Byron Dacers is an actor, known for Artifice: Loose Fellowship and Partners (2015).
Byron Daniel Bishop was born on May 8, 1978 in Fort Worth, Texas, USA. He was an actor, known for In the Name of the Brotherhood (1996) and I Dream of a Psychopomp (2021). He died on March 11, 2008 in Fort Worth, Texas, USA.
In 2008 Byron Davis started his career as a camera operator and editor. He has since shot and edited 15 feature films as well as more than 400 episodes of broadcast television. In 2015 Byron's solid work and determination paid off when he made his directorial debut on the primetime television series Snake Park. The SABC2 youth drama, shot on location in KwaZulu-Natal, focuses on the daily challenges that the youth of South Africa faces. In 2016 Byron stepped up to direct his first feature film called Jagveld. The film was penned by world-renowned author Deon Meyer. Jagveld was released theatrically in 2017 and received rave reviews from the local Afrikaans community. Jagveld, or as it's known abroad, Hunting Emma, was picked up for international distribution by LA based distributor, The Little Film Company. Hunting Emma travelled the festival circuit where it won top honours, including Best Feature, and sold to all major territories globally. In 2019/2020 Byron helped bring SABC 2's new drama series, Melody, to life. The 26-part prime-time drama was the first series to be shot on location in Athlone and the surrounding communities. In the later part of 2020, Byron formally founded Rebel Rebel with long-time friend and filmmaker, Robert dos Santos. The production company focuses on high-end storytelling within both the film and television industry.
Byron Davison is known for Brick City (2019).
Byron Easmon is an actor, known for The A List (2018), Get Even (2020) and Doctors (2000).
Byron Ferguson is an actor, known for Saints and Soldiers (2003), Mythbusters Jr. (2019) and Extreme Marksmen (2008).
One of those wonderfully busy character actors whose face is familiar if not his name, mild-mannered actor Byron Foulger began performing with community theater, and stock and repertory companies after graduating from the University of Utah. He met his future wife, character actress Dorothy Adams, in one of these companies. The marriage lasted nearly five decades and ended only with his death. Making his Broadway debut in a 1920 production of "Medea" that featured Moroni Olsen as Jason (of the Argonauts), and went on to appear in several other Olsen Broadway productions and in close succession (including "The Trial of Joan of Arc," "Mr. Faust" and "Candida"). While touring the country with Olsen's stock company, he ended up at the Pasadena Playhouse where he both acted and directed. Thereafter he and wife Dorothy decided to settle in Los Angeles. Together the acting couple tried to stake a claim for themselves in 30s and 40s Hollywood films. Both succeeded, appearing in hundreds of film parts, both together and apart, albeit in small and often unbilled bits. A man of meek, nervous countenance, Foulger's short stature and squinty stare could be used for playing both humble and shady fellows. In the 1940s, the actor became a part of Preston Sturges' company of players, appearing in five of his classic films -- The Great McGinty (1940), Sullivan's Travels (1941), The Palm Beach Story (1942), The Miracle of Morgan's Creek (1944) and The Great Moment (1944). Although predominantly employed as an owlish storekeeper, mortician, professor, or bank teller, his better parts had darker intentions. He was exceptional as weaselly, mealy-mouthed, whining henchmen who inevitably showed their yellow streak by the film's end. The character actor eased into TV roles in the 1950s and '60s, displaying a comedy side in many folksy, rural sitcoms. His final regular TV role was as train conductor Wendell Gibbs in the final years of the Petticoat Junction (1963) series. The father of actress Rachel Ames, Foulger died of a heart ailment on April 4, 1970, coincidentally the same day the final new episode of Petticoat Junction (1963) was broadcast. .
Byron Gibson originates from Cambridge England. In his working career he has been a Construction Worker, Street Market Trader and a Champion Thai-boxing Trainer. He was the first fight promoter to promote professional Thaiboxing shows in Cambridge England. He first entered the movie business by chance in 2008 when Jean Claude Van Damme cast him as a gangster in his film . He is known for the famous torture scene in "Only God Forgives". Byron normally plays the Villain or Anti Hero.
Byron Grant is an actor, known for The Neighbors' Window (2019).
After graduation from the University of California at Berkeley, Byron Haskin worked for a time as a newspaper cartoonist. He began his career in the film industry in 1920 as a commercial-industrial movie photographer, and then as a cameraman for Pathe and International Newsreel. Later he became an assistant director at Selznick Pictures. He was a cinematographer during the silent era, worked on special effects and helped to develop the technology that eventually brought sound to the film industry. He began directing in the late 1920s at Warner Brothers and journeyed to England in the early 1930s to make films there. Upon his return he was appointed head of the Warner Brothers Special Effects department. He returned to directing, and was responsible for Walt Disney's first live-action film, Treasure Island (1950). In the mid-'50s Haskin began a rewarding association with producer George Pal, for whom he shot what is probably his best-known film, the science-fiction classic The War of the Worlds (1953). Haskin would collaborate with Pal on three other films, The Naked Jungle (1954), Conquest of Space (1955) and The Power (1968). Fans will also remember Haskin for the cult-classic Robinson Crusoe on Mars (1964).