J. Satishkumar is known for Taramani (2017), Kadhal Kadhai (2009) and M. S. Subbulakshmi Biopic.
J. Scott Bronstein is known for The Panama Papers (2018).
J. Scott Browning was born and raised in Modesto, California. His family moved to Missouri in 1992 where he finished high school. He attended Northwest Missouri State University and earned a BA in Music with a Vocal emphasis. Upon graduation, he moved back to California and began doing musical theatre while earning his teaching credential. In 2005, after teaching for a couple years, he decided to make acting his full-time career. He moved to Orlando in 2008 to improve his training as an actor in the MFA program at the University of Central Florida. After years of work in the theme parks of Orlando, he now finds himself bouncing around the Southeast, where he juggles full-time work in TV, Film and Commercials.
J Scott Freeman was born in Yadkinville, North Carolina; however, he was raised in Tarboro, North Carolina. In September 1992, Scott joined the United States Marine Corps and completed boot camp aboard Parris Island MCRD in South Carolina. Scott served in the military police field and as a career recruiter on bases and in communities on the east coast, west coast, and overseas. Retiring from the Marine Corps in 2016, after twenty four years of service, Scott created Twelve Tavern, LLC and purchased a restaurant. I'm addition to being a restaurateur, he has a weekly on-air radio show, plays golf, and enjoys bowling.
J. Scott Green is known for Strange Things Happen at Sundown (2003), Hell Fire (2015) and Last Rites of the Dead (2006).
J. Scott Pennington was born in Charleston, W.VA. on July 13, 1962. Though he didn't start acting until later in life, he has always been fascinated by the industry, finally taking the plunge and becoming a character driven performer in film, television, and commercials. In addition to acting, he has written several screenplays, one having been optioned to Vanguard Films.
J. Scott Scheel is a producer and actor, known for Madtown (2016), Beautiful Garden (2017) and Anatomy of a Film (2014).
J. Shawn Durham is an actor, pitchman, improv artist and humorist. Shawn appeared on the second episode of the critically-acclaimed HBO miniseries, "We Own The City." But Shawn has also led features, including his weighty role in the PBS historical drama "The King of Crimes" as Pres Thomas Jefferson. He is also star of the Amazon Prime horror "The House Invictus," and the indie comedy "Sylvio." Shawn has also done extensive TV commercial work for Gilette, CareFirst Vaccines, Boy Scouts, HCA, Febreeze, Papa Johns, NFL and more. Also, Shawn was a "ringer" cast member on OWN's hit reality dating show, "Ready To Love." As a writer, Shawn is a 2017 Arena Stage Playwrighting Fellow and penned the successful comedy novel "Broke" (formerly titled "The Broke Brothers' Revolution"), and wrote, directed and produced the three-part satirical podcast miniseries "The Great Recession (or, 'How Democracy Broke Its @$$ Through A Comedy of Errors')", available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and other popular mediums. Shawn has also penned special projects such as writing lines for the GEICO Caveman mascot, as well as write treatments for music videos, and more. He resides in Washington, DC, and is a Macon, Georgia native and University of Georgia alum.
J. Simmons is known for After (2014) and The Mystery of Her (2022).
Actress J. Smith-Cameron was born Jean Isabel Smith in Louisville, Kentucky, and raised in Greenville, South Carolina, the daughter of an architect. She was known simply as J. Smith by her fellow students at Florida State University School of Theatre program in the mid-1970s. Despite her age, she made for a completely believable teenage Anne Frank in "The Diary of Anne Frank", was a touching and memorable Helen Keller in "The Miracle Worker", was wonderfully bizarre as Honey in "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" and demonstrated great skill and versatility in an all-female version of "The Taming of the Shrew". Smith's older sister, actress Jo Ann Smith (who later became a teacher), also attended FSU at the same time and performed in a production of the classic Iranian allegory, "The Butterfly" ("Shaparak Khanoom") by Bijan Mofid and directed by his actor/brother, Ardavan Mofid. She made her film debut while studying at FSU, starring in the acclaimed low-budget production of Gal Young Un (1979), directed by Victor Nunez, who later directed Ulee's Gold (1997). The film, shot in Florida, starred and featured several fellow FSU alumni, including David Peck, Marc H. Glick, Tim McCormack, Gil Lazier (FSU acting teacher), and Randy Ser (who later won an Emmy as production designer for the Whitney Houston version of Cinderella (1997)). The film was not released until 1979, several years after her college graduation. Following college, she added the hyphenated Cameron to her moniker as both a tribute to her great-grandmother and to avoid confusion once she joined Actors' Equity. As "J. Smith-Cameron", she made her Broadway debut as the crazy, suicidal "Babe" in Beth Henley's "Crimes of the Heart" (as a replacement). She went on to make an award-worthy New York impression with a Tony nomination for "Our Country's Good" (1991), winning an Outer Critics Circle award for "Lend Me a Tenor" (1989), and an Obie for her no-holds-barred performance in "As Bees in Honey Drown" (1997). Other stage successes have included "Wild Honey", "The Memory of Water", "Night Must Fall", "Tartuffe", and "After the Night and the Music". Her TV and film work has become stronger and more frequent with each decade. She has shown that, even in the smallest role, she can draw attention to herself, as evinced by her hysterically funny bit as a sexual compulsive in the gay film Jeffrey (1995). She has played various wife and/or mother parts, some more stable than others, in such films as Mighty Aphrodite (1995), Harriet the Spy (1996) and The Rage: Carrie 2 (1999). She also had strong roles in TV guest spots on such shows as The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd (1987), in a recurring role, plus such East Coast-based television series as "The Equalizer", "Homicide: Life on the Street", "Spin City", and "Law & Order". She met and married playwright/film writer Kenneth Lonergan. They have a daughter, Nellie, who was featured as Mabel, the secretary, in Lonergan's Oscar-nominated breakthrough play-turned-film You Can Count on Me (2000), which made film stars out of Laura Linney and Mark Ruffalo, and was particularly effective in Margaret (2011). Other film projects have included The First Wives Club (1996), In & Out (1997), Bittersweet Place (2005), Man on a Ledge (2012), Like Sunday, Like Rain (2014), and, most recently, True Blood (2008) (as a shape-shifter), as a tormented mother in Rectify (2013), and as "Gerri" in the social drama Succession (2018).