Lucy Hart began performing in 2007 as "Lance Hart." She transitioned to female in August of 2021 and now goes by "Lucy Hart." She is a Director, Producer and Actress. She serves on the Board of both the Free Speech Coalition and PASS. She owns an independent adult film network called Pervout.
Lance Haverda is an actor, known for The Curse of Babylon (2011) and Heaven's War (2018).
An intense, versatile actor as adept at playing clean-cut FBI agents as he is psychotic motorcycle-gang leaders, who can go from portraying soulless, murderous vampires to burned-out, world-weary homicide detectives, Lance Henriksen has starred in a variety of films that have allowed him to stretch his talents just about as far as an actor could possibly hope. He played "Awful Knoffel" in the TNT original movie Evel Knievel (2004), directed by John Badham and executive produced by Mel Gibson. Henriksen portrayed "Awful Knoffel" in this project based on the life of the famed daredevil, played by George Eads. Henriksen starred for three seasons (1996-1999) on Millennium (1996), Fox-TV's critically acclaimed series created by Chris Carter (The X Files (1993)). His performance as Frank Black, a retired FBI agent who has the ability to get inside the minds of killers, landed him three consecutive Golden Globe nominations for "Best Performance by a Lead Actor in a Drama Series" and a People's Choice Award nomination for "Favorite New TV Male Star". Henriksen was born in New York City. His mother, Margueritte, was a waitress, dance instructor, and model. His father, James Marin Henriksen, who was from Tønsberg, Norway, was a boxer and merchant sailor. Henriksen studied at the Actors Studio and began his career off-Broadway in Eugene O'Neill's "Three Plays of the Sea." One of his first film appearances was as an FBI agent in Sidney Lumet's Dog Day Afternoon (1975), followed by parts in Lumet's Network (1976) and Prince of the City (1981). He then appeared in Steven Spielberg's Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977) with Richard Dreyfuss and François Truffaut, Damien: Omen II (1978) and in Philip Kaufman's The Right Stuff (1983), in which he played Mercury astronaut Capt. Wally Schirra. James Cameron cast Henriksen in his first directorial effort, Piranha Part Two: The Spawning (1981), then used him again in The Terminator (1984) and as the android Bishop in the sci-fi classic Aliens (1986). Sam Raimi cast Henriksen as an outrageously garbed gunfighter in his quirky western The Quick and the Dead (1995). Henriksen has also appeared in what has developed into a cult classic: Kathryn Bigelow's Near Dark (1987), in which he plays the head of a clan of murderous redneck vampires. He was nominated for a Golden Satellite Award for his portrayal of Abraham Lincoln in the TNT original film The Day Lincoln Was Shot (1998). In addition to his abilities as an actor, Henriksen is an accomplished painter and potter. His talent as a ceramist has enabled him to create some of the most unusual ceramic artworks available on the art market today. He resides in Southern California with his wife Jane and their five-year-old daughter Sage.
Lance Holloway is an actor and writer, known for Grown-ish (2018), Blindspotting (2021) and Why Not? (2021).
Lance Hool is a film producer with a uniquely multifaceted background in the industry, having also worked as an actor, writer, director, executive producer, distribution company chairman, and now studio chief. Over the last four decades he has produced twenty-five major motion pictures, two of which have reached number one at the US box-office: Missing in Action (1984) and Man on Fire (2004). He currently heads Silver Lion Films, an independent film finance and production company, which he established in 1987 with his brother Conrad, and Santa Fe Studios, the world's first "green" film and television production facility, which he developed with his son Jason in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Born and raised in Mexico City in 1948, Lance grew up within a family environment of international politics and art. His mother Constanza was an internationally renowned ballerina and choreographer, his father Alan an American diplomat and health innovator; his grandmother Marión de Lagos was a playwright, journalist, and actress, and his uncle the great muralist Siqueiros. His grandfather Domingo Kamffer, a tough Italian-immigrated rancher, hosted and acted in Howard Hawks' Viva Villa! (1934) on his ranch outside of Mexico City. Twenty-six years later, Lance would begin his own film career acting alongside John Wayne in Hawks' final film, Rio Lobo (1970). After earning a BA and MBA from La Universidad de las Americas, and serving as press coordinator for the 1968 Olympic Summer Games in Mexico City, Lance spent his formative years within the film industry working as an actor on films such as Soldier Blue (1970) and Lawman (1971). In 1975 he relocated to Los Angeles, guest-starring on shows like Hawaii Five-O and McCloud, and soon stepped behind the camera. From 1977 to 1980, Lance headed the US operations of Pelmex, the Mexican national film distribution company. Under his management, the company co-produced more than 20 films and released upwards of 100 theatrical releases per year. Soon he was developing and producing films of his own: Wolf Lake (1980) and Caboblanco (1980), starring the likes of Rod Steiger, Jason Robards, and Charles Bronson. His relationship with Bronson lasted several more years with films such as 10 to Midnight (1983) and The Evil That Men Do (1984). After writing and producing Missing in Action (1984) he had his first bona fide hit on his hands, and went on to direct the sequel, as well as cult favorite Steel Dawn (1987) with a budding Patrick Swayze. In the 1990s Lance produced several family-oriented pictures, including Pure Luck (1991) with Martin Short and Danny Glover, The Air Up There (1994) with Kevin Bacon, and Flipper (1996) with Elijah Wood and Paul Hogan. At the end of the decade Lance produced and directed his most personally important film, One Man's Hero (1998). It took 25 years to gather the resources to tell the true story of a band of Irish immigrants, enlisted into the American army after fleeing the Great Famine of 1845, who encountered extreme religious persecution and deserted to Mexico, only to be swept up in the Mexican-American War. Heroes to the Mexicans, traitors to the Americans, the film was deemed too controversial to be commercial and its distribution was severely cut, but it received high critical praise, drawing comparisons to Lance's heroes John Ford and David Lean. When the film was released in Ireland, Lance and star Tom Berenger traveled to Belfast for the premiere. The film had found its way to Sinn Fein's Gerry Adams and the mayor of Belfast. On a hot summer night in a sold-out theater, the two long-time enemies in Ireland's Troubles came together publicly for the first time. The film's portrayal of suffering by both Catholics and Protestants so moved both men that afterward they hugged like brothers. In the early 2000s, Lance went on to produce several high profile films including the third installment of the Crocodile Dundee (2001) franchise with Paul Hogan, and Man on Fire (2004) with Denzel Washington and director Tony Scott. Because of his wide-ranging aptitude for the intricacies of every stage of the filmmaking process-from acting to physical production to directing-Lance is known for his exceptional knack for managing a film's schedule and budget, while simultaneously facilitating the magic of the creative process. He enjoys an unrivaled reputation for successfully shepherding a story from the page to the screen, and for delivering films on time and on budget. Investors have always received their investment back, with a return. Utilizing these skills, in 2007 Lance realized another dream and began developing a world-class filmmaking facility in New Mexico. Santa Fe Studios opened its doors in late 2011 as the world's first "green" film studio. Recent productions include Fox's hit TV series Cosmos (2014) and Seth McFarlane's A Million Ways to Die in the West (2014). Lance holds a BA and MBA from La Universidad de las Americas, and is a member of the Directors Guild of America, the Screen Actors Guild of America, the Screenwriters Guild, and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Lance Hubbard Jr. is an actor, known for Every Secret Thing (2014).
Born Jeremy Lance Gosnell in Conway, Arkansas on September 6, 1978, to Linda Kay Gosnell (née Stacks) and James Leo Gosnell, but raised by his mother and maternal grandmother Wynell Stacks (née Dollar), a personal Nanny for former Arkansas Governor Winthrop Rockefeller and his family. While growing up in Conway at an early age Lance become interested in acting imagining that one day he would be discovered by Hollywood. During his public school years he attending the University of Central Arkansas' youth theater where he was introduced to the basics of acting. As a teenager Lance would often study the comedians on Saturday Night Live where he would often entertain his mother and anyone who would listen with the voices of Yogi the Bear, a parody of Dana Carvey's President George Bush and Ross Perot, the late Phil Hartman's President Bill Clinton and Ronald Reagan and well as learning the art of physical comedy from watching Chevy Chase. In 1998, Lance enrolled in college at Arkansas State University where he studied theater and stage managed William Shakespeare's The Merry Wives of Windsor. After enrolling at the University of Central Arkansas in 2006, a few years later an HBO film crew came to Little Rock, Arkansas to film part the documentary Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory (2011) at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock Bowen School for Law and Lance made it into a background shot of the film.
Lance J. Guidry is an actor, known for The Courier (2012) and Memphis Beat (2010).