Larry Caughlan Jr. was born on November 26, 1985 in Plano, Texas, USA. He is an actor, known for The Finale (2011), Knock Down Drag Out (2012) and Fact or Faked: Paranormal Files (2010). He has been married to Brittany (Bledsoe) Caughlan since February 11, 2011. They have three children.
Larry Cech is an American born actor and producer who grew up in Philadelphia. He is best known for his portrayal of Jodi, the surfer, from the short film Washington Blvd. which screened at The Marche du Film at the 67th Festival du Cannes. Larry has studied with the famed Stella Adler Studio in New York and is currently the Head of Development for South Pointe Pictures.
Larry Cedar is an accomplished film, television, stage and voiceover artist best known for his portrayal of opium addict Leon Stalsworth in the HBO series, Deadwood. Admitted to Hastings Law School after earning his BA in Communication Studies, the course of his life was dramatically altered when he impulsively decided to audition for, and was accepted into, the MFA Theater program at UCLA. There he participated in and won the Hugh O'Brian Acting Competition award for Best Actor and was subsequently signed to an exclusive one-year artist development contract with Universal Studios where he ultimately landed his first television pilot. He went on to star in several Disney movies as well as hundreds of television episodes and feature films, including a starring role opposite Rebecca De Mornay and Mary Gross in the Ivan Reitman-produced Feds, and an unforgettable performance opposite John Lithgow as "The Creature on the Wing" in Steven Spielberg's feature remake, Twilight Zone: The Movie, directed by George Miller. Larry spent six years in New York starring in the award-winning PBS series Square One Television and later starred in 40 episodes of the Fox television series A.J.'s Time Travelers, produced by Gianni Russo (aka Carlo The Godfather). An excellent singer, he has portrayed Hoagy Carmichael in Hoagy, Bix, and Wolfgang Beethoven Bunkhaus at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles, starred as Vernon opposite Lea Thompson in They're Playing Our Song, and as Secretary Thompson in 1776: The Musical opposite Roger Rees. Awards include nominations for two Los Angeles Theater Alliance Ovation awards for his performances in Anything Goes (as Lord Oakley) opposite Rachel York and She Loves Me (as Sipos, for which he ultimately won Best Featured Actor in a Musical). Larry excels in the field of voice-overs, and in addition to lending his wide-ranging vocal characterizations to hundreds of commercials, cartoon series, and video games, specializes in the art of legal disclaimers or "speed talking". Demos of his voiceover work can be heard at www.disclaimerman.com. An avid monologist, Cedar has also adapted and starred in several award-winning one-man stage productions based on the works of his favorite authors, George Orwell (Orwellian), Fyodor Dostoevsky (Notes From the Underground), and Franz Kafka (Letter to My Father, The Burrow, and The Hunger Artist), and will soon present his final Kafka piece, The Trial based on a new translation by British playwright Howard Colyer.
Larry Chance was born on April 18, 1933 in the USA. He is an actor and writer, known for Northwest Passage (1958), War Drums (1957) and Rescue 8 (1958).
Larry Charles was born on December 1, 1956 in Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA. He is a producer and writer, known for Seinfeld (1989), The Dictator (2012) and Brüno (2009).
Larry Chatfield is known for Urban Envy (2016) and True Law (2018).
It looks like we don't have any Biography for Larry Clark yet.
Was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma (1943). Son of Frances Clark (baby photographer) and Lewis Clark. Graduated from Central High school in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Attended Layton School of Art in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Studied under Walter Sheffer and Gerard Bakker. Film debut was the movie Kids (1995). He was already well known for his revolutionary photographic body of work, including the books Tulsa (1971), Teenage Lust (1982), and Perfect Childhood (1992).
Born in Baltimore's Women Hospital, Larry grew up primarily in the suburbs of Maryland. His mother, Dolores was a teacher, and an activist. His father, Emerson, was a ballistics engineer at Aberdeen Proving Ground. He is the youngest of 5 children. Attended John Carroll in Bel Air, Maryland. Larry attended Towson University where he majored in Theater. His professional stage debut was in David Hare's "A Map of the World" at Baltimore's prestigious Center Stage theater. He performed there for two seasons. The highlights there working with Boyd Gaines in Hamlet and in Wallace Shawn's "Aunt Dan and Lemon". He then moved to New York. He worked with The Barrow Group theater company and got his first big break in the movie, "In and Out". The next year he landed the recurring role of Det. Morris LaMotte in L&O. His great love is the New York Stage where he has performed throughout the years most notably as the lead character in the premiere of David Rabe's "The Dog Problem". Larry left New York and moved to Los Angeles in the winter of 2002. He currently resides in Hollywood, California.
Larry Cohen was born July 15, 1936, in New York, New York, and spent time in Kingston, a small town north of New York City. At a young age, his family moved to the Riverdale section of the Bronx, and he eventually majored in film at the historic City College of New York, from which he graduated in 1963. An independent maverick who got his start in studio-based television, he is best known for inventive low-budget horror films that combine scathing social commentary with the requisite scares and occasional laughs. He was also a major player in the Blaxploitation films of the 1970s. Later in his career, he became a sought-after screenplay writer. Although not very prolific in his screen writing, these works still combine provocative social commentary--but with more conventional storytelling. Sadly, Cohen died of cancer on March 23, 2019.