Moyan Chen is an actor, known for San shao ye de jian (2016).
Moyo Akandé is a Scottish actress based in London. Moyo is best known for Rob Cohen's action thriller "The Hurricane Heist" and the BIFA and BAFTA nominated short film "1745", in which her standout performance as Emma Atkin has been critically acclaimed. She recently appeared in the BBC dark comedy-drama four-part series, "Guilt" (2019) and the BAFTA award winning BBC prime time Mini-Series "The Cry".
Moyo Lawal is known for Demystified (2021), Here Love Lies (2023) and The Bridal Shower (2018).
Mozad is an actor, known for La cara oculta (2011).
Mozaffar Shafeie is known for Twenty Twelve (2011), Triage (2009) and Poirot (1989).
Mozammel Hoshen Chowdhury is known for Kaithi (2019), Vikram Vedha (2017) and 24 (2016).
Mozart La Para was born on January 31, 1988 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. He is an actor and composer, known for Hightown (2020), El Escuadrón and Los Paracaidistas (2015).
Mozez Singh is known for Zubaan (2015), Human (2022) and White Noise (2004).
Marnò was born in Los Angeles, and went to boarding school at Phillips Academy, in Andover, Massachusetts. She then received a BA in Comparative Literature from Barnard College, Columbia University and an MFA in Acting at the Yale School of Drama. She has received additional training at the Guthrie Theater in Minnesota and at the Public Theater's Shakespeare Lab in New York. Marnò received rave reviews for the one-woman show "Nine Parts of Desire" in which she portrayed nine different Middle Eastern women which ran at the Berkeley Repertory Theatre and at the Geffen Playhouse in Los Angeles. Marnò has lived in France, Germany, Sweden and Argentina, and speaks english, French, German, Farsi, and Spanish. She is also a playwright. Her first play, When the Lights Went Out, premiered at New York Stage & Film, starring Laura Innes, directed by Kate Whoriskey. She is the voice of Mirabelle Ervine and Namira in the video game Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim.
Mozhdah never calls herself the "Oprah of Afghanistan". That's just the name her adoring global audience-which includes individuals like Barack and Michelle Obama as well as Ms. Winfrey herself-has given her. That's because, like Oprah, this Kabul-born, Vancouver-based icon has sparked conversations and inspired women all over the world as a bold, big-hearted example of female leadership. Through her internationally renowned music career and groundbreaking television show The Mozhdah Show, Mozhdah has inspired profound respect and serious controversy in equal measure. She's the first Afghani artist to produce hit records in English, capturing a global audience and performing on international stages. She's the first Afghani woman to brave death threats in order to host her own talk show and cover sensitive subjects impacting Afghani women and children. She's the first Afghani female artist to perform in the White House, or appear on The Oprah Winfrey Show, or express her mission of empowerment on CNN. Other pop artists and media figures may be known as daring, even groundbreaking, but Mozhdah's courage is on another level. A singular voice in music and media, she's risked everything in order to express herself-along with the deepest hopes of women across the planet.