Jack Kristiansen is known for It Came from Dimension X (2022), Sacrifice (2020) and Under the Crystal Dome (2019).
Jack Krizmanich was born in the small town of Phoenixville, Pennsylvania, just outside Philadelphia. While working at a restaurant in high school, Jack was discovered by an agent at IMAGE Models a boutique agency in Penn. Once signed with them doing a myriad of jobs, he was out at a club and got noticed by a talent scout. He stars as the dashing Aaron Spencer on the MyTV Network prime time series "Wicked Wicked Games." Tatum Oneal plays his mother and together they scheme their way through many twists and turns in the entertaining plot line. Jack was also a series regular for three years on NBC's "Passions" and a strong supporting role in the feature film "Shadowboxer" with Cuba Gooding Jr. and Helen Mirren.
Canadian-born Jack Kruschen entered films after years on the stage, and became a dependable character actor both in movies and on television. Often cast as ethnic comedy relief, Kruschen occasionally landed a role as a villain, but was more often the volatile, emotional Italian or Jewish neighbor patriarch. He was nominated for an Academy Award for his role in The Apartment (1960).
Jack Kyser was born on August 5, 1990 in Austin, Texas, USA. He is an assistant director and director, known for Jack and Lucas Go to a Wedding (2016), You Can't Put Your Arms Around a Memory (2015) and Jake the Cinephile (2014).
With his brothers Harry M. Warner, Albert Warner, and Sam Warner, he founded Warner Bros. Pictures Inc. in 1923. They released the first motion picture with synchronized sound, The Jazz Singer (1927) with Al Jolson. In the 1930s they gave employment to a parade of stars, including Bette Davis, Errol Flynn and Paul Muni, as well as James Cagney, Edward G. Robinson, and a man whose star would eventually rise in the 1940s, Humphrey Bogart. Decades later, the firm's successor, Warner Communications Inc., merged with Time Inc. to become Time Warner Inc., the world's largest media and entertainment company.
Jack La Cayenne is an actor, known for Charleston (1977), Belli e brutti ridono tutti (1979) and Squadra antiscippo (1976).
Discovered on Broadway by director Howard Hawks, La Rue was originally brought to Hollywood to play a gangster in Scarface (1932). He lost that role to George Raft, and similarly was replaced by Humphrey Bogart in the film version of The Petrified Forest (1936). Eventually, he became well-known to movie-goers as a mean, sexy gangster type in sadistic roles like Miriam Hopkins' abductor in The Story of Temple Drake (1933). Film audiences, who loved to loathe him on-screen, were occasionally surprised by his being cast against type in such movies as A Farewell to Arms (1932). His final film was in the low-budget film Paesano: A Voice in the Night (1975).
Jack La Rue Jr. is an actor, known for La tumba de la isla maldita (1973) and The Young Nurses (1973).
Jack has several exciting credits to his name for a young actor; the most notable being the role of Young Lars in "Nine Perfect Strangers" (dir. Jonathan Levine), for which he was able to learn from a remarkably star-studded international cast. His other credits include playing Young Clem in "The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart" (dir. Glendyn Ivin); the role of young Andrew Queller in "Pieces of Her" (dir. Minkie Spiro); the role of Young Rodney in "Riot" (dir. Jeffrey Walker); Jack in "Little Monsters" (dir. Abe Forsythe); and Young Boy in "Diary of an Uber Driver" (dir. Matthew Moore). Such high-profile credits have afforded him a great relationship with casting directors, directors, producers and fellow artists across the country and internationally. Jack has also appeared in many big-brand television commercials, including Fox Sports, Woolies, Banana Boat, Big W, Kids Cancer Project and P&O Cruises. Having started in the industry at a very young age, Jack has an excellent Standard American and English accent, and often receives work as a voice artist. He loves working alongside his little sister Lily, and spending time with his family, dog and just being a country beach kid, mixing his own music tracks on GarageBand, playing sport and devouring books.
Jack Lam is known for Ninja Terminator (1986), Chains of Gold (1990) and Leopard Fist Ninja (1982).