James Fletcher is an actor, known for Cirque du Soleil: Worlds Away (2012).
James has a diverse acting and writing career and takes great enjoyment in the versatile roles he plays, everything from French King Louis XV to a homeless poet in east London. He is a native of Ireland and after completing an English degree at University College Cork, he decided to travel to gain life experience. Consequently James started acting later than his contemporaries, but before long he had earned 4 star reviews in the Edinburgh theatre festival and produced and acted in a UK theatre premiere in London's west end . His first screen role was in the Irish series Ballykissangel in an episode with Colin Farrell. Following that he appeared as Ralph Morice alongside Jonathan Rhys Meyers in the critically acclaimed costume drama The Tudors for Showtime and in the History channel's Vikings , and Titanic: Blood & Steel for Netflix, all shot in Ireland. He then moved to London where he appeared in many dramas and series for the BBC and with his languages he was able to expand into Europe and work on French TV series Versailles, and Luc Besson's feature film Valerian & the city of a thousand planets and more recently The Three Musketeers: Milady, starring Eva Green and Vincent Cassel, for Pathé and the German feature Girl you know it's true , directed by Simon Verhoeven and Czech production Masaryk, A prominent patient, to mention a few . James recently played his first on screen American role in the feature Eddie & Sunny directed by Desmond Devenish for Paradox studios
James Foley is an actor, known for Madame (2017).
James Foley was born on December 28, 1953 in Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA. He is a director and writer, known for At Close Range (1986), After Dark, My Sweet (1990) and Glengarry Glen Ross (1992).
James Forbis is an actor, known for The Shell (2020), The Match-Stick Flame 2: Lunada Bay (2023) and The Match-Stick Flame (2020).
James Ford is known for What Happens in the Dark (2021) and Song of the Tree Frogs (2020).
James Ford Murphy is known for Lava (2014), The Incredibles (2004) and Up (2009).
James Fortune is an actor, known for Independent Lens (1999), Never Heard (2018) and James Fortune & FIYA: I Trust You (2009).
James Foster was born in Salford, Lancashire and trained at Salford University. James was part of a Scotsman Fringe First winning play on leaving university and has played in many BAFTA Award winning shows on TV and in film. James also set up a multi award winning and much credited theatre company collective called Studio Salford which gave birth to many successful writers and actors.
James Fotopoulos was born in Norridge, Illinois in 1976. He attended film classes at Columbia College in Chicago, but later dropped out. His film Migrating Forms (2000) won the Best Feature award at the New York Underground Film Festival. His feature Films have screened internationally at many prestigious festivals and venues including the International Film Festival Rotterdam, New York Underground Film Festival, Sundance Channel, Walker Art Center in Minneapolis (where he was voted "Artist of the Year"), the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh and Chicago Filmmakers. James Fotopoulos has been compared to the hand crafting avant gardists like Stan Brakhage, Malcolm Le Grice and Kurt Kren, and revered by top critics as an artist whose films display strong atmospheres and deal with sexual and psychological power struggles. He has also directed over 100 short films. He was Runner Up in Amy Taubin's Village Voice Year End Top Ten list in 2000, and made the NY Press Year End Top Ten List that same year. In 2002 the Anthology Film Archives sponsored a major retrospective of his films up to date, and his feature Families was screened in the 2004 Whitney Biennial. In this same year, he received the Creative Capital Grant for his exploratory presidential biography entitled Richard Nixon, a 10-hour-plus trans-media corpus in variably exhibitable sections, and was approached to publish a book of 400 drawings entitled The Lime Book. In 2005, Fotopoulos was hired by Barney Rosset, famed publisher of the Evergreen Review (providing the first widespread domestic access to literary figures like Jean Genet, Eugene Ionesco and Harold Pinter), to direct a short film of an Ionesco short story in a triptych of films known as the Evergreen Trilogy premiering at the MOMA in May 2006. Also a renowned multi media artist, he recently completed an installation for the 2005 Contour Biennial for Video Art.