Brian Thornton is known for Fear the Walking Dead: The Althea Tapes (2019), Queen of the South (2016) and Friday Night Lights (2004).
Brian Tichnell is an actor, known for Silicon Valley (2014), 9-1-1 (2018) and Station 19 (2018).
Brian Timothy Anderson was born on June 27, 1997 in Scottsdale, Arizona, USA. He is known for Bishounen Tanteidan (2021), Beyblade Burst Rise (2020) and Pokemon masutâzu (2019).
Brian Garcia Tirado is an accomplished personality and stunt driver known for their dynamic range and powerful performances. Born in Puerto Rico and raised in Florida, Brian knew from a young age that they wanted to pursue a career in the automotive and entertainment industry. After studying at Texas State University Brian began their career in media and driving, honing their craft and developing a reputation as a talented and dedicated performer. From there, they moved on to marketing, creating content as a personality for Leif Johnson Ford, quickly establishing themselves as a rising star in the industry. Beyond their work on screen, Brian is also a committed advocate for Veteran Suicide awareness, using their platform to raise awareness and promote positive change. Whether on screen or off, Brian is a true force to be reckoned with, and a rising star in the automotive and entertainment industry.
Brian Titus was born and raised in Metro Detroit area of Michigan. With over 19 years of improv/sketch comedy experience with a Metro Detroit comedy troupe called Project 2 Improv, Titus is no stranger to the stage. Performing for public and private audiences across Michigan, with Project 2 Improv. In 2017 he finished additional improv training at Go Comedy. He has been called "hyper and likable, similar to Chris Farley, is as equally adept at physical comedy as he is at assuming a highly visible role as the wise cracking fat kid," by the Belleville View newspaper. He can bee seen in films such as 'Surviving the Rush,' 'Bad to the Bone,' 'Tetherball,' 'Mary's Buttons,' and 'A Dog for Christmas.' Also he was in the 2nd season, 'Mort Crim' episode of Comedy Central's 'Detroiters.'
Brian To, a graduate from UCLA Film/TV school, has been working as a model, actor, photographer, and director since 1990. Brian To started as a photographer working together with Greg Gorman, David LaChapelle, Douglas Kirkland, and Steven Meisel, who photographed him for the L'Uomo Vogue, CK One campaign, and the Italian Vogue Cover. One of To's first assignments was photographing Antonio Sabato Jr. for his book No Excuse - Workout for Life. Aside from several magazine covers and fashion editorials, Brian To has shot advertising campaigns for Pure Beauty, Johnson & Johnson, Walgreens, and The WB and CW shows such as Starlet starring Faye Dunaway and Vivica A. Fox, The Closer starring Kyra Sedgwick, the pilot TRUE starring Anne Heche, and the reality series Beauty and the Geek 2, which won a 2006 Promax/BDA Silver Award for outdoor print campaigns. Brian To, a member of Cinematographer's Guild Local 600, also did still photography for several of Randal Kleiser's films including Lovewrecked, starring Amanda Bynes, Chris Carmack, Jaimie-Lynn DiScala, and Jonathan Bennett, Red Riding Hood featuring Lainie Kazan, Debi Mazar, and Joey Fatone, and It's My Party where Brian To photographed Eric Roberts, Bruce Davison, Marlee Matlin, Olivia Newton-John, George Segal, Lee Grant, and Roddy McDowall. In addition, Brian To shot both the poster and stills for the producers Gina Goff and Laura Kellum's independent, award-winning movies Girl Play starring Dom DeLuise and Mink Stole and Out at the Wedding starring Andrea Marcellus, Desi Lydic, Mike Farrell, Reginald VelJohnson, and Charlie Schlatter. Photographing director Bryan Singer (Superman Returns, X-Men) and the late Academy award-winning director John Schlesinger (Midnight Cowboy, Marathon Man) inspired Brian To to direct his first film Audit starring Sally Kirkland, Alexis Arquette, and Judy Greer which premiered at the IFP West / L.A. Film Festival. In addition, Audit won Best Short Film at the WIN Femme Film Festival as well as Best Short and Best Actress for Judy Greer at Dublin Film Festival. After Filmmaker Magazine 2002, named Brian To No. 5 to watch in its list of "25 New Faces of Indie Film," Audit was released as part of a DVD/home video compilation called Boxer Shorts, played on The Independent Film Channel, and played on Here! TV. As a service to the community, Brian To directed Public Service Announcements benefiting homeless families, battered women and children, and victims of human trafficking. Additionally, Brian To directed the educational documentary Children of Incarcerated Parents and The Virtual Sex Project, three USC interactive videos intended to reduce high risk sexual behavior in young adults. He most recently directed a PSA for the L.A. Metro Task Force on Human Trafficking. Brian To exhibited two solo shows of his art photography and has appeared in several group exhibitions.
Film audiences & television viewers know Brian Tochi as a star of several hit films, a collection of six television series, theater, and a multitude of guest-starring and co-starring roles in episodic television. Brian has starred or co-starred in over 25 motion pictures and their sequels, among them Revenge of the Nerds (1984) and Revenge of the Nerds III: The Next Generation (1992), as well as Police Academy 3: Back in Training (1986) and Police Academy 4: Citizens on Patrol (1987), where his creation of outlandish characters has been the prototype for countless other portrayals in television, commercials and feature film productions. Another hugely successful film franchise is the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990) and its three sequels, starring as "Leonardo", the pizza-loving leader of the Turtles. Brian's television work is diverse and highly acclaimed. He has starred in numerous television series, including Anna and the King (1972) (opposite Yul Brynner for CBS), Space Academy (1977) (CBS), the The Renegades (1983) (ABC) and Santa Barbara (1984) (NBC). Also, for over 3-1/2 years, he replaced Barry Bostwick and was named Host and Star of his own CBS television series entitled Razzmatazz (1977), garnering the network a Daytime Emmy in the process. Another unique series outing came from Time/Warner's "Channel One", the educational news program with a daily audience of over 11.5 million students. His 2.5-year involvement not only included hosting and narrating duties, but he also functioned as a writer, producer and segment director, as well as being named chief foreign correspondent for the show. Another area in which Brian has focused his attention is directing and the creation of unique properties, one of them being Tales of a Fly on the Wall (2004), of which he is the producer, creator, writer and director. Through his years of work in the entertainment industry, Brian has been able to use his position to help support many causes for young people, including Famous Phone Friends (calling and lending encouragement to catastrophically and terminally ill children), the Make-A-Wish Foundation, the Special Olympics, Young Artists United (celebrities & entertainment professionals who've donated their time to help troubled teens throughout the country), and others. A native of Los Angeles, Brian has been educated through the L.A. public school system in addition to being privately tutored through the studios' education program. His outstanding scholastic abilities rated him in the highest percentile in national academic levels. Brian has also been educated at the University of Southern California (USC), University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA), and University of California at Irvine (UCI). Besides several of the projects Brian is developing and creating, one is passionately closest to his heart - that of helping to fix a broken planet. His greatest ambition is to enlist the help of others to lift humanity, to give back, to create change, and to ultimately lay a foundation towards building a better and greener future. With everyone's help, Brian believes it can and will be done.
Brian Townes is an actor and writer, known for Bacurau (2019), Marighella (2019) and House of Demons (2018).
Brian Tree is an actor, known for A Taste of Shakespeare (1995), Much Ado About Nothing (1987) and The Taming of the Shrew (1988).
Brian Trenchard-Smith is an Anglo Australian film and television director, producer, and writer, with a reputation for large scale movies on small scale budgets, many of which display a quirky sense of humor that has earned him a cult following. Quentin Tarantino referred to him in Entertainment Weekly as one of his favorite directors. His early work is featured in Not Quite Hollywood, an award winning documentary released by Magnolia. Among his early successes were the 20th Century Fox release The Man from Hong Kong, a wry James Bond/Chop Sockey cocktail, the Vietnam battle movie Siege of Firebase Gloria, and the futuristic satire Dead End Drive-In, a particular Tarantino favorite. BMX Bandits, showcasing a 15-year old Nicole Kidman, and Miramax's The Quest, starring ET's Henry Thomas, won prizes at children's film festivals in Montreal and Europe. He has also directed 35 episodes of television series as diverse as Silk Stalkings, Time Trax, The Others, and Flipper. Born in England, where his Australian father was in the RAF, Trenchard-Smith attended UK's prestigious Wellington College, where he neglected studies in favor of acting and making short films, before migrating to Australia. He started as a news film editor, then graduated to network promos before he became one of a group of young people that, as he recalls, "pushed, shoved, lobbied and bullied the government into introducing investment for Australian made films." He persuaded Australia's largest distribution-exhibition circuit at the time, the Greater Union Theater Organization, to form an in-house production company that he would run. The company made three successful films in a row, and his career was underway. In parallel careers, he was also founding editor of Australia's quarterly Movie magazine for 6 years, and has made over 100 trailers for other directors in Australia, Europe, and America. Among his 39 movies, 5 were commissioned by Showtime, including the remake of the World War II classic, Sahara, the highly rated, Happy Face Murders, starring Ann-Margret, and DC 9/11: Time of Crisis, with Timothy Bottoms as President Bush. His frequently repeated family drama for Lifetime, Long Lost Son starring Gabrielle Anwar, introduced future Gossip Girl's Chace Crawford to audiences in the title role." I knew from his first scene, he was going to be hot." In 2009, Trenchard-Smith shot Porky's - The College Years, a re-imagining of the famous 80's franchise of teen comedies. His recent ecological thriller Arctic Blast, starring Michael Shanks, was chosen to premiere at the 2010 Possible Worlds Canadian Film Festival in Sydney. Trenchard-Smith writes for filmindustrybloggers.com as The Genre Director, and is a contributing guru to trailersfromhell.com. He is married to Byzantine historian Dr. Margaret Trenchard-Smith, lives in Los Angeles, and is a member of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts.