Tom Costello was born on August 31, 1977 in Birmingham, Alabama, USA. He is an actor and producer, known for Dark Skies (2013), Peaceful Warrior (2006) and Cold Case (2003).
Tom Costello is known for Eddie the Eagle (2015).
Tom Costello, Jr. is an award winning comedy/drama actor originally from the Oklahoma City, Oklahoma area. In the Mid 70's, Tom moved to central Florida to pursue his then dream job of becoming a Cypress Gardens water ski show performer. After a lot of practice on the water learning the skills, Tom achieved that dream and was a member of the ski team and show until 1980. Tom was an accomplished skier with barefoot, jumping, slalom, ski doubles and flat kite abilities. His specialty, however, was comedy. Tom was awarded the "Male Comic " of the year award for his participation in the Cypress Gardens "Super Show 77" extravaganza. After leaving Florida, Tom returned to Oklahoma for awhile, then on to Dallas, Texas in the mid 80's. In Dallas, Tom pursued a career in the DFW Film/Television Industry working in production as an actor, lighting tech, production manager, producer and executive producer. South Dallas County is now home for Tom where he works not only as an actor, but as a Real Estate Broker/Owner of A-Lister Properties, LLC in Cedar Hill, TX. Tom is married to his wife Cathy of 30+ years. They have 3 children and 4 grand children.
Tom Cotcher was born on July 28, 1950 in Glasgow, Scotland. He is an actor and writer, known for On the Line (1982), Strangers (1978) and No Offence (2015). He is married to Cookie Weymouth. They have two children.
Tom Cotter is an actor and writer, known for Next Stop Wonderland (1998), The Devil's Tree and Comedy Central Presents (1998).
Tom Cotton was born on May 13, 1977 in Dardanelle, Arkansas, USA. He is known for C-SPAN Live (1979), KSFY News at 10 (1960) and The Jackson Confirmation Hearings (2022). He has been married to Anna Peckham since March 15, 2014. They have one child.
Tom Coughlin is an actor and producer, known for I Am Legend (2007), Sunset (2018) and Know Fear (2021).
Tom was born in the steel city of Sheffield with English, Scottish and Irish roots. As a teenager he was a very keen footballer who played for the Sheffield United Junior blades, he was also a regular ball boy at his beloved club for 3 years. His first experience of a speaking part in a feature film came when he worked alongside Martin Kemp in the British gangster film Top Dog. He began acting training with his LA acting coach Michael John Gonzales back in 2014 and he still works passionately with him today as he continues to learn his craft. Tom has played characters in BBC's comedy series Motherland and Ch4's Man Down where he worked closely with the comedy genius Greg Davies. In 2017 Tom was cast to play a character in the upcoming Lollywood feature film 'Teefa in Trouble' starring Ali Zafar and Maya Ali, directed by Ahsan Rahim. 'Teefa in Trouble' will see it's global release on 20th July 2018.
Acting chameleon Sir Tom Courtenay, along with Sir Alan Bates and Albert Finney, became a front-runner in an up-and-coming company of rebel upstarts who created quite a stir in British "kitchen sink" cinema during the early '60s. An undying love for the theatre, however, had Courtenay channeling a different course from the aforementioned greats and he never, by his own choosing, attained comparable cinematic stardom. The gaunt and glum, fair-haired actor was born Thomas Daniel Courtenay into modest surroundings on February 25, 1937, in Hull, East Yorkshire, England, the son of Thomas Henry Courtenay, a ship painter, and his wife, Anne Eliza (née Quest). Graduating from Kingston High School there, he trained in drama at London's Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts. His reputation as an actor grew almost immediately with his professional debut in 1960 as Konstantin in "The Seagull" at the Old Vic. Following tours in Scotland and London with the play, Tom performed in "Henry IV, Part I" and "Twelfth Night" (also at the Old Vic) before assuming the title role of Billy from Albert Finney in the critically acclaimed drama "Billy Liar" at the Cambridge Theatre in 1961. The story, which tells of a Yorkshire man who creates a fantasy world to shield himself from his mundane middle-class woes, was the initial spark in Tom's rise to fame. The recognition he received landed him squarely into the heap of things as a new wave of "angry young men" were taking over British cinema during the swinging '60s. Singled out for his earlier stage work at RADA, he was eventually handed the title role in the war film Private Potter (1962), but it was his second movie that clinched stardom. Winning the role of Colin Smith in The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner (1962), Courtenay invested everything he had in this bruising portrayal of youthful desolation and rebellion. As a reform school truant whose solitary sentencing for robbing a bakery leads to a reawakening and subsequent recognition as a long distance runner, he was awarded a "Promising Newcomer" award from the British Film Academy, It was Courtenay then, and not Finney, who recreated his stage triumph as Billy Fisher in the stark film version of Billy Liar (1963). British Film Academy nominations came his way for this and for his fourth movie role in King & Country (1964). Vivid contributions to the films King Rat (1965), the ever-popular Doctor Zhivago (1965), which earned him his first Oscar nomination, and The Night of the Generals (1967) followed. Despite all this cinematic glory, Courtenay did not enjoy the process of movie-making and reverted to his first passion -- the theatre -- beginning in 1966. Displaying his versatility with roles in such classic works as "The Cherry Orchard," "Macbeth" (as Malcolm), "Charley's Aunt," "The Playboy of the Western World," "Hamlet," "She Stoops to Conquer," "Peer Gynt" and "Arms and the Man," he still found scattered work in films, including The Day the Fish Came Out (1967), A Dandy in Aspic (1968) and Otley (1969), but none matched his earlier brilliance. In 1971 he took a self-imposed, decade-long sabbatical from filming. Forming a sturdy association with the Royal Exchange Theatre in Manchester that would last over a decade, he continued to impress with lead roles in "The Rivals" and "The Prince of Homburg". Following his huge success as the libidinous Norman in "The Norman Conquests" in London, he made his Broadway debut with "Otherwise Engaged" (1977) and earned a Tony nomination and Drama League Award in the process. It was his second Tony-nominated triumph in "The Dresser" in 1980-1981, however, that lured Courtenay back to films when he was asked to recreate the role for the large screen. The Dresser (1983) co-starred Tom as the mincing personal assistant to an appallingly self-destructive stage star played by Albert Finney (Paul Rogers played the role with Tom on Broadway) who struggles to get the actor through a rigorous performance of "King Lear". Both British actors received Oscar nominations but lost the 1984 "Best Actor" award to American Robert Duvall. Since then Tom has appeared on occasion in TV and film roles -- usually in support. A few standouts include the films Let Him Have It (1991), Whatever Happened to Harold Smith? (1999), Last Orders (2001) and Nicholas Nickleby (2002), as well as the TV mini-series A Rather English Marriage (1998), for which he earned a British Television Award, Little Dorrit (2008) and the series Unforgotten (2015) for which he won a BAFTA award. Over the years Sir Tom has excelled in solo stage shows as well. As a chronic alcoholic in "Moscow Stations," he won the 1994 London Critics Circle Theatre and London Evening Standard Theatre awards for "Best Actor." In 2002, he wrote the one-man show "Pretending To Be Me," based on the letters and writings of poet Philip Larkin. In the past decade he has continued to distinguish himself on both the classical ("King Lear," "Uncle Vanya") and contemporary ("Art") stages. Courtenay's marriage to actress Cheryl Kennedy lasted about a decade (from 1973 to 1982). In 1988 he married Isabel Crossley, a stage manager at the Royal Exchange Theatre in London. He has no children from either marriage. In 1999, Sir Tom Courtenay was awarded an honorary doctorate from Hull University and in 2000 published his memoir "Dear Tom: Letters From Home", which earned strong reviews. Knighthood came a year after that.
Tom Cox is an actor, known for The 355 (2022), The Lesson (2015) and The Holly Kane Experiment (2017).