Three-time Formula 1 World Champion Jack Brabham had a long and fruitful career in racing. The Australian native won numerous titles in his home country before taking on the world. After Brabham entered the prestigious Formula 1 series, he raced for the Cooper Car Co., who provided him with his first two World Championships in 1959 & 1960. After a short stint with Lotus, he designed and built his own car, Brabham, taking it to Indianapolis in 1961 and creating a sensation as the first rear-engined racer there. He won his third and final championship in 1966 with his own car, the Brabham BT19 & BT20. He retired in 1970 with 14 wins, 13 poles in more than 125 starts.
Jack Braddy is known for Three Thousand Years of Longing (2022).
It looks like we don't have any Biography for Jack Bradley yet.
Jack Bradley is an actor and composer, known for Space Travelers: A Rock Opera, Listen Carefully (2023) and No Second Acts (2008).
Jack Brady is an English actor born in Leamington Spa. At the age of 15 he discovered Shakespeare and never looked back as acting became his constant driving force. In his second year at drama school Jack became the first non London based drama student to win the Laurence Olivier Bursary Award. Jack has many years of theatre experience and his excellent comic timing has lead to roles being written specifically for him. After working with Tom Hooper, Jack has directed his energy towards the screen and has worked with a range of directors for both film and television including Tim Burton, Shekhar Kapur and Guillem Morales. Jack is fast building a reputation as an accomplished character actor in both the UK and the USA.
Jack Brammall was born on 15 October 1879 in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England, UK. He is known for The Wolf Man (1915), The Fatal Glass of Beer (1916) and Macbeth (1916).
Jack Brand is an actor and composer, known for Resident Evil 7: Biohazard (2017), A Day's Work (2008) and The Bold and the Beautiful (1987).
It looks like we don't have any Biography for Jack Brandon Frazier yet.
Jack Bravman grew up in a Jewish neighborhood in the Bronx in the 1940's. Bravman was raised by neighbors after his blood parents gave him up for adoption and attended Taft High School in the Bronx. Jack developed an interest in film from a cousin who worked as a projectionist at a drive-in theatre in Bangor, Maine. Moreover, Bravman watched a slew of movies at various theaters in Times Square in Manhattan, New York City as well as at the Museum of Modern Art. Jack's first job was placing bets for people at a racetrack in Yonkers. Bravman eventually got another job working as a messenger boy for an uncle's printing company down on Varick Street in SoHo. Jack then got a job working as a messenger in the photography department for Look magazine, which was where he met Ed Adlum. Bravman next got a job working for the small company Photosonic, which produced and edited films and commercials (Bravman learned all about filmmaking from this particular gig). After Photosonic closed down, Jack went on to work as a film booker at MGM and subsequently learned all about how to sell movies. Bravman then decided to make the leap into filmmaking with his debut feature Blonde on a Bum Trip (1968), which he both co-wrote and co-produced with Adlum. Jack continued directing and/or producing black and white soft-core sex films throughout the 1960's which he often attributed to the pseudonyms Wizard Glick and Looney Bear. Bravman made the transition to more explicit hardcore movies in the early 1970's and continued to make X-rated films up until the mid-1980's under the alias J. Angel Martine. Jack ended his film career with a few low-budget horror movies that were made in Canada.
A rising star in both theatre and film, summer 2017 saw Jack Brett Anderson return to the stage with the lead role in Tina Jay's new play, 'Held', directed by Richard Elson. He performed dual parts, as prisoners Jamie and as Fynn, in a production that explores the broken lives of five inmates. It was in his debut theatre role that Jack caught the eye of critics for his portrayal as Prince Edward in the Christopher Marlowe's King Edward II at the South Bank's Rose Theatre. The British Theatre Guide described his performance as 'uniquely moving ....electric to watch.' Jack's latest television character is in the period drama series for National Geographic - 'Genius: Picasso', directed by Ron Howard, in which he will play a lead role as Honoré Joseph Géry Pieret - thief, con man and general trouble maker and friend to Picasso - in the series which dramatizes the life of the artist Picasso. He also shot two films last year - 'Acceptable Damage' as well as 'Intrigo', directed by Daniel Alfredson (The Girl Who Played With Fire, The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet's Nest), starring Andrew Buchan, Millie Brady and Phoebe Fox. Jack has starred in several BBC productions, including his best known role, as the teen wolf Matei, in the critically acclaimed and award-winning fantasy drama 'Wolfblood'. He also performed the lead in the cutting edge and arresting docudrama, 'Is this Rape? Sex on Trial' - part of the Breaking the Mould series directed by the BAFTA winning, Ben Anthony. Other film and screen credits include, playing Jeff Mosley in Damien Mace and Alexi Waisbrot's feature film 'Don't hang Up', in which he starred alongside Sienna Guillory, Greg Sulking and Garrett Clayton; the BAFTA long listed and award winning short film, 'Hello Again', alongside Naomi Scott, and Lucien Laviscount's 'Runway', which premiered at the Austen Texas Film Festival as well as the Omaha and Cinequest Film Festivals. Jack has also starred with Billy Zane, Dale Dickey and Shanley Caswell in 'Come Find Me', as well as appearing as a guest lead in the popular drama series 'Casualty' for the BBC. Jack has also starred in a 'Wolf Alice' music video, for their song 'Don't Delete The Kisses', and has recently walked in Dolce & Gabbana fashion shows in London and Milan.