .. CSA Firing Range Op
Daniel Aiken (Actor) .. Bogus CSA Op
Bayo Akinfemi (Actor) .. SWAT CSA Op
Allen Stewart-Coates (Actor) .. Concert Maitre' D
Paul Huggett (Actor) .. Banning Lab Worker
Daveed Louza (Actor) .. Banning Lab Worker
Gavin Stephens (Actor) .. Hotel Security Guard
Ian Downie (Actor) .. Banning Party Guest
Jamie Jones (Actor) .. Banning Guard
Perry Perlmutar (Actor) .. Guy in Toilet
William Lynn (Actor) .. Doorman
Jean Green (Actor) .. Elderly Woman
Jack Duffy (Actor) .. Elderly Man
Fred Lee (Actor) .. Poultry Employee
Peter Yip (Actor) .. Poultry Employee
Naomi Emmerson (Actor) .. Hospital Patron
Poi Wong (Actor) .. Hospital Patient
Lisa Levy (Actor) .. Nurse #2
Peter Gail Williams (Actor) .. Backstage Fan
Ben Jacob (Actor) .. Drunk Friend
Bob Balaban (Actor) .. Winton Chalmers
Michael Bunin (Actor) .. Bodyguard #2
Scotty Cook (Actor) .. Bad Kid
Chris Coppola (Actor) .. Bodyguard
Byron McIntyre (Actor) .. Bodyguard
Bradley James Allan (Actor) .. Banning's Henchman
Jeff Wolfe (Actor) .. Banning Lab Worker
Dennis Keiffer (Actor) .. Banning Lab Worker

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Jackie Chan (Actor) .. Jimmy Tong
Born: April 07, 1954
Birthplace: Hong Kong
Trivia: One of the most popular film personalities in the world, Jackie Chan came from a poverty-stricken Hong Kong family -- so poor, claims Chan, that he was almost sold in infancy to a wealthy British couple. As it turned out, Chan became his family's sole support. Enrolled in the Chinese Opera Research Institute at the age of seven, he spent the next decade in rigorous training for a career with the Peking Opera, excelling in martial arts and acrobatics. Billed as Cheng Lung, Chan entered films in his mid-teens, appearing in 25 productions before his 20th birthday. Starting out as a stunt man, Chan was promoted to stardom as the potential successor to the late Bruce Lee. In his earliest starring films, he was cast as a stone-cold serious type, determined to avenge Lee's death. Only when he began playing for laughs did Chan truly attain full celebrity status. Frequently referred to as the Buster Keaton of kung-fu, Chan's outlook on life is a lot more optimistic than Keaton's, but in his tireless devotion to the most elaborate of sight gags and the most awe-inspiring of stunts (many of which have nearly cost him his life), Chan is Keaton incarnate. From 1978's The Young Master onward, Chan has usually been his own director and screenwriter. His best Hong Kong-produced films include the nonstop action-fests Project A (1983), Police Story (1985), Armour of God (1986), and the Golden Horse Award-winning Crime Story (1993) -- not to mention the multiple sequels of each of the aforementioned titles. Despite his popularity in Europe and Asia, Chan was for many years unable to make a dent in the American market. He tried hard in such films as The Big Brawl (1980) and the first two Cannonball Run flicks, but American filmgoers just weren't buying.At long last, Chan mined U.S. box-office gold with 1996's Rumble in the Bronx, a film so exhilarating that audiences never noticed those distinctly Canadian mountain ranges looming behind the "Bronx" skyline. Chan remained the most popular Asian actor with the greatest potential to cross over into the profitable English-speaking markets, something he again demonstrated when he co-starred with Chris Tucker in the 1998 box-office hit Rush Hour. In 2000 Chan had another success on his hands with Shanghai Noon, a comedy Western in which he starred as an Imperial Guard dispatched to the American West to rescue the kidnapped daughter (Lucy Liu) of the Chinese Emperor.He maintained his status as one of the biggest movie stars in the world throughout the next decades in a series of films that include Rush Hour 2, The Tuxedo, Shankghai Knights, The Myth, Rush Hour 3. He enjoyed his biggest U.S. hit in quite some time starring in the 2010 remake of The Karate Kid opposite Jaden Smith. Even with his hits in the English-language world, Chan continued to work in China as well, as both an actor and a producer. In 2016, he won an Honorary Academy Award for his more than 50 years of service to the film industry.
Jennifer Love Hewitt (Actor) .. Del Blaine
Born: February 21, 1979
Birthplace: Waco, Texas, United States
Trivia: Personifying the type of teen spirit most commonly found in Noxzema ads and pep squad meets, actress Jennifer Love Hewitt has brought new meaning to the word "effervescent." The 1990s saw Hewitt go from relative obscurity to a bona fide teen queen, to say nothing of one of the most frequently enshrined actresses on the Internet.Hewitt was born on February 21, 1979 in Waco, TX. She made her first appearance on television in 1984 in the show Kids Incorporated (which, coincidentally, once guest-starred Scott Wolf, her Party of Five co-star). She also did a multitude of commercials, even doing a stint as a LA Gear spokesgirl at the age of ten. After spending the majority of the 80s working in television, Hewitt got her first film role in the 1993 film Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit, but it wasn't until she got her big break as Sarah Reeves on Party of Five (1994) that she began to gain recognition. More recognition came, first in the form of Trojan War (1997), and then from I Know What You Did Last Summer (1997). The film, which capitalized on the growing trend in teen horror flicks catalyzed by Wes Craven's Scream (1996), proved to be immensely popular among audiences, if not critics. It was predictably followed by a sequel, the aptly titled I Still Know What You Did Last Summer (1998). In addition to her film work, which also included 1998's Can't Hardly Wait, Hewitt maintained her role in Party of Five and continued to star in commercials, most notably as the Neutrogena spokesgirl.
Jason Isaacs (Actor) .. Clark Devlin
Born: June 06, 1963
Birthplace: Liverpool, England
Trivia: The latest in an illustrious line of actors to convince American audiences that the British make the cinema's most sinister and cold-hearted villains, Jason Isaacs earned the vicarious enmity and disgust of filmgoers everywhere in his role as the vile Colonel Tavington in the 2000 summer blockbuster The Patriot. Actually an incredibly versatile performer whose previous characterizations included a priest, a brilliant scientist, and a drug dealer, the tall, blue-eyed actor won admiration and respect for his performance, and soon found himself being hailed in the American press as one of the most exciting British imports of the early 21st century.The third of four sons of a Liverpool merchant, Isaacs was born in his father's hometown on June 6, 1963. He initially planned to go into law -- a white-collar profession that would have fit nicely with those of his brothers, who became a doctor, lawyer, and accountant -- but was swayed by acting early in the course of his law studies at Bristol University. Although he first became interested in acting in part because "it was a great way to meet girls," Isaacs soon found deeper meaning in the theater (in one interview he was quoted as saying "I could release myself into acting in a way that I was not released socially") and duly dropped out of Bristol to hone his skills at London's Central School of Speech and Drama. Once in London, Isaacs began landing professional work almost immediately, appearing on the stage and on television. He made his big-screen debut in 1989 with a minor turn as a doctor in Mel Smith's The Tall Guy and that same year won a steady role on the TV series Capital City. Isaacs exhibited his versatility in several more TV series and on-stage in such productions as the Royal National Theatre's 1993 staging of Tony Kushner's Pulitzer Prize-winning Angels in America. He also began to find more work onscreen, receiving his first nod of Hollywood recognition in his casting in the Bruce Willis blockbuster Armageddon (1998). Initially called upon to take a fairly substantial role, Isaacs was eventually cast in a much smaller capacity as a planet-saving scientist so that he could accommodate his commitment to Divorcing Jack (1998), a comedy thriller he was making with David Thewlis. After portraying a priest opposite Julianne Moore and Ralph Fiennes in Neil Jordan's acclaimed adaptation of Graham Greene's The End of the Affair, Isaacs got his biggest international break to date when he was picked to portray Colonel Tavington, the resident villain of Roland Emmerich's Revolutionary War epic The Patriot. Starring opposite Mel Gibson, who (naturally) played the film's hero, Isaacs made an unnervingly memorable impression as a man whose pastimes included infanticide, rape, and church- burning, emerging as one of summer 2000s most indelible screen presences. Although his work in the film earned him comparisons to Ralph Fiennes' portrayal of evil Nazi Amon Goeth in Schindler's List and talks of a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination, the actor was not content to be typecast in the historical scum mold. Thus, he logically signed on to play none other than a drag queen for his next project, Sweet November (2001), a romantic comedy-drama starring Charlize Theron and Keanu Reeves. For his lead portrayal in the 2007 miniseries The State Within, Isaacs received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Performance in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television. Over the next several years, Isaacs appeared in films like Green Zone and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows, Part 2. He would also star in TV series like Case Histories and Awake.
Debi Mazar (Actor) .. Steena
Born: August 13, 1964
Birthplace: Queens, New York, United States
Trivia: Known for her feline eyes and brash New York attitude, Queens native Debi Mazar began her show business career behind the scenes as a makeup artist for a star-studded clientele, the most lucrative of the bunch being Madonna. Attracted by her unique features, the iconic pop singer cast Mazar in the music videos for "True Blue," "Deeper and Deeper," and "Papa Don't Preach." It wasn't until 1990, however, that Mazar made her film debut as the cokehead girlfriend of Henry Hill (Ray Liotta) in Martin Scorsese's GoodFellas. After portraying a series of small but indelible characters in Oliver Stone's The Doors, Spike Lee's Jungle Fever, and Jodie Foster's Little Man Tate (all 1991), Mazar had developed a small but devoted following and a reputation solid enough to land her the tough-talking role of legal defense secretary Denise Iannello on ABC's legal drama Civil Wars (1991-1993), a role she would reprise for NBC's L.A. Law in 1994.After taking on several more tiny supporting parts throughout the early '90s, including one which would reunite her with Jungle Fever director Spike Lee (in the Oscar-winning Malcolm X [1992]), Mazar made her debut as a lead character in Money for Nothing (1993), a blue-collar crime comedy co-starring John Cusack, with whom she would work for a second time in Woody Allen's Bullets Over Broadway (1994). After a brief performance as a manicurist in television's Witch Hunt (1994), Mazar could be found in the role of a femme fatale alongside Drew Barrymore, Jim Carrey, and Val Kilmer in Batman Forever (1995), and would portray an idealistic HIV-positive thief in Red Ribbon Blues (1995). Red Ribbon Blues wasn't the last time Mazar would delve into the complex world of sex and gender-related prejudice -- in 1996's Girl 6, Mazar co-starred as an anonymous member of a phone sex business, while Things I Never Told You found her playing a transsexual. Shortly afterward, Mazar chewed a respectable amount of scenery as one of Long Island barfly Tommy's (Steve Buscemi) potential hook-ups in 1996's Trees Lounge. The actress continued to exhibit her versatility in a series of roles during 1997, including those of a sleazy television show producer in Meet Wally Sparks, an intergalactic waitress in Space Truckers, and two decidedly more serious performances in the gay & lesbian drama Nowhere and Nick Cassavetes' romantic drama She's So Lovely.With the notable exceptions of bleaching her trademark jet-black tresses for 1998's Frogs for Snakes with Robbie Coltrane, and her role as Debbie De Luca in Michael Mann's tobacco industry exposé The Insider (1999), Mazar spent much of the late '90s on the small screen. After the failure of CBS's sitcom Temporarily Yours (1997), Mazar played lead roles in David and Lisa (a psychological drama co-produced by Oprah Winfrey) and NBC's Witness to the Mob. Following another NBC sitcom appearance in the short-lived Working (1998), the actress starred in 2000's CBS drama That's Life as an advice-dispensing hairdresser. In 2002, Mazar played right-hand woman to multi-millionaire Clark Devlin (Jason Isaacs) in Jackie Chan's The Tuxedo, and went on to offer a poignant monologue in Ten Tiny Love Stories the same year. In 2004, Mazar took on a supporting role in the crime comedy Be Cool with John Travolta and Uma Thurman, and starred in Dennis Brooks' independent film Goodnight, Joseph Parker.She had a major role in 2008's A Beautiful Life, and that same year had a small part in the ensemble of The Women. In 2012 she could be seen in the porn queen biopic Lovelace.
Ritchie Coster (Actor) .. Dietrich Banning
Born: July 01, 1967
Peter Stormare (Actor) .. Dr. Simms
Born: August 27, 1953
Birthplace: Arbra, Halsingland, Sweden
Trivia: With a cool stoic gaze suggesting unmentionable thoughts lurking somewhere deep behind those deep, blank eyes, popular character actor Peter Stormare offered American audiences slightly discomforting comic relief in Joel and Ethan Coen's popular dark comedy Fargo (1996), though his versatility and adaptability have since led him to roles in everything from major Hollywood blockbusters to the stripped-down Dogma 95 efforts of eccentric Danish director Lars von Trier's Dancer in the Dark (2000). Born Peter Rolf Stormare in Arbra, Sweden, on August 27th,1953, the dynamic Nordic actor began his career with an 11-year stint with the Royal National Theater of Sweden. Aside from appearing in such productions as Don Juan and The Curse of the Starving Class, Stormare would pen such original plays as El Paso and The Electric Boy. Later earning positive critical reception in such classic Shakespearian productions as King Lear, the actor made his big-screen debut, and began a 15-year association with legendary Swedish director Ingmar Bergman, with a brief appearance in Fanny and Alexander in 1982. Later earning positive critical reception for his role in the legendary filmmaker's stage adaptation of Shakespeare's Hamlet in 1988, Stormare continued to gain career trajectory with numerous memorable stage and film roles in his native country. In 1990, Stormare became the Associate Artistic Director at the Tokyo Globe Theatre and made his American screen debut as a neurochemist who questions Robin Williams' experimental medical tactics in the touching Awakenings. Subsequently appearing in numerous international films (Freud's Leaving Home [1991] and Damage [1992]), Stormare hit his stateside stride with his chilling turn as a woodchipper-happy kidnapper in Fargo. Though he would continue to make appearances in such Swedish efforts as Ett Sorts Hades and Bergman's In the Presence of a Clown (1996 and 1997 respectively), his Hollywood star was on the rise with memorable roles in such increasingly mega-budgeted efforts as The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997) and Armageddon (1998). Equally adept in comparatively low-budget efforts such as director George Romero's Bruiser (2000) and the aforementioned Dancer -- two roles which couldn't possibly be more polar opposites -- Stormare branched out into sitcom territory with his turn as Julia Louis-Dreyfuss' enamored superintendent in the ill-fated Watching Ellie in 2002. It wasn't long before Stormare was back on the silver screen, and with the same year potential blockbuster triple threat of The Tuxedo, Windtalkers, and Minority Report, it appeared as if Stormare's unique talents were as in-demand as ever. 2002 also found the established actor branching out with his role as producer of the romantic comedy The Movie Nut and His Audience.In 2005 he joined the cast of The Brothers Grimm in the role of an interogator, and took on a regular role in the television drama Prison Break. Stormare made guest appearances on a variety of television stand-outs throughout the 2000s, among them including Weeds, Monk, Entourage, and Hawaii Five-0.
Mia Cottet (Actor) .. Cheryl
Born: December 31, 1968
Trivia: Mia Cottet began her career as a dancer at the School of American Ballet before joining a world-touring show and acting on the New York stage. On television, she did numerous pilots, guest-starring roles, and made-for-TV movies. Making the transition to feature films in 1995, she appeared in the comedies Not Again!, Nine Months, and Romy and Michele's High School Reunion. In 1998, she starred on the short-lived FOX TV series Living in Captivity as Lisa Santucci, the trophy wife of bigoted Carmine Santucci. After the straight-to-video Bad Boy and a small role in Joel Schumacher's Phone Booth, she appeared in The Tuxedo with Jackie Chan and played Romana Barcelona in the Coen brothers' comedy Intolerable Cruelty.
Romany Malco (Actor) .. Mitch
Born: November 18, 1968
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: The multi-talented Romany Malco's first break in the entertainment industry came when his rap group, College Boyz, had a hit song titled "Victim of the Ghetto." With the encouragement of the multi-faceted John Leguizamo, Malco tried his hand at acting. In a relatively short period of time, he scored a main role on Level 9, and landed the title role in the made-for-TV biopic Too Legit: The MC Hammer Story. He reached a much wider audience as Jay, one of the co-workers/friends of The 40-Year-Old Virgin. His supporting role as Conrad Shepard on Showtime's satirical sitcom Weeds earned him more strong notices. He continued working in comedy with a supporting turn in Baby Mama starring former Saturday Night Live anchorwomen Tina Fey and Amy Poehler. He would also continue to find success on the small screen, with shows like No Ordinary Family and The Good Wife.
Daniel Kash (Actor) .. Rogers
Jody Racicot (Actor) .. Kells
Scott Wickware (Actor) .. CSA Agent Wallace
Christian Potenza (Actor) .. CSA Agent Joel
Born: December 23, 1972
Karen Glave (Actor) .. CSA Agent Randa
Scott Yaphe (Actor) .. CSA Agent Gabe
Born: February 16, 1970
Boyd Banks (Actor) .. Vic
Born: April 16, 1964
Colin Mochrie (Actor) .. Gallery Owner
Born: November 30, 1957
Birthplace: Kilmarnock, Scotland
Trivia: Family moved from Scotland to Canada in 1964. Planned to become a marine biologist. First appeared on stage in a school production of The Death and Life of Sneaky Fitch; his pants split during his performance, earning him a big laugh. Was high-school valedictorian. Studied at a Vancouver theater school for four years. Honed his improv-comedy talent at the Vancouver TheatreSport League. Performed with Toronto's Second City comedy troupe. Hobbies include cooking.
James Brown (Actor) .. James Brown
Born: January 01, 1901
Died: January 01, 1944
Paul Bates (Actor) .. Lundeen
Noah Danby (Actor) .. Bike Messenger
Born: April 24, 1974
Birthplace: Guelph, Ontario
Cecile Cristobal (Actor) .. Girl in Gallery
Kim Roberts (Actor) .. ER Nurse
Fred Rutherford (Actor) .. Banning Party Bouncer
Jordan Madley (Actor) .. Fast Food Girl
Born: November 13, 1978
Phoenix Gonzales (Actor) .. De L'Air Saleswoman
Craig Eldridge (Actor) .. Doran
Stacey DePass (Actor) .. Woman in Park
Ron Gabriel (Actor) .. Frank Rollins
Marcia Bennett (Actor) .. Water Executive
Michael Ayoub (Actor) .. Water Executive
Brian Rhodes (Actor) .. Water Executive
Born: March 14, 1947
Frank Nakashima (Actor) .. Water Executive
Rudy Webb (Actor) .. Water Executive
Reg Dreger (Actor) .. Water Executive
Diana C. Weng (Actor) .. Flower Shop CSA Op
Mike "Nug" Nahrgang (Actor) .. Homeless CSA Op
Paul Braunstein (Actor) .. Sewer CSA Op
John Catucci (Actor) .. Firing Range CSA Op
Robert Tinkler (Actor) .. CSA Firing Range Op
Born: May 12, 1973
Daniel Aiken (Actor) .. Bogus CSA Op
Bayo Akinfemi (Actor) .. SWAT CSA Op
Allen Stewart-Coates (Actor) .. Concert Maitre' D
Paul Huggett (Actor) .. Banning Lab Worker
Daveed Louza (Actor) .. Banning Lab Worker
Gavin Stephens (Actor) .. Hotel Security Guard
Born: March 27, 1975
Ian Downie (Actor) .. Banning Party Guest
Jamie Jones (Actor) .. Banning Guard
Perry Perlmutar (Actor) .. Guy in Toilet
William Lynn (Actor) .. Doorman
Jean Green (Actor) .. Elderly Woman
Jack Duffy (Actor) .. Elderly Man
Born: September 27, 1926
Died: May 19, 2008
Fred Lee (Actor) .. Poultry Employee
Born: July 10, 1930
Peter Yip (Actor) .. Poultry Employee
Naomi Emmerson (Actor) .. Hospital Patron
Poi Wong (Actor) .. Hospital Patient
Lisa Levy (Actor) .. Nurse #2
Peter Gail Williams (Actor) .. Backstage Fan
Ben Jacob (Actor) .. Drunk Friend
Bob Balaban (Actor) .. Winton Chalmers
Born: August 16, 1945
Birthplace: Chicago, Illinois, United States
Trivia: Playing a succession of bespectacled, soft-spoken, yet vaguely superior characters, Bob Balaban carved himself a niche as a reliable character actor in the last quarter of the 20th century, while also getting the occasional opportunity to write and direct for the screen. The nephew and cousin of industry personages, Balaban got the acting bug at Colgate University and N.Y.U., inspiring him to study with Uta Hagen and Viola Spolin. After some exposure on and off-Broadway in the late 1960s, Balaban made his film debut in Midnight Cowboy (1969), playing the high school student who meets Jon Voight in the movie theater for a tryst. Working sporadically through the '70s, more in theater and TV than film, Balaban developed a more familiar face with such roles as the cartographer and French translator from Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1978) and the attorney hired to help Richard Dreyfuss' quadriplegic choose to die in Whose Life Is It Anyway? (1981). Balaban's major contribution to the industry in the 1980s was as a director, first of the disappointing Showtime movie The Brass Ring (1983) and then of the macabre weekly TV series Tales of the Darkside (1984) and Amazing Stories (1985). His big-screen directorial debut, the cannibal-themed black comedy Parents (1989), was considered either an objectionable failure by some or a devious cult classic by others; two later forays into directing (My Boyfriend's Back in 1993, The Last Good Time in 1994) were better received.In the 1990s, Balaban returned his focus to acting, especially as he caught on with more regular parts in the latter half of the decade. His most widely seen role was the NBC executive who accepts, then declines, then accepts again the pilot written by George and Jerry on the popular sitcom Seinfeld. His Russell Dalrymple appeared in only six episodes in the 1992-1993 season but was featured prominently in the season finale, lost at sea and presumed dead in his all-consuming quest to win Elaine's affections. It was this Seinfeld gig that netted Balaban the most regular and prominent work of his career in the years that followed. Although often still appearing in serious roles, Balaban indulged his talent for subtle comedy by linking up with actor/director Christopher Guest and appearing in two of his acclaimed faux documentaries, Waiting for Guffman (1996) and Best in Show (2000).Balaban scored a major art-house and critical successes producing and playing one of the main characters in Robert Altman's murder-mystery Gosford Park, and appearing as an ineffective father in Ghost World. That same year he appeared in important supporting roles in such big-budget fare as The Mexican and The Majestic. He maintained his carer in the independent world hooking up again with Christopher Guest for A Mighty Wind, and making a cameo appearance in the Oscar nominated Capote. Balaban appeared in and helped produce the animated Hollywood satire Hopeless Pictures, which ran on IFC in 2005. 2006 proved to be a very busy year for the multi-talented Balaban. In addition to another ollaboration with Guest, For Your Consideration, he played a film critic in M. Nght Shyamalan's The Lady in the Water. He also directed Ralph Finnes and Susan Sarandon in Doris and Bernard.Over the coming years, Balaban would continue to find outlets for his unique screen presence, appearing on the popular comedy series Web Therapy, and narrating the Wes Anderson comedy Moonrise Kingdom.
Michael Bunin (Actor) .. Bodyguard #2
Born: January 14, 1970
Birthplace: Norfolk, Virginia, United States
Trivia: Performed with the Black Box Theater, the Odyssey Theater and the Paul Harris Theater. After guest stints on NBC's Scrubs, CBS's CSI, and Lifetime's Strong Medicine, took on his first headlining TV role in 2006, playing Kenny on TBS's sitcom My Boys. Is a cast member of the Improv Olympics in Los Angeles.
Scotty Cook (Actor) .. Bad Kid
Chris Coppola (Actor) .. Bodyguard
Byron McIntyre (Actor) .. Bodyguard
Bradley James Allan (Actor) .. Banning's Henchman
Jeff Wolfe (Actor) .. Banning Lab Worker
Dennis Keiffer (Actor) .. Banning Lab Worker

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