Spencer "Spooky" Madison is an award winning actor and a jack of all trades in the film industry who has quickly become one of the indie-film community's favorite Scream Queen's. Despite being known for their darker roles, Spooky has both improv and stand up comedy experience and hope's to utilize them in future projects. Upon starting their own production company in 2020, FinalGhoul Films, they dove headfirst into writing/directing/producing high quality short films in and around Ohio.
Spooner Oldham was born on June 14, 1943 in Alabama, USA. He is known for Mortal Kombat (2021), Boss Level (2020) and Rain Man (1988).
Spoorthi Jithender is known for Savaari (2020) and Ee Dooram (2021).
Spoorthi debuted in the 2008 Kannada film Jollydays, a remake of the Telugu film Happydays, opposite her actor husband Vishwas. After the success of Jollydays, she signed up for her second Kannada project Chellidharu Sampigeya opposite Varata Prashanth which was directed by S Narayan. She then acted in Madhuve Mane, Prithvi, Bul Bul as sister to the lead actors. She made her Tamil Debut as Lead actress in Manadhil Oru Matram opposite Madhan in 2012. Athramaragam was her second film in Tamil and then she acted in Pokkiri Mannan opposite Sridhar Master in Debut Movie. 'Keratam;' the remake of Kannada movie Josh was her Debut Movie in Telugu in 2011. She was also a lead actor for Telugu popular serial Puthadi Bomma and Kannada Serial Athi Madhura Anuraga. Spoorthi's family hails from Mysore, Karnataka, India. She was born in Bangalore. Spoorthi's father is an Civil engineer and her mother is an inspector at Commercial Taxes Department. She did her degree in Baldwin Methodist College and completed her MBA degree in National School of Business. In 2014 she got married to her long time best friend and jollydays co actor Vishwas and has a daughter Saanvi Vishwas. Spoorthi Vishwas is an assiduous entrepreneur, social media influencer, blogger, proud mother, blissful wife and acclaimed South Indian actress, the resolute and determined Spoorthi Vishwas believes. A MBA graduate, celebrated TV host and anchor for more than 1500 shows Nationally and Internationally, Young Achiever Award Winner from Whistle Woods, Mumbai, featured as 'Alpha Female' by Ritz magazine, this eternal unswerving dreamer has a long trail of achievements and accomplishments! Though being in the spot light from an early age Spoorthi harboured a dream to carve a unique niche for herself that would set her above the ordinary, motherhood put her dreams into perspective, it gave her the strength to believe that nothing is impossible, catapulting her focus as she transitioned to prove her mettle in the field of event management, she spearheaded to launching 2 platforms to reveal the warrior in her Founder Director of KWAA- Karnataka Woman Achievers Award, her coveted brain child that set a new bench mark in women accomplishments and recognition. Spoorthi is also the Managing Director of Event'Art an event management company. She thus gained the recognition as top 5 actors turned entrepreneurs by 'Femina' and 'Provoke Lifestyle' magazines. Keeping abreast of rising corporate challenges and competition she built and developed her high performing 'all women' team and rallied them to solidify her position in the events scenario. Self-motivated and driven entirely by passion to super succeed she juggles motherhood, family and her dreams.
Sporty Cordell is an actor, known for Straight A's (2013).
Spot is an actor, known for Perfect Break (2016).
The daughter of two school teachers, Grayden was born and raised in Manchester-by-the-Sea, Massachusetts, and began performing at age five. After graduating cum laude from Barnard College where she majored in American Studies, she worked as a performing member of the 'Drama Department' in New York City. Her additional theater credits include Hopscotch, The Vagina Monologues, Fool for Love, Hamlet, Waiting for Lefty and Ordinary Day. Her television credits include a recurring role on HBO's Six Feet Under (2001), a starring role on Fox Television's John Doe (2002), and a guest appearance on Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (1999). Her feature film credits include Dad (1989) starring Jack Lemmon.
The possessor of one of Hollywood's gentlest faces and warmest voices, and about as sweet as Tupelo honey both on-and-off camera, character actress Spring Byington was seldom called upon to play callous or unsympathetic (she did once play a half-crazed housekeeper in Dragonwyck (1946)). Although playing the part of Mrs. March in Little Women (1933) was hardly what one could call a stretch, it did ignite a heartwarming typecasting that kept her employed on the screen throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her first name said it all: sunny, sparkling, flowery, energetic, whimsical, eternally cheerful. She was a wonderfully popular and old-fashioned sort. By the 1950s, Spring had sprung on both radio and TV. The petite, be-dimpled darling became the star of her very own sitcom and, in the process, singlehandedly gave the term "mother-in-law" a decidedly positive ring. She was born in Colorado Springs, Colorado, on October 17, 1886 (some sources list the year as 1893), one of two daughters born to a college professor/school superintendent. Her father Edwin died when she was quite young, and mother Helene placed the children with their maternal grandparents while she studied to become a doctor. Spring developed an early interest in the theater as a high-school teenager and ambitiously put together an acting company that toured mining camps in the Colorado Springs area. Her professional career materialized via the stock company circuit in both the U.S. and Canada. At the onset of WWI she joined a repertory company that left for Buenos Aires. There she married the company's manager, Roy Carey Chandler, and had two children by him: Phyllis and Lois. The couple remained in South America and Spring learned fluent Spanish there. About four years into the marriage, the couple divorced and Spring returned to New York with her children. She never married again. Spring took her first Broadway bow at age 31 with a role in the comedy satire "A Beggar on Horseback", a show that lasted several months in 1924. She returned to the show briefly the following year. Other New York plays came and went throughout the 1920s, but none were certifiable hits. She did, however, gain a strong reputation playing up her fluttery comic instincts. Other shows included "Weak Sister" (1925), "Puppy Love" (1926), "Skin Deep" (1927), "To-night at Twelve" (1928) and "Be Your Age" (1929). She also played the role of Nerissa in "The Merchant of Venice" on Broadway alongside George Arliss and Peggy Wood in the roles of Shylock and Portia, respectively. By the 1930s, Spring had established herself as a deft comedienne on stage but had made nary a dent in film. In early 1933, following major hits on Broadway with "Once in a Lifetime" (1930) and "When Ladies Meet" (1932), Spring was noticed by RKO, which had begun the casting for one of its most prestigious pictures of the year, Louisa May Alcott's classic Little Women (1933). As a testament to her talents and graceful appeal, the studio took a chance on her and gave her the role of Marmee. As mother to daughters Katharine Hepburn, Joan Bennett, Jean Parker and Frances Dee in what is still considered the best film version of the novel, Spring was praised for her work and became immediately captivated by this medium. She never returned to Broadway. She became the quintessentially wise, concerned and understanding mother/relative in scores of films, often to her detriment. The roles were so kind, polite and conservative that it was hard for her to display any of her obvious scene-stealing abilities. As a result, she was often overlooked in her pictures. Her best parts came as a bewildered parent, snooty socialite, flaky eccentric, inveterate gossip or merry mischief-maker. From 1936 to 1939, she did a lot of mothering in the popular "Jones Family" feature film series from 1936 to 1940. but the flavorful roles she won came with her more disparate roles in Dodsworth (1936), Theodora Goes Wild (1936), The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1938) (as the Widow Douglas), When Ladies Meet (1941) (in which she recreated her Broadway triumph), and Roxie Hart (1942) (in which she played the sob sister journalist). Spring's only Oscar nomination came with her delightful portrayal of eccentric Penny Sycamore in You Can't Take It with You (1938). Throughout the war years, she lent her patented fluff to a number of Hollywood's finest comedies, including The Devil and Miss Jones (1941), Rings on Her Fingers (1942) and Heaven Can Wait (1943). Her career began to die down in the 1950s, and, like many others in her predicament, she turned to TV. Her sparkling performance in the comedy Louisa (1950), in which she played an older lady pursued by both Edmund Gwenn and Charles Coburn, set the perfect tone and image for her Lily Ruskin radio/TV character. December Bride (1954) was initially a popular radio program when it transferred to TV. The result was a success, and Spring became a household name as everybody's favorite mother-in-law. As a widow who lived with her daughter and son-in-law, complications ensued as the married couple tried to set Lily up for marriage--hence the title. Brash and bossy Verna Felton and the ever-droll Harry Morgan were brought in as perfect comic relief. The show ran for a healthy five seasons, and Spring followed this in 1961 with the role of Daisy Cooper, the chief cook and surrogate mother to a bunch of cowpokes in the already established western series Laramie (1959). Making her last film appearance in the comedy Please Don't Eat the Daisies (1960) as, of course, a spirited mom (this time to Doris Day), Spring, now in her 70s, started to drop off the acting radar. She eventually retired to her Hollywood Hills home after a few guest spots on such '60s shows as Batman (1966) (playing a wealthy socialite named J. Pauline Spaghetti) and I Dream of Jeannie (1965) (as Larry Hagman's mother). A very private individual in real life, Spring enjoyed traveling and reading during her retirement years. She passed away in 1971 from cancer and was survived by her two daughters, three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
Spring Day is an actress, known for Jerk (2019), Robyn Loau: Never Let You Down (2011) and Tokyo Comedy Store (2008).
Spring Inés Peña was born on May 10, 1987 in Jacksonville, Florida, USA. She is an actress, known for The Rider, Sensitive (2015) and Cry Havoc (2020).