Sam Nagar is known for Gangubai Kathiawadi (2022), Housefull 4 (2019) and Simmba (2018).
Sam Nakhai is an actor known for The Bureau (2015) French TV series, Hidden Tags (2021), The Return (2022) and Without Her (2022). He is also an Actor/Stuntman and does all his own action scenes. He grew up most of his adult life in London, England, and Paris France, and speaks fluently in English, French, Farsi & basic Italian. He is also a stand-up comedian and an impersonator of many famous Hollywood actors and nationalities. Sam is very adventurous; he is a professional race car driver, a keen motorcycle rider, traveled through India with a motorcycle, and regularly rides on western and eastern Europe's mountain curvy roads. Sam is a founder and producer of Dolce Cilento, the medal-winning brand of Limoncello and Meloncello in southern Italy.
Sam Nance is known for Fight (2021).
Sam Neill was born in Omagh, Co. Tyrone, Northern Ireland, to army parents, an English-born mother, Priscilla Beatrice (Ingham), and a New Zealand-born father, Dermot Neill. His family moved to the South Island of New Zealand in 1954. He went to boarding schools and then attended the universities at Canterbury and Victoria. The 6-foot tall star has a BA in English Literature. Following his graduation, he worked with the New Zealand Players and other theater groups. He also was a film director, editor and scriptwriter for the New Zealand National Film Unit for 6 years. Sam Neill is internationally recognised for his contribution to film and television. He is well known for his roles in Steven Spielberg's Jurassic Park (1993) and Jane Campion's Academy Award Winning film The Piano (1993). Other film roles include The Daughter (2015), Backtrack (2015) opposite Adrien Brody, MindGamers (2015), United Passions (2014), A Long Way Down (2014), Escape Plan (2013), The Hunter (2011) with Willem Dafoe, Daybreakers (2009), Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole (2010), Little Fish (2005) opposite Cate Blanchett, Skin (2008), Dean Spanley (2008), Wimbledon (2004), Yes (2004), Perfect Strangers (2003), Dirty Deeds (2002), The Zookeeper (2001), Bicentennial Man (1999) opposite Robin Williams, The Horse Whisperer (1998) alongside Kristin Scott Thomas, Sleeping Dogs (1977), and My Brilliant Career (1979). He received Emmy and Golden Globe nominations for the NBC miniseries Merlin (1998). He also received a Golden Globe nomination for One Against the Wind (1991), and for Reilly: Ace of Spies (1983). The British Academy of Film and Television honoured Sam's work in Reilly by naming him Best Actor. Sam received an AFI Award for Best Actor for his role in Jessica (2004). Other television includes House of Hancock (2015), Rake (2010), Doctor Zhivago (2002), To the Ends of the Earth (2005), The Tudors (2007) with Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Crusoe (2008), Alcatraz (2012) and recently in Old School (2014) opposite Bryan Brown, Peaky Blinders (2013) alongside Cillian Murphy and The Dovekeepers (2015) for CBS Studios.
Sam Nelson Harris is known for Sonic the Hedgehog (2020), Suicide Squad (2016) and Hellboy (2019).
Legendary "B" picture director Sam Newfield was born Samuel Neufeld in New York City. His brother was Sigmund Neufeld, later the head of PRC Pictures, where Sam made so many of his films (so many, in fact, that he had to use the pseudonyms "Peter Stewart" and "Sherman Scott" so audiences wouldn't notice that only one man directed so much of the studio's output). He entered the film business in 1919 and began his career as a director in 1926, shooting two-reel comedy shorts for virtually every production company in town, from fly-by-night independent producers to major studios like Universal Pictures. He made his first full-length feature in 1933, for independent "B"-picture production company Tower Pictures. He worked for many of the independent studios, making films for such prestigious-sounding but low-rent companies as Ambassador Pictures, Victory Pictures and Puritan Pictures. While much of his output seemed to be, shall we say, "rushed", he did in fact manage to turn out several interesting, compact and well-made little westerns with Tim McCoy for Victory and Puritan (two companies headed by another "B" picture icon, producer Sam Katzman). In 1939 he went to work for PRC, where he would make his "name". Sam shot films in two styles: fast and faster. With rock-bottom budgets (at PRC, for instance, budgets were so low that he got paid only $500 a picture; he had to grind them out like sausages in order to make any kind of money), super-tight shooting schedules (often a week, sometimes less) and not necessarily the best talent in front of and behind the cameras, glitches were bound to happen. However, since Sam didn't believe in retakes (and couldn't afford them, anyway), whatever went wrong in the picture (crew members wandering into shots, actors flubbing lines, props malfunctioning, etc.) pretty much stayed in the picture. Sam made films in just about every conceivable genre (science-fiction, westerns, crime thrillers, horror, comedy), and while most were routine at best (and embarrassingly inept and/or incoherent at worst), there were a few bright spots among the dross: Lost Continent (1951), a sci-fi epic he made for low-budget specialist Lippert Pictures in 1951, showed more care than you normally found in a Newfield film, with a better cast and a more coherent script than he was usually given, and is now considered to be one of his best films, if not his best. He also turned out Western Pacific Agent (1950) for Lippert, a fast-paced, neat little crime thriller about railroad detectives investigating a string of murders. Newfield is considered to be among the most prolific directors in the history of American films (not counting cartoon directors, whose product rarely ran longer than 8-10 minutes or so), with an output estimated at approximately 300 films--everything from one-reel black-and-white training films to full-length color features--over a 30-year-plus career. He spent the last few years of that career shooting films and TV series outside the US (he shot the Buster Crabbe action series Captain Gallant of the Foreign Legion (1955) in Morocco and the Lon Chaney Jr. western series Hawkeye and the Last of the Mohicans (1957) in Canada) because of cheaper production costs. Sam Newfield finally retired from the film industry in 1958 and died in Los Angeles in 1964.
Sam Newman is known for The Murder of Laci Peterson (2017).
Sam recently played Frank in The Krays - Code Of Silence. Released December 2021. Having been touched by the genius of the late Stephen Sondheim, Sam was lucky enough to be cast and directed by Sondheim as the leading man Gene Gorman, in the world premiere of Saturday Night in the London West End. From a theatrical family, Sam first appeared on stage in a world renowned production of Madame Butterfly for WNO. The younger son of Henry Newman and Peggy Troman, who both led careers as principal opera singers. Sam's childhood schooling started in Guildford, Surrey. Sam was inspired to become an actor by the Paris Film Festival whilst living there at the age of 17. It was the experience of immersing in a different language and culture which helped to shape his future as a British actor. At 18 he came back to the Uk and started forging his career. He then took off to London where he lives permanently. He enjoys his roles in film, television dramas and comedies both on screen, and on American and British stage. In recognition for his role of John Roika in the film The Last Chance, he won the best actor award for L.I.F.A. His West End appearances are numerous, and he has become a semi regular on UK television. Sam was born in the UK, and has lived in New Jersey, Los Angeles, Paris and London. He trained as an actor at Montclair State College New Jersey and completed a BA (Hons) degree in drama at Middlesex, and continues to explore many forms of story telling, though film remains his passion.
Sam Nightingale is known for The Island with Bear Grylls (2014) and Bear Grylls: Surviving the Island (2014).
Sam Nisbett is an actor, known for The Enchanted Cottage (2016) and Driving Bill Crazy (2008).